GNRSP Local Mini-Survey
Thanks
to the 98 who’ve responded to the
GNRSP mini-survey as of this morning. Starting on the analysis today, so if
you haven’t already done so please click on the link and add your view, thank
you.
There
is an interesting example of a hydro scheme on the Thames at Reading
Hydro – the
scheme’s two turbines have a combined maximum power of 46kW (0.000046 GW, GNRSP
max. 1GW - 21,739 times bigger than Reading Hydro, and still only 2.2% of the
45GW mentioned below. Riverbank water power got our economy started in the 18th
Century but today it’s, for the most part, a curiosity.
I
read this morning that:-
“The electricity grid needs to be able produce
around 45GW peak demand, and to supply all the population night and day, winter
and summer. In our interconnected and sophisticated modern world power cuts are
disastrous. To prevent power cuts, energy must be always available, and the
only way to have that is to have it ready, stored, and able to be converted
into electricity immediately (and I mean within seconds, not minutes). Battery
technology is nothing like developed enough to store grid-scale electricity,
and even if it were, it would be fantastically expensive to install. The
largest battery in the world at the moment is in California, and it could power
the UK grid in normal use for about 3 minutes. That battery cost about $1.5bn!”
The only watery renewable that could bring reliability to a renewables future is the Severn Barrage – generating up to 15GW (a third of UK 45GW base load) which, because it’s tidal, is totally predictable, years ahead! Brilliant, but it won’t happen, ecopolitics, Anglo-Welsh politics etc. It’s the kind of project only dictators could push through – second thoughts, I’ll drop Starmer/Miliband a line.

