Britain's energy system is already capable of taking a large amount of wind power,
according to a new report released today by a leading energy expert.
The report shows that there is no technical
reason why a significant amount of energy generated by wind cannot be used to
supply the National Grid.
And, as the report is launched, Britain's
leading environmental organisations are calling on the Government to listen to
the experts and provide a boost to the country's wind industry.
Key
findings include:
- Wind power does not
need large amounts of extra conventional - fossil, nuclear or gas - energy
backup to stop the lights going out - while the instant loss of a large
conventional power station is a real risk, it is extremely unlikely that
the same amount of wind will disappear instantaneously.
- The National Grid is
more than able to manage the variable input created by wind power, as it
is already designed to manage fluctuations in demand and supply - variations in wind
power are considerably less than variations in consumer demand, which can
vary on an hourly basis according to the weather, rush hour and even TV
scheduling.
- There are no
significant costs associated with managing variability - If the UK meets
its renewable energy targets and within this provides 32% of our
electricity from wind by 2020, it will only add £2 to every £100 spent by
consumers.
- New technology would
reduce this slight increase in price even more, and would reduce the need
for fossil fuel station back up - technologies already exist which can
hep manage the variability of wind energy and reduce associated costs, and
these can be expanded upon . More accurate wind forecasting could help
reduce these costs by as much as 30%.
- Wind power will
provide significant job opportunities in the UK - there are already
400,000 people working in the wind-energy sector worldwide and this could
reach 1 million by the end of the decade.
Report
Author David Milborrow, an energy expert with 30 years experience in the field,
said:
"Utilities worldwide generally agree there is
no fundamental technical reason why high proportions of wind cannot be
assimilated without the lights going out."
Chris Bennett, National Grid's Future Transmission Networks Manager, said:
"We welcome this
report and the way that it highlights the implications of integrating wind into
our electricity network.
"The report
complements the consultation document that National Grid issued in June which
highlighted the different solutions available to ensure a safe secure and
economic supply of electricity is maintained."
Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace, RSPB and
WWF, who commissioned the report, are calling on the UK Government to put in
place funding and incentives to encourage investment in much more wind power
and to grant priority access to the energy market and the electricity grid.
ENDS
The summary and the full report are available online.
For more information, contact:
Greenpeace press office: 020 7865 8255
WWF press office: 01483 412 375
John Clare, RSPB Media Officer: 01767
693582
Friends of the Earth press office: 020 7566
1664
Stewart Larque, National Grid media
relations manager: 01926 655274
Notes:
Keith
Allott, Head of Climate Change at WWF-UK said:
"Britain is not short of the
renewable resources, or the engineers and technological know-how to create a
sustainable, zero carbon power sector. We have a fantastic opportunity now to
transform the UK
electricity network with many old coal and nuclear plants retiring over the
next 10 years or so. What we lack is the market framework to make the clean
energy revolution a reality."
Louise
Hutchins, energy solutions campaigner at Greenpeace, said:
"This report scuppers the final arguments
against wind power. The government must now get cracking and make the most of
the energy that wind will provide to the country.
"And wind won't just generate energy for Britain, it will also generate thousands of jobs
for Britain."
Ruth
Davis, Head of Climate Change Policy at the RSPB, said:
"Left unchecked, climate change threatens
many species with extinction, and risks destroying ecosystems such as
tropical forests, upon which we all depend for our survival. This report shows
that sensitively located wind power, which avoids impacts on the natural
environment, can provide a secure, low-carbon and
sustainable source of power for the future."
Robin
Webster, Senior Climate Campaigner at Friends of the Earth, said:
"The
claim that renewable power cannot deliver a big portion of our energy needs is
dead and buried. The Government needs to deliver a genuine shift in energy
policy in its upcoming Renewable Energy Strategy.
"We're still right at the bottom of the
renewable energy league table in Europe and the energy system in Britain
is skewed against renewable power.
"The Government needs to put renewables and
energy efficiency at the centre of its energy policy - not the margins - and
deliver a real industrial strategy to enable us to move towards a low-carbon
economy."