Onshore Wind Generation costs now at 3.3 cent per kw/h or less.

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albion

albion

Veteran
More data, though the 'successive goevernments' is problematic in that Nick Clegg fought for onshore wind.
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...ossil-fuel-profits-insulation-fracking-crisis
'Successive governments have also ignored the benefits of cheap renewable energy. It is not news that wind and solar power are cheap. This was already the case in 2015, when David Cameron’s government banned new onshore wind farms and pulled the rug from underneath the solar industry. In absolute terms, the cost of solar has fallen by 88% since 2010 and onshore wind has fallen 57%, despite both being intentionally frozen out of new deployment. In relative terms, the numbers are now staggering: building a new solar or windfarm is now nine times cheaper than just running an existing gas power station.'.......
'Borrowing £150bn just to cap energy bills at already historic levels – with most of it going to oil and gas producers – is just the start of the pain'
 
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albion

albion

Veteran
Fantastic news says Mails Money. It says the current price of €0.20 per kw/h of gas 'might' be slashed to €0.10 by next spring.
https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money...rice-set-slash-PM-Liz-Truss-bailout-bill.html

Wasn't it once a tenth of that 20 cents?
 

MrGrumpy

Regular
Either way if true that brings in some welcome relief I would hope . However the only real winners or the energy companies
 

BoldonLad

Old man on a bike. Not a member of a clique.
Location
South Tyneside
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-business-62967209.amp

6 turbines going up in Scotland, each powering 6,500 homes. The interesting aspect here is that Scotland allows large turbines, England limiting the size for the few that do get allowed.
The way the whole system works is that the company makes a killing, so that 3p per kw/h cost is to their benefit, not ours.

I thought I recognised that Company name (Banks Renewables), they are in my neck of the woods.
 

Milkfloat

Active Member
The whole market is just incredibly weird - offshore costs 3.3p per kWh, we are capped at about 28p, which was about to go to 52p, but will now be 36p and I am paid 15p for what I generate. On top of this our government has banned the cheapest and fastest way to get energy security AND greatly reduce prices. The whole thing is bonkers.
 

BoldonLad

Old man on a bike. Not a member of a clique.
Location
South Tyneside
Far more in the news for their infamous coal mining endeavours.

Indeed. Some of that around here too.
 

mjr

Active Member
But Truss says it's good for us to pay more for energy because it means security from Putin. https://www.thenational.wales/news/...lls-price-worth-paying-long-term-uk-security/

There's so much wrong with that, including that it ignores the high energy company profit windfalls and the disconnects between high prices and security.

But most of all, it sucks to announce it's good to pay more, so soon after moving into notoriously lavish taxpayer-funded official residences and presumably paying almost no units on her own homes for the forseeable.
 
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albion

albion

Veteran

BoldonLad

Old man on a bike. Not a member of a clique.
Location
South Tyneside
https://amp.theguardian.com/environ...ont-work-uk-founder-chris-cornelius-cuadrilla

Experts declaring what many of us had already discovered.
Maybe Truss has plans to rent part of Texas.:bicycle:

I know Truss is thought to be thick, but...

1. Fracking is unpopular and resumption will no doubt lead to criticism of which ever Government re-introduces it, will be widely criticised

2. The "expert" says it will not work (in UK), and, will not have a significant impact on Energy prices

So, lots of potential criticism, for little or no return?

The obvious question to me is "why do it".
 

Mugshot

Über Member
I know Truss is thought to be thick, but...

1. Fracking is unpopular and resumption will no doubt lead to criticism of which ever Government re-introduces it, will be widely criticised

2. The "expert" says it will not work (in UK), and, will not have a significant impact on Energy prices

So, lots of potential criticism, for little or no return?

The obvious question to me is "why do it".

Follow the money.
 
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