By Paul Homewood
h/t Robin Guenier/Philip Bratby
The UK’s electricity network needs almost a further £60bn of upgrades to hit government decarbonisation targets by 2035, according to a new plan.
Some 4,000 miles of undersea cables and 1,000 miles of power lines including pylons are needed, National Grid’s Electricity Systems Operator said.
The investment would add between £20 to £30 a year to customer bills, it said.
The government said the ESO’s plans were preliminary and yet to pass a “robust planning process”.
The plans were written up by the ESO, the organisation which runs the electricity network and would run the updated system it is calling for too. It is currently owned by National Grid but will transfer into government ownership later this year.
Its latest £58bn estimate is for work needed between 2030 and 2035 and comes on top of a previous £54bn estimate for work taking place between now and 2030.
The additional infrastructure spend would help get the UK’s offshore wind from where it is produced out at sea, to where it is used by households across the country.
That would be key in making greener energy, according to the ESO, which said the project would be the largest build of its kind for seven decades.
The government said the plans would support more than 20,000 jobs, but these are preliminary ones that would have to go through a robust planning process – a stage at which many infrastructure plans have failed.
The ESO says this is the kind of ambitious plan needed to deliver clean, secure, decarbonised energy. It called for “swift and co-ordinated” progress, and said that without it, the country’s climate ambitions might be at risk.
“Great Britain is about to embark upon the biggest change to the electricity network since the high voltage transmission grid was established back in the 1950s,” it said.
New connections and more grid capacity will also be needed as people and companies switch to using electricity for their cars or heating their homes. Renewable forms of generating energy, including through solar and wind farms, will also change the way the grid is shaped.
The undersea cables will have to come ashore at various points, predominantly on the east coast of Scotland and England – and from there, on to places near urban centres via overhead pylons or at four times the cost, under the ground. Hot spots for the new pylons include West Wales and a route through East Anglia.
Speaking to the BBC, Jake Rigg, corporate affairs director at the ESO, said conversation with communities across the UK is ongoing.
Critics have said the plan would deface areas of outstanding national beauty by adding more pylons – the huge steel structures which have been accused of blighting landscapes.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-68601354
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Including the cost of £54 billion already committed, this adds up to a gobsmacking £112 billion, a cost of over £4000 per household. The claim that bills will only rise by £20 a year clearly is a lie. Even if the cost is spread out over 20 years, it still amounts to £200 a year, and interest payments will drastically increase this. It is a sign of the times that we discuss these ludicrous amounts of money without batting an eyelid.
As we know with all public infrastructure projects, the eventual cost will be much more then budgeted. It is worth noting that the government decided to take the ESO into public ownership precisely because the National Grid and other owners of the transmission network demanded full compensation for these upgrades, which would increase electricity bills to an unacceptable degree. Instead the government will have to fund any overspend. And the full cost will simply be added to the already crippling National Debt.
I would emphasize that this project is solely concerned with the transmission network, and does not cover the distribution network, which will also require tens of billions to increase capacity to cope with increased demand.
The National Grid’s Beyond 2030 plan clearly states that the upgrade’s only purpose is to build more capacity to:
1) Transmit power from offshore windfarms and other renewable generators, and carry it to where it will be used.
2) Cope with increased demand for electricity, due to electric cars, heat pumps etc.
In short, this £112 billion needs to be spent in order to meet Net Zero objectives, and no other reason.
The report also claims that thousands of jobs will be created and GDP increased. This is the same tired old argument often wheeled out, and it ignores the fact that money spent on this will be diverted from other purposes.
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Author: Paul Homewood
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