Climate Change, Energy, Environment, Government

Energy security: Is there to be a next generation of reactors?

UK ENERGY NEEDS: SECURITY OF SUPPLY

EVER SINCE the Labour government under Tony Blair rebooted nuclear power some 13 years ago, successive British governments have been committed to new reactors to secure electricity supplies and by cutting carbon emissions. Yet, those ambitions have yielded just one project that is currently under construction – Hinkley Point C in Somerset.

The past three months or so have dealt serious blows to hopes for more. Toshiba scrapped its plans for Moorside in Cumbria and Hitachi has axed Wylfa. That means that a second Hitachi plant planned for Oldbury in Gloucestershire is also doomed. Together, these three projects would have provided around 15% of current UK electricity demand.

This must now raise the question: is it time to rethink plans for new nuclear, and focus on more renewables – or redouble our nuclear efforts?

The UK needs more low-carbon power. Coal and old nuclear plants are shutting, and tough climate targets are looming.

Environmental groups, such as The Green Party and Greenpeace, want to ditch nuclear in favour of more renewables, more energy efficiency, imports, batteries and other technologies. Most energy industry experts, however, think we still need nuclear. They say that if we try and rely on just renewables and storage, without carbon capture and storage or nuclear, then we will be looking at a very challenging transition and one that is costlier than a balanced mix.

National Grid’s four future energy scenarios all envisage some new nuclear, though the amounts do differ.

The main issue is that nuclear provides baseload power (or continuous electricity supply). But there is a school of thought that baseload is a 20th-century thing. Those who suggest such an argument might be right. It would, though, be a big call by government to suggest baseload won’t be a thing by 2025.

The government has already downgraded the amount of new nuclear it expects to be built. It assumes 13GW of new nuclear capacity by 2035 – or three more plants on top of the 3.2GW at Hinkley. There are now just two companies in the running, with plans for two new plants. French state-owned EDF, which is behind Hinkley, wants to build a carbon copy of that project at Sizewell, on the Suffolk coast, in 2021. Chinese state-owned CGN, is working on a Chinese-designed reactor for Bradwell in Essex, to be operational around 2030.

Hitachi’s withdrawal suggests the financing model used for Hinkley and proposed for Wylfa – a guaranteed price for the electricity generated for 35 years – is now dead. The alternative is the “regulated asset base” (RAB) model, where a regulator sets a fixed sum for the plant’s costs and fixed returns for the developer, paid for by energy bill payers or taxpayers. Critics say RAB loads the risk of construction delays – such as those seen in France and Finland – on to citizens. Returns would be paid for years before any electricity was generated.

Labour, which is pro-nuclear, has branded the approach risky and reckless, but has not put forward an alternative.

So, could Britain manage without nuclear? The answer is maybe, but it would take a lot more renewables. Filling the 9.2GW-sized hole left by Moorside, Wylfa and Oldbury would require 14GW of offshore wind power, according to the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit. That is the equivalent to more than 20 of the world’s biggest offshore windfarm, which consists of 87 giant turbines.

Undoubtedly, that would mean spending a vast amount of money on saturating the UK with offshore wind – with enough turbines in enough different locations to replicate the “always-on” nature of nuclear. Large-scale batteries will help, but they won’t address the fact that electricity demand is much higher in winter than summer – or solve long windless spells.

The other big techno fix could be carbon capture and storage (CCS) systems attached to fossil-fuel power stations. However, years of government efforts to kickstart it have failed. Officials have been working on CCS gas for around 20 years and are nowhere near reaching a satisfactory outcome that are mainly due to cost considerations.

 

ALL sources of electricity face the same trilemma in the 21st century: carbon emissions, continuity of supply and cost. The British government has placed a big bet on nuclear power, but reactors meet only two of the three challenges. Nuclear power is low-carbon and a secure source of electricity – but it is hugely expensive.

While building nuclear plants and fuelling them requires concrete, transport and so on, the overall emissions are similar to wind power and solar power. All produce far less carbon than coal- or gas-powered stations.

Nuclear power also largely passes the security of supply test. The giant plants provide steady electricity 24 hours a day, but are incredibly complex, and technical problems can result in long shutdowns. They also need vast amounts of cooling water, causing problems during periods of droughts.

Nuclear power’s big problem is its price tag – building extraordinarily complicated plants and keeping them safe is extremely expensive. Solar and onshore wind power prices have plummeted and are now about one third of that of nuclear. How to deal with nuclear waste in the long term is another expensive, and as yet unresolved, headache.

The industry has hopes that “small modular reactors” could be cheaper and faster to build. But to fight global warming the world needs low carbon energy now, and no SMR is likely to be generating power in the next 10 years because of long and rigorous safety checks.

The government faces a difficult decision. It could persist with its nuclear dream, hoping that a way to finance new plants can be found and that they are then built on time and on budget.

Or it can pivot towards renewable energy, storage and interconnectors, potentially with gas plants that capture and bury their carbon emissions as a backup. That would mean overturning its antipathy to onshore wind and solar power and ramping up offshore wind.

Around the world only two nations are putting new nuclear plants into service: China and Russia. Overall, nuclear construction is at its lowest for a decade and global nuclear generation has been flat since 2000. Even France, that most nuclear of countries, is planning big cuts in nuclear power. If Britain persists with nuclear, it will be swimming against the international tide.

SUMMARY

. Britain’s old nuclear power stations supply a fifth of electricity supplies and are a significant part of the energy system. However, their share of the mix has been gradually shrinking as renewables have grown. Significantly, seven of the eight nuclear sites will have shut by the end of the 2020s as they reach the end of their economic lives, with just Sizewell B in Suffolk continuing to operate. The government has also committed to shutting the country’s last seven coal plants by 2025 at the latest.

. So far, the only nuclear project to get the go ahead is EDF Energy’s Hinkley Point C, a 3.2GW plant in Suffolk that will power around 6million homes. It is officially due to begin supplying electricity in 2025, but similar projects in Finland and France have run many years over schedule. EDF has warned the plant may not be generating until 2027. Originally there were plans for five nuclear plants to meet Britain’s new nuclear ambitions. But three – Moorside, Wylfa and Oldbury – have been shelved. That leaves Sizewell C, backed by the Chinese state firm CGN, and the 2.3GW, Chinese-led Bradwell B in Essex (in which EDF has a one third stake).

. The UK government negotiated a guaranteed price for power for 35 years with EDF Energy for Hinkley. Hitachi was trying to do the same, with the government taking a multibillion-pound stake, but could not make the numbers work.

Attention will now turn to a new method of financing known as the regulated asset base model (RAB). The UK government plans to give more details later this year. An RAB model is one in which the regulator sets fixed costs and fixed returns for a nuclear developer to overcome the huge upfront cost of constructing plant and the years-long delay for investors reaping a return.

. No new nuclear plants would pose a challenge to carbon targets, but it is unlikely to threaten energy supplies, given the speed with which gas plants and windfarms could be built. Offshore wind power could fill the gap, and more inshore windfarms and solar power would help. The intermittent nature of those technologies could be addressed to a degree by more batteries and other storage, imports and technologies that allow big energy users – and maybe homes – to reduce consumption at peak times in return for a financial incentive.

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Consumer Affairs, Energy, Government, Society, Technology

Smart Meters: Energy giants can remotely cut supply

HOUSEHOLD METERING

ENERGY giants can use smart meters to cut the power supply to homes and force customers to pay their bill up front.

It is now known that suppliers have the power to switch the new digital devices to a prepayment setting without visiting the house.

This would force the occupier to top up their account before they use any gas or electricity – and if their balance runs out, their power could automatically be cut off.

More than 11million smart meters have been installed across the country as part of a national upgrade programme ordered by the Government.

. See also Smart Meters and the ‘hidden agenda’

The new meters automatically send readings to suppliers as often as every half an hour and show customers in pounds and pence exactly how much energy they use.

The aim is to make bills more accurate and help customers save money by encouraging them to reduce their power consumption. Experts warn, however, that smart meters give firms unprecedented power over their customers, including access to reams of data about how and when customers use energy and the ability to control a customer’s supply remotely.

Major energy companies said they had not yet used the feature, but admitted it was possible.

A spokesperson for auto-switching service Look After My Bills, said: “Suppliers now have a frightening level of power to hit customers in the pocket. In the past, the Big Six have proven far too eager to force expensive prepayment meters into people’s homes – despite warnings from OFGEM that they should only ever be used as a last resort.

“If they can switch someone to a prepayment meter with a flick of a switch whenever they choose, this is very worrying for families across the country already struggling with unfair price rises.”

A prepayment meter works like a pay-as-you-go mobile phone in that customers have to top it up with credit before they can use any power.

They are most commonly found in households where the homeowner or occupier is struggling financially, because they provide a better means of controlling how much is spent on energy.

Energy firms said that one of the benefits of new smart meters is that they can switch a meter from prepayment to the more popular credit setting remotely.

Energy watchdog OFGEM has strict rules on when suppliers can force customers to have a prepayment meter.

It is supposed to be a last resort when recovering debt, and suppliers should put households on to repayment plans first.

Currently, power companies need a warrant to install a prepayment meter against a customer’s wishes because they need access to their property. But if suppliers can switch someone’s meter remotely it would remove the need to go through the courts.

Under OFGEM rules energy firms would still have to show they had done everything possible to avoid forcing someone to have a prepayment meter and take steps to ensure that any vulnerable customers are protected.

An OFGEM spokesman said: “For suppliers that are considering if it is appropriate to offer prepayment to smart meter customers, the same rules apply as for those on traditional meters.

“Suppliers must be clear in their communications and establish that prepayment is practical and affordable for a customer. OFGEM would take any breach of these rules by a supplier very seriously.”

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Consumer Affairs, Energy, Government, Society

Smart Meters and the ‘hidden agenda’

ENERGY USAGE

Smart Meters

ENERGY firms using smart meters have a “hidden agenda” to charge customers more when demand for power surges, an expert has warned.

The technology has been promoted as a way of ending estimated bills and giving households real-time information on how much energy they are using.

But it will also allow firms to introduce a raft of new tariffs that will hit those who use electricity and gas at peak times with higher charges.

Under these “time-of-use” tariffs those who use appliances at off-peak times overnight will be rewarded with low rates. This will have the effect of spreading out demand over a 24-hour period. This is seen as an advantage by the Government and energy industry because it means fewer power stations are needed to cover the daily peak.

. See also Concern over energy firms refusing to pass on price cuts…

But the move towards these tariffs raises the prospect of surge pricing during holiday periods when millions of householders are using appliances at the same time.

The former head of gas and electricity meter technology at the energy regulator OFGEM, Jerry Fulton, said the industry will quickly move beyond a two-tier peak and off-peak system to prices that change depending on demand every 30 minutes. He said: “I believe that the hidden agenda behind smart meters is that they will allow half-hourly charging.

“Instead of having two charge rates – day and night – the price of energy will change every half hour, so when solar and wind generation are low and usage is high the price of electricity will rise steeply.”

Unlike ordinary meters, smart devices transmit information about when households use most energy to suppliers.

The default setting on most means that the machines send a total usage figure to suppliers once a month. Customers can change this to send their data as often as every half an hour.

These regular updates are essential for those who have signed up to a tariff where prices vary depending on the time of day. This type of tariff was first offered by British Gas two years ago.

It ran trials giving smart meter customers free electricity for eight hours on either a Saturday or Sunday in an attempt to encourage them to shift heavy power use to this off-peak period.

Another smaller provider, Green Energy UK, has already launched a “time-of-day” tariff where prices vary between periods of high and low demand. It charges five times more for electricity used in early evening than it does overnight.

More of these types of tariffs are expected to flood the market as the rollout of smart meters continues. They are not yet compulsory, but suppliers must at least offer every household a smart meter by 2020.

Critics say everyone cooking family meals, watching prime-time TV shows and heating their homes in the evenings will be penalised by time-of-day tariffs. Higher charges are also likely to apply in the mornings when people are taking showers and heating their homes as they get ready for the day ahead.

A spokesperson for the comparison site Energy helpline, said: “Energy prices are confusing enough and fluctuating half-hourly tariffs will complicate matters further. How are you supposed to know when to turn the dishwasher on when the cost is continually changing?

“For years the Government has been saying it wants to simplify the energy market for customers. This will do the exact opposite.”

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