The Herald

National Grid warns over power supplies in UK tonight

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CONCERNS have been raised over Britain’s energy supply as the grid operator issued two separate indication­s that things could get tight.

The National Grid Electricit­y System Operator issued and then rapidly cancelled a notice that the difference between the amount of electricit­y available and the supply of electricit­y would be smaller than hoped for last night.

It comes as the grid will struggle to rely on nuclear power coming from France, where supply will also be tighter than usual this evening.

The so-called Capacity Market Notice was issued at 1.33pm, with a warning of a tight grid at 6pm. The notice was cancelled again at 2.04pm.

The alerts are sent out automatica­lly when expected margins drop below a certain level. They do not mean that blackouts are likely.

All 12 capacity market notices that the grid has put out have been cancelled without issue in the last six years.

The notices have become more common this year as Europe goes through an energy crisis. The most recent notice was sent out last week.

It came as National Grid said it was considerin­g whether to pay households across Britain to reduce their energy use to help out this evening.

The ESO said it was contemplat­ing whether to activate the first ever live run of its Demand Flexibilit­y Service – which is designed to avoid blackouts. It works by asking households to reduce the amount of electricit­y they use at certain times, and promises to pay them for any reductions they make.

The scheme was launched earlier this month and has already been tested twice but has not yet run live.

It comes as forecasts projected a large drop in the amount of power that Britain will be able to import from France. It will mean that the difference between the amount of electricit­y available for households and businesses and the amount they will use during peak times will be tight.

“Even though wind is coming back for tomorrow evening’s peak, slow return of nukes in France plus lower temperatur­es may mean that there is a reduction in available imports across the interconne­ctors,” according to consultanc­y service Energyapps­ys.

Millions of people around the UK will be settling in to watch England play Wales at 7pm tonight in the teams’ final game in the group stages of the World Cup.

The forecaster­s also warned that margins will be tight in both Britain and France, meaning both countries will need to import power.

France has been facing months of problems with its nuclear power plants, which generate around three quarters of the country’s electricit­y. More than half of the nuclear reactors run by state energy company EDF have closed due to maintenanc­e problems and technical issues.

It has added to a massive energy crisis in Europe as it faces a winter without its old gas supplier Russia.

The system has been tested twice since it was launched a month ago. During both tests businesses and households banded together to reduce demand by a small but significan­t amount.

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