The Sunday Telegraph

Salmond plans to cheat the English of billions in a green power swap

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In all the flood of questions unleashed by Alex Salmond’s desire to see Scotland withdraw from the United Kingdom – what about the Armed Forces, the flag, the Queen, the £11 billion given to the Scots annually by English taxpayers? – one issue has gone unnoticed. Last year, Mr Salmond hubristica­lly pledged that 100 per cent of Scotland’s “gross electricit­y consumptio­n” will come from renewable sources by 2020, supplied mainly by the thousands of wind turbines he wishes to see covering Scotland’s hills and seas. He even boasted that these windmills will produce so much power that they will “help to keep England’s lights on”.

At the moment, I gather from the “Scottish government”, Scotland exports on average some 1.2 gigawatts of electricit­y to England, mostly generated by nuclear and coal-fired power stations, which Salmond wishes to see closed down. But within eight years he wants to see these replaced by 16GW of renewable “capacity”, which should generate all the 4.5GW of power Scotland itself needs.

As we all know, however, the problem with wind is that it doesn’t permanentl­y blow at the right speed to generate the power needed. There might be times when Scotland could export large amounts of wind-generated electricit­y to England. But these would be counterbal­anced by all the times when, to keep its own lights on, it needs to import even larger amounts of power from England – generated by the kind of convention­al power stations that Mr Salmond so scorns.

As hypocrisy, this is bad enough. But Mr Salmond omits to mention the further anomaly arising from the ludicrous subsidy system for wind energy. Onshore wind farms receive a 100 per cent subsidy on top of the market rate for their electricit­y; for offshore this is doubled to 200 per cent. So Mr Salmond’s green dream implies that Scotland will sell large amounts of inordinate­ly expensive electricit­y to England, at about two to three times the going rate, while to keep its own lights on it will buy very much cheaper power from England. In other words, he is hoping to pull off an astonishin­gly advantageo­us deal, which might soon net Scotland a profit amounting to billions of pounds.

We can already see the absurd situation such green dreams can bring about in the case of Denmark, which has more wind turbines per head than any country in the world, generating on paper the equivalent of 20 per cent of the power it uses. But, wind being so variable, as much as 80 per cent of the electricit­y produced has to be exported cheaply to Norway, forcing the Danes to import power from Germany at prices which have made Danish electricit­y the most expensive in Europe.

Mr Salmond hopes to get round this difficulty by selling his own “green electricit­y” at exorbitant rates to the hated English, while relying on them to supply cheap electricit­y whenever the wind fails him. Whether he can pull off such a trick is another of the questions that needs to be resolved before Scotland is allowed to float off into his dreamworld where it joins the euro and lives happily ever after, in a land made even more beautiful by 1,000 square miles of windmills.

 ?? DANNY LAWSON/PA ?? Scotland’s First Minister has gigantic ambitions for his army of Caledonian windmills
DANNY LAWSON/PA Scotland’s First Minister has gigantic ambitions for his army of Caledonian windmills

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