Only in Britain

KS55

Well-Known Member
Joined
14 Oct 2016
Messages
22,318
Britain is world champion at mucking up infrastructure projects. We have seen the cancellation of HR 2. Personally, I always felt that would happen yet for the last ten years or so just about every improvement to railways in and around Manchester have been cancelled on the grounds that HR2 would solve the problem. The trans Pennine route has suffered particularly badly, even new trains were cancelled in favour of Hydrogen driven trains, which of course are yet to be built.
Now we have a classic in wind powered electricity.…….. the windmills produce TOO MUCH. Eh?? Yup, we don’t have enough cables to transport the power from land based wind farms to the users. Most on shore electricity is generated in Scotland but is used in southern England. Nobody thought about this at the planning stage and we are about to build more on shore farms.
What happens when the wind blows strongly? Er, we pay the wind farms to shut down and we pay gas fired generators to start up. This costs every consumer about £60 pa and is forecast to rise to £180pa over the next few years. Why don’t we build more cables? Ah, not worth it as planning takes 15 to 20 years as the cables move through many different authorities. So nobody is applying to build them.
Net zero? Go whistle! YCNMIU.
 
Britain is world champion at mucking up infrastructure projects. We have seen the cancellation of HR 2. Personally, I always felt that would happen yet for the last ten years or so just about every improvement to railways in and around Manchester have been cancelled on the grounds that HR2 would solve the problem. The trans Pennine route has suffered particularly badly, even new trains were cancelled in favour of Hydrogen driven trains, which of course are yet to be built.
Now we have a classic in wind powered electricity.…….. the windmills produce TOO MUCH. Eh?? Yup, we don’t have enough cables to transport the power from land based wind farms to the users. Most on shore electricity is generated in Scotland but is used in southern England. Nobody thought about this at the planning stage and we are about to build more on shore farms.
What happens when the wind blows strongly? Er, we pay the wind farms to shut down and we pay gas fired generators to start up. This costs every consumer about £60 pa and is forecast to rise to £180pa over the next few years. Why don’t we build more cables? Ah, not worth it as planning takes 15 to 20 years as the cables move through many different authorities. So nobody is applying to build them.
Net zero? Go whistle! YCNMIU.

Bigger problem is lack of battery farms to store the power.
 
Which they’ve stopped buying due to lack of plug in points.

It'll be interesting here.
Same problem with lack of charging stations, but with -30 temperatures and long distance travel to contend with.
 
Which they’ve stopped buying due to lack of plug in points.
And the price. And the lack of knowledge about what happens with the batteries after. And the fact that electricity costs the most and will go up because of the lack of infrastructure and the oil companies owning the charging companies.

Hydrogen is the solution. Trouble is no one will make huge money with Hydrogen.
 

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