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UK Energy

  • Green light for huge green energy park in Yorkshire - with 4,500 jobs on cards
    www.hulldailymail.co.uk Green light for huge energy park - with 4,500 jobs on cards

    Project 'will help cement Hull’s status as a leader in renewable energy', council says

    Green light for huge energy park - with 4,500 jobs on cards

    > Plans for a £200m green energy park, which could create 4,500 jobs, have been given the green light.

    > Yorkshire Energy Park, on the site of the former Hedon Aerodrome, to the east of Hull, is set to focus on renewable energy, battery storage, state-of-the-art digital infrastructure and research and development. The proposal, for land allocated to the wider Humber Freeport scheme, was approved by Hull City Council's ruling cabinet.

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  • Households set to learn of fresh energy price rise
    www.independent.co.uk Households set to learn of fresh energy price rise

    Ofgem will announce its latest price cap on Thursday.

    Households set to learn of fresh energy price rise

    > Households are set to learn that their energy bills will rise again from January as hopes for relief from the cost-of-living crisis are put on hold. > > Ofgem will announce its latest price cap on Thursday, with energy consultancy Cornwall Insight predicting it will increase from the current £1,834 for a typical dual fuel household to £1,931 – a 5% jump to take effect from January to March. > > The forecasts suggest that the typical bill will then fall to £1,853 from the start of April, but will not drop below today’s level until July next year. > > ... > > Dr Craig Lowrey, principal consultant at Cornwall Insight, said: “An unstable wholesale energy market, coupled with the UK’s reliance on energy imports, makes it inevitable that energy bills will rise from current levels. > > “This leaves households facing yet another winter with bills hundreds of pounds higher than pre-pandemic levels, and affordable fixed deals few and far between.” > > ... > > “While we continue to advocate for immediate targeted support for vulnerable consumers, it is evident that the only enduring solution lies in transitioning the UK away from the influence of global energy prices towards sustainable, domestically sourced energy.”

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  • Allowing Cumbria coalmine was ‘disaster’ for climate diplomacy, says Lord Turner
    www.theguardian.com Allowing Cumbria coalmine was ‘disaster’ for climate diplomacy, says Lord Turner

    Former chair of climate change committee says UK’s decision has encouraged other countries to keep exploiting fossil fuels

    Allowing Cumbria coalmine was ‘disaster’ for climate diplomacy, says Lord Turner

    > Other countries are using the UK as an excuse for pressing ahead with fossil fuel projects despite their climate commitments, according to Adair Turner, the first chair of the Committee on Climate Change and a former head of the CBI. > > Lord Turner told the Guardian that he had “literally been involved in discussions” in China and India where UK decisions had been given as a reason for not moving faster on the climate. > > “I can tell you that [the Cumbrian coalmine] was a disaster globally, and in China and India, where I was engaged in debates [on reducing greenhouse gas emissions], I have had people say ‘yeah, but you’re building a new coalmine in the UK’,” he said. > > “So that was a disaster for our reputation, and it provides arguments for the people within government or within interest groups in China and India to say ‘oh look, the UK is supposedly committed to net zero, but it’s not serious, it’s building a new coalmine’. And the same occurs with new oil and gas fields in the North Sea.” > > Turner is now chair of the Energy Transitions Commission (ETC), a thinktank that on Thursday published a report that says the production of and demand for fossil fuels must be reduced rapidly, and that this is achievable. “Unabated” fossil fuel use must be phased out, and there is only limited scope for the use of carbon capture and storage (CCS), the report finds.

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  • Floating factories of artificial leaves could make green fuel for jets and ships
    www.theguardian.com Floating factories of artificial leaves could make green fuel for jets and ships

    Cambridge University scientists develop a device to ‘defossilise’ the economy using sunlight, water and carbon dioxide

    Floating factories of artificial leaves could make green fuel for jets and ships

    > Automated floating factories that manufacture green versions of petrol or diesel could soon be in operation thanks to pioneering work at the University of Cambridge. The revolutionary system would produce a net-zero fuel that would burn without creating fossil-derived emissions of carbon dioxide, say researchers. > > The Cambridge project is based on a floating artificial leaf which has been developed at the university and which can turn sunlight, water and carbon dioxide into synthetic fuel. The group believe these thin, flexible devices could one day be exploited on a industrial scale. > > “Solar panels are excellent at generating electricity and are making a great contribution to the world reaching its net zero aspirations,” said Erwin Reisner, the professor of energy and sustainability at Cambridge University. “But using sunlight to make non-fossil fuels that could be burned by cars or ships takes things a stage further.” > > Reisner and his colleagues envisage exploiting the technology to build carpets of artificial leaves that would float on lakes and river estuaries, and use sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into the components of petrol and other fuels. “The crucial point is that we are not decarbonising the economy through techniques like these,” Reisner said. “Carbon is still a key component. What we are doing is to ‘defossilise’ the economy. We will no longer be burning ancient sources of carbon – coal, oil and gas – and adding greenhouse gases to the atmosphere, a process that is doing so much damage at present.”

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  • Can solar and wind power Britain? An update of David MacKay's numbers
    www.sustainabilitybynumbers.com Can solar and wind power Britain? An update of David MacKay’s numbers

    These technologies have developed a lot since 2008. Should we be any more optimistic about their potential to power Britain?

    Can solar and wind power Britain? An update of David MacKay’s numbers

    cross-posted from: https://derp.foo/post/374476

    Wind conclusions:

    > The authors give three reasons for their discrepancy with MacKay’s estimates. > > * Improved fixed turbine technologies. MacKay described all waters deeper than 30 metres as “not economically feasible”. But fixed turbines could soon be commercially feasible to around 80 metres of depth. > > * Floating offshore turbines. The advent of floating turbines means that these can extend into much deeper waters. Note that O’Callaghan et al. (2023) already account for many other competing uses such as fishing areas, military zones, shipping routes, and low-wind areas. > > * Improved social and political support. O’Callaghan et al. (2023) assume there is less public resistance to offshore wind, which seems appropriate.

    Solar conclusions:

    > What are the major differences to MacKay? > > * Lower cost: the price of solar PV has fallen by 90% in the last decade. MacKay’s main concern was it was too expensive: this is not the case today. > > * Improved cell efficiency: MacKay used a cell efficiency of 10%, and thought an efficiency of 30% would be “quite remarkable”. Last year, Fraunhofer ISE achieved 47.6%. Efficiencies greater than 30% have also been achieved using perovskite solar cells. O’Callaghan uses a cell efficiency of 25%. See the footnote for a chart showing the differences in efficiency over time.7 > > * Combined use with agriculture: MacKay assumed an inherent trade-off between agricultural land and solar. He thought the Brits would never give up farmland for solar panels. But this trade-off does not always exist: there are now a range of projects where solar and agriculture work in tandem (‘agrivoltaics’).

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  • Dearman – making clean engines with liquid air
    www.theguardian.com Dearman – making clean engines with liquid air

    British startup pioneering a piston engine that could revolutionise refrigerated transport and power zero emissions vehicles

    Dearman – making clean engines with liquid air
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  • Labour can hit green goals by building in Tory seats, Keir Starmer told
    www.politico.eu Labour can hit green goals by building in Tory seats, Keir Starmer told

    Analysis shared with POLITICO suggests a Labour government could swerve NIMBY backlash as it races to decarbonize Britain’s electricity grid.

    Labour can hit green goals by building in Tory seats, Keir Starmer told
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  • Proposed North Yorkshire fracking site becomes source of clean, geothermal energy
    news.sky.com Proposed North Yorkshire fracking site becomes source of clean, geothermal energy

    An underground well in the North Yorkshire village of Kirby Misperton was drilled but never fracked after a fightback by protesters. It has now taken on a "second life" as a source of clean, green, geothermal energy.

    Proposed North Yorkshire fracking site becomes source of clean, geothermal energy

    > The well was drilled but never fracked - leaving the site owners, Third Energy, with a deep hole in the ground. > > Tom Heap with Steve Mason and Russell Hoare at the once highly-contested proposed fracking site Its managing director, Russell Hoare, showed me the well and explained its second life. They are even re-using the two metre-high gas valve which caps the hole. > > "This is the actual well that was drilled for fracking and it's about 3,000 metres deep, but the protesters were successful, and Steve was successful, in stopping that operation. > > "But it's perfect for testing geothermal energy. There's hot water at the bottom. All we're doing is bringing it to the surface." > > ... > > Once commercially exploited, they reckon this well could supply 300 homes, so we would need a lot more deep drilling to keep Britain warm. > > Gas to geothermal conversion company, CeraPhi, thinks there are 680 wells in the UK ripe for conversion together with millions around the world, and that new wells can be sunk cheaply enough to expand further. > > Such potential provokes interest. While we are on the site, chief executive Karl Farrow is showing around a group of academics and industry players. > > They've had more than 100 such visitors in the past month. > > Karl told me: "Wells at the end of life can be repurposed and reused for energy.

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  • Plans unveiled for new solar farm and battery storage scheme on edge of Bedford

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/3446966

    > And you can have your say via public consultation starting today

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  • These flooded coal mines are being used to heat hundreds of homes
    www.euronews.com These flooded coal mines are being used to heat hundreds of homes

    Abandoned coal mines are providing a surprisingly potent source of zero-carbon energy in Europe.

    These flooded coal mines are being used to heat hundreds of homes

    > An old coal mine has been providing an English town with green energy for the last six months. > > The ground-breaking project in Gateshead is using the warm water that has filled the tunnels to heat hundreds of homes and businesses in the former coalfield community. > > Hailed a success, the UK’s first large-scale network shows the huge potential to be found in the nation’s sprawling warren of old mining tunnels, which sit beneath roughly a quarter of homes.

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  • Largest offshore wind farm celebrates power milestone
    www.bbc.co.uk Largest offshore wind farm celebrates power milestone

    Power from the first turbine at the Dogger Bank scheme is now being sent to the UK's national grid.

    Largest offshore wind farm celebrates power milestone

    > The world's largest offshore wind farm has started producing electricity for the first time. > > Power from the first turbine at the Dogger Bank project, which is construction in the North Sea, is now being sent to the UK's national grid. > > In total 277 turbines will be powered-up at the location, situated between 81 and 124 miles (130-200km) off the Yorkshire coast. > > The wind farm is due for completion in 2026. > > ... > > Each rotation of the 107m (351ft) long blades on Dogger Bank's first operational turbine can produce enough clean energy to power an average British home for two days, SSE Renewables said. > > Once complete, Dogger Bank's offshore turbines are expected to generate 3.6GW of power - enough for six million UK homes.

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  • ‘Detached from reality’: anger as Rishi Sunak plans to restrict solar panels
    www.theguardian.com ‘Detached from reality’: anger as Rishi Sunak plans to restrict solar panels

    Climate campaigners dismiss government argument that move will improve food security

    ‘Detached from reality’: anger as Rishi Sunak plans to restrict solar panels

    > Rishi Sunak plans to restrict the installation of solar panels on swathes of English farmland, which climate campaigners say will raise bills and put the UK’s energy security at risk. > > Last year, then prime minister Liz Truss attempted to block solar from most of the country’s farmland. The plans were deeply controversial and unpopular, and were dropped when she left office. > > However, solar panels in the countryside are disliked by many rural Conservative MPs, and the Observer can reveal that Sunak and environment secretary Thérèse Coffey have revived plans to put new restrictions on this form of cheap renewable energy.

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  • 'Peer-to-peer energy trading slashes business bills by up to 90%'
    www.energylivenews.com 'Peer-to-peer energy trading slashes business bills by up to 90%' - Energy Live News

    Companies at Mildenhall Industrial Park in West Suffolk have witnessed reductions in their energy bills, ranging from 20% to 90%, through peer-to-peer energy trading

    'Peer-to-peer energy trading slashes business bills by up to 90%' - Energy Live News

    > Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) at Mildenhall Industrial Park in West Suffolk have reported reductions in their energy bills, ranging from 20% to as much as 90%, thanks to a peer-to-peer energy trading initiative. > > West Suffolk Council and Manchester-based deeptech company UrbanChain have partnered to establish a local green energy market. > > Peer-to-peer energy trading enables individuals and businesses to directly buy and sell electricity. > > West Suffolk Council has proactively invested in renewable energy infrastructure, with 272kW of solar PV installations on ten commercial buildings within Mildenhall Industrial Estate and ownership of a nearby 12MW solar farm. > > By participating in UrbanChain’s peer-to-peer energy exchange, the council’s renewable generators have seen returns at least 35% higher than prevailing market rates.

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  • UK electricity consumption hits rock bottom
    www.energylivenews.com UK electricity consumption hits rock bottom - Energy Live News

    Electricity consumption in the UK has reached its lowest level since the second quarter of 2020, primarily driven by reduced demand in all sectors, especially in the domestic sector

    UK electricity consumption hits rock bottom - Energy Live News

    > The consumption of electricity in the UK has reached its lowest levels since the second quarter of 2020, a period marked by the initial Covid-19 lockdown, which significantly curtailed energy demand. > > According to government analysis, this decline in electricity consumption is evident across all sectors, with the domestic sector experiencing the most significant reduction, down by 7.7% to 20.4TWh. > > This continued trend of decreased consumption aligns with the backdrop of increasing household expenses, including rising energy costs. > > In addition, there has been a substantial decrease in the demand for natural gas, with a 13% during the second quarter of 2023 compared to the same period in 2022. > > The total final consumption of gas also witnessed a decline of 7.5%, reflecting reduced gas demand across all sectors. > > Among these sectors, the domestic sector saw the most substantial decline, down by 9.3% compared to the same period in the previous year.

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  • Designs chosen for mini nuclear reactors
    www.constructionenquirer.com Designs chosen for mini nuclear reactors

    First contracts for next generation of nuclear power to be awarded next summer

    Designs chosen for mini nuclear reactors

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/5912949

    > EDF, GE-Hitachi Nuclear Energy International LLC, Holtec Britain Limited, NuScale Power, Rolls Royce and Westinghouse Electric Company UK Limited have been chosen for the next stage of the process. > > The Small Modular Reactor (SMR) competition is part of the government’s plan for up to a quarter of all UK electricity to come from nuclear power by 2050.

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  • UK's Onshore Wind Sector Experiences Strong Growth, Reaching 14GW Mark

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/5913604

    > >To date, the UK has installed more than 14 GW of onshore wind power and has a pipeline of planned projects totaling 23 GW. > > Cool to see the UK doing cool shit even though they left the EU.

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  • Why Scotland's renewable energy schemes are being delayed for years
    www.scotsman.com Why Scotland's renewable energy schemes are being delayed for years – Dr Sam Gardner

    The last big electricity transmission line built in Scotland took 15 years to get through permitting and construction

    Why Scotland's renewable energy schemes are being delayed for years – Dr Sam Gardner

    > if we’re to stand any chance of making that net-zero deadline, we need to be able to do all of this faster. Quite simply, green energy projects are taking far too long to clear the planning process. It takes two years to build an offshore wind farm, but ten years to get it from the drawing board and through planning; and half that for onshore. > > The last big electricity transmission line built in Scotland, Beauly-Denny, took 15 years to get through permitting and construction. By those standards, we would reach 2045 before we know it, with nothing changed. The recent Onshore Wind Sector Deal signed between the Scottish Government and the industry sets out commitments to reduce planning determination timescales, which is very welcome. > > What we now need from both the Scottish and UK governments is a commitment to speed up the planning process to one year for all new renewables as well as the grid infrastructure that connects them to the network. It’s no good building the low-carbon generation if you can’t move the power to where it’s needed. > > ... > > Dr Sam Gardner is ScottishPower’s head of climate change and sustainability

    So add salt accordingly. However, it does look like the Tories are building themselves up to be the party of NIMBYs and climate change deniers.

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  • UK streamlines planning for £20bn plan to bring power from Morocco
    www.ft.com UK streamlines planning for £20bn plan to bring power from Morocco | Financial Times

    Xlinks project seeks 25-year contract with government to guarantee a fixed electricity price

    > A £20bn plan to bring solar and wind power from the Sahara to Britain via the world’s longest sub-sea cable has been declared a project of “national significance” by Claire Coutinho, the new energy secretary. > > The designation will streamline the planning process for the scheme, whose backers claim it could bring enough electricity from Morocco to supply more than 7mn homes, or 8 per cent of Britain’s power needs. > > ... > > Under the plan, electricity from the Guelmim Oued Noun region of southern Morocco would be supplied via cables running 3,800km under the sea to the tiny North Devon village of Alverdiscott, where it would be connected to the national grid. > > Lewis said the project would have generation capacity of 10.5 gigawatts, of which 7GW would come from solar and 3.5GW from wind. “The sun shines every day there and the wind blows every evening,” he added. > > ... > > Xlinks said it is seeking a contract for 25 years guaranteeing a price of £56-£64 per MWh in 2012 prices. That is equivalent to about £77-£87 per MWh in today’s prices and is lower than the current wholesale price of about £96 per MWh. > > However, prices in Britain may well fall as more renewable power comes online. Before the recent energy crisis, prices were about £50 per MWh. > > Xlinks is seeking a higher guaranteed price than that awarded to onshore wind and solar in the UK government’s latest auction round for contracts, of £52 per MWh and £47 per MWh respectively, in 2012 prices. The contract length sought is also a decade longer than the typical 15 years.

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  • UK breaks solar records with rooftop power surge
    www.energylivenews.com UK breaks solar records with rooftop power surge - Energy Live News

    The UK has experienced a remarkable increase in rooftop solar power installations in 2023, surpassing the total installations for the entire previous year, new data shows

    UK breaks solar records with rooftop power surge - Energy Live News

    > The UK has experienced a significant surge in rooftop solar power installations in 2023, surpassing the total installations for the entire year of 2022, according to data from MCS. > > The figures show that a total of 138,336 solar photovoltaic installations have been registered since December, slightly exceeding the 137,926 recorded throughout the previous year. > > ... > > The current trajectory suggests that the UK may surpass the all-time installation record of 203,120, established during the peak of the Feed-in Tariffs regime in 2011.

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  • Wind and solar power could significantly exceed Britain’s energy needs
    www.ox.ac.uk Wind and solar power could significantly exceed Britain’s energy needs | University of Oxford

    Britain’s energy needs could be met entirely by wind and solar, according to a policy brief published today by Oxford’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment.

    Wind and solar power could significantly exceed Britain’s energy needs | University of Oxford

    > Wind and solar can provide significantly more energy than the highest energy demand forecasts for 2050 and nearly ten times current electricity demand (299 TWh/year). The research shows up to 2,896 TWh a year could be generated by wind and solar, against the demand forecast of 1,500 TWh/year. > > These estimates are intentionally conservative, accounting for common concerns around land use and the visibility of installations, say the authors. > > ‘This is a question of ambition rather than technical feasibility,’ insists lead author Dr Brian O’Callaghan. ‘The UK is already lagging in the global green race. Instead of hitting reverse, we should be turbocharging on renewables with US-style incentives and gearing up our grid for the surge that is already underway.’

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  • The next UK net zero battleground is electricity pylons
    www.theguardian.com The next UK net zero battleground is electricity pylons | Nils Pratley

    Plans involve doubling use of such energy but not everybody wants to live near power lines

    The next UK net zero battleground is electricity pylons | Nils Pratley

    > There are two big tensions in how, and how quickly, the UK gets to net zero. One was the main focus of Rishi Sunak’s speech last week in which the phasing out of sales of new petrol and diesel vehicles was delayed and gas boilers got a semi-reprieve. But the other aspect, only briefly referenced, deserves more attention: it is the reform of planning rules to allow the UK to build new electricity infrastructure, including hated pylons, at twice the pace we usually manage. > > For a prime minister who says “consent” is “the only realistic path to net zero”, there is potential for more trouble. Net zero involves doubling the UK’s use of electricity, which plainly requires more kit, but not everybody wants to live near a new high-voltage transmission line suspended on 50-metre stilts. It is hard to see how the government’s target of decarbonising the power network by 2035 (a target that survived last week’s bonfire of deadlines) can be met without upsetting a few local interests. > > The relevant passage in the speech came after the one about how we will be saved from the menace of seven recycling bins, so may have been lost in the laughter. Here’s what Sunak said: “The chancellor and energy security secretary will shortly bring forward comprehensive new reforms to energy infrastructure. We’ll set out the UK’s first ever spatial plan for that infrastructure to give industry certainty and every community a say.” > > ... > > Then consider the scale of what is being planned nationally. “In Great Britain, around four times as much new transmission network will be needed in the next seven years as was built since 1990,” said Nick Winser, the new electricity commissioner in his report to government last month. > > It has to happen so quickly for several reasons. First, there’s already a queue of projects waiting to be connected to the grid – enough to generate more than half of our future electricity needs, Sunak said. Second, the planning nightmare is having to pay renewable generators to stand idle because the system can’t handle their output; such “annual constraint costs” could rise from £500m-£1bn in 2022 to £2bn-£4bn a year by about 2030, warned Winser. Third, the 2035 deadline looms, which is why Winser was tasked with finding a way to deliver major power projects in seven years rather than the usual 14.

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  • Britain to Allow Big North Sea Oil Field, Despite Climate Concerns
    www.nytimes.com Britain to Allow Big North Sea Oil Field, Despite Climate Concerns

    A go-ahead for a long-delayed $9.4 billion drilling project is expected to support the oil industry and provide energy security, but environmental advocates were outraged.

    Britain to Allow Big North Sea Oil Field, Despite Climate Concerns

    cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/2571878

    > Archived copy

    > The British government on Wednesday gave a go-ahead to develop a large offshore oil field known as Rosebank, a move that is expected to provide a modest boost to the country’s oil and gas industry but prompted outrage from environmental groups. > > ... > > Environmental groups, however, were dismayed by the decision. > > “This is yet another colossal failure of leadership from a government that seems determined to ignore the scientific warnings on the climate crisis,” Friends of the Earth said in a statement.

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  • 'Offshore Fan Club': Octopus Energy expands local wind tariff to Lincolnshire coastline
    www.businessgreen.com 'Offshore Fan Club': Octopus Energy expands local wind tariff to Lincolnshire coastline

    Fan club tariff offers cheaper power to customers living close to offshore wind turbines

    'Offshore Fan Club': Octopus Energy expands local wind tariff to Lincolnshire coastline

    > Octopus Energy has announced it will be expanding its 'Fan Club' energy tariff to customers living on the Lincolnshire coastline between Grimsby to Skegness, linking the discounted energy offer to an offshore wind farm for the first time. > > The move, announced by the energy company this morning, marks the first UK expansion of the scheme, which was launched in 2021 for households living near onshore wind turbines in Market Weighton and Halifax in Yorkshire and Caerphilly in Wales. The tariff has since been extended to Octopus customers living near wind farms in the US and Germany. > > And now the tariff, which offers cheaper power to customers living close to wind turbines, will now be extended to customers living near an offshore wind farm part-owned by Octopus off the coast of Lincolnshire. > > Customers who sign up to the Fan Club tariff could get up to 50 per cent off their electricity when their local offshore farm is producing high levels of clean power, Octopus confirmed.

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  • Solar panel breakthrough could supercharge ‘miracle material’ production
    www.independent.co.uk Solar panel breakthrough could supercharge ‘miracle material’ production

    Perovskite is cheaper and more efficient than conventional solar cells, but it suffers from instability

    Solar panel breakthrough could supercharge ‘miracle material’ production

    > A team from the University of Surrey discovered that a nanoscale “ink” coating could improve stability enough to make next-generation perovskite solar cells suitable for mass production. > > Perovskite is cheaper and lighter than conventional silicon-based cells, as well as far more efficient, however the emerging technology currently suffers from a drop in efficiency and energy output during the manufacturing process. > > “Performance limits of traditional solar cells are why researchers are switching to examining perovskite as the next-generation solar technology, especially as applications both terrestrial and in space are rapidly growing,” said Dr Imalka Jayawardena from the University of Surrey’s Advanced Technology Institute (ATI). > > ... > > The breakthrough was made when the researchers identified an aluminium oxide that minimises the drop in efficiency during the conditioning of perovskite solar cells. > > ... > > Recent advances have seen it used to create self-healing solar panels that can recover 100 per cent of their efficiency after being damaged by radiation in space, as well as break new efficiency records when combined with silicon to form tandem cells. > > If the cheap-to-produce perovskite cells can be manufactured at scale while retaining their durability and reliability, then the cost of solar panels would plummet.

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  • Britain to import power from solar farms in Egypt

    > Sun beating down on the Egyptian desert could help to power British homes under plans being drawn up to help bolster energy security in a net zero world. > > Plans to install subsea cables connecting Egypt and Europe across the Mediterranean will see power from solar farms and wind turbines in North Africa exported to the UK and Europe. > > Exports will flow during times when low wind or poor sunshine reduce output from North Sea wind farms and onshore solar farms. Details of the project will be set out at an energy summit in London next week. > > ... > > The Egyptian project will run in parallel with another separate scheme to lay four cables directly between Morocco and the UK – a distance of about 2,400 miles.

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  • Sea windfarm in North Wales receives green light
    www.bbc.co.uk North Wales sea windfarm Awel y Môr gets green light

    In 2021 the plan was reduced from 90 turbines to between 35 and 50 after public concerns.

    North Wales sea windfarm Awel y Môr gets green light

    cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/8734610

    > Plans for a large offshore wind farm off north Wales have been given the green light by the UK government. > > Awel y Môr is described by its developer as "Wales' largest renewable energy investment this decade".

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  • Free electricity: Is it really fair?
    www.bbc.com Free electricity: Is it really fair?

    Customers are being offered free power to balance supply and demand, but who is being left out?

    Free electricity: Is it really fair?

    > With the number of solar and wind farms increasing all the time, our electricity grid is more complex than ever. > > But sometimes more power is produced in one part of the country than can be used, so they are ordered - and paid - to shut down. > > This is known as "constraint" and cost £1.2bn in 2021, which ultimately goes on to customers' bills. It is also a waste of low-carbon power. > > That is why one grid operator and one power supplier are trialling the free electricity scheme. But is it fair? > > ... > > Balancing supply and demand on the electricity grid falls to operators including UK Power Networks. Its director of innovation, Ian Cameron, said the pilot Mr Bradley took part in aimed to see if customers could "soak up excess generation" rather than "turning down" renewable generators. > > He said the grid needed consumers to "step forward and engage with the energy system". > > The peak period for electricity demand is between 17:00 BST and about 21:00 BST, Mr Cameron added, and that drawing 15% to 20% away from that period "makes a significant difference". > > ... > > The "Power-Ups" are announced around a day before the free window. Customers living in certain postcodes and who have pre-registered, can take part. > > Rosie Robison, a professor of social sustainability at Anglia Ruskin University, said it was important such schemes did not leave those on low incomes "doubly disadvantaged" because they could not make the most of them. > > Those "with more resources" and "technical know-how" may find it easier to access the scheme and save money immediately, she said.

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  • Smart meter mania sweeps UK: Record high installations
    www.energylivenews.com Smart meter mania sweeps UK: Record high installations - Energy Live News

    The UK experienced a record-breaking month for electricity smart meter installations in August, according to a report

    Smart meter mania sweeps UK: Record high installations - Energy Live News

    > In August, 213,000 electricity smart meter installations were reported, reflecting a 9% increase from August 2022. > > This figure surpassed the previous high for the year in March, which stood at 212,000 installations. > > The growing trend of smart meter adoption is attributed to rising energy costs, as households use these devices to manage consumption and monitor bills. > > To date, 1.576 million electricity smart meter installations have been completed in 2023, with East England, East Midlands and Southern England leading in installations.

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  • Fears over solar panel safety as number of fires rises six-fold
    www.independent.co.uk Fears over solar panel safety as number of fires rises six-fold

    Exclusive: The rate has increased sharply with 66 fires already recorded up until July this year compared with 63 for whole of 2019

    Fears over solar panel safety as number of fires rises six-fold

    > The number of fires involving solar panels has soared after a boom in their use driven by energy bill rises, The Independent can reveal. > > Data obtained under freedom of information rules show that there were six times the number of fires involving solar panels last year compared with 10 years ago. > > The rate has increased sharply with 66 fires already recorded up until July this year compared with 63 for the whole of 2019, prompting concern from safety experts who are worried about a lack of regulation on who can install them. > > However, new data from 45 of the UK’s 52 fire authorities, suggests that the first wave of solar panels installed under the government’s Feed in Tariff (FiT) subsidies introduced in 2010, are increasingly at risk of catching fire. > > .. > > Safety experts say there was a “gold rush” to install solar panels when the FiT was introduced and that many of these installations may have not since been tested. > > ... > >Anyone can install a solar panel in the UK but the work has to be cleared by the local council. The government recommends homeowners use a registered electrician but critics say installers are often unaware of the regulations and that panels are forgotten about and left to deteriorate over time. > > In the past, in order to qualify for the FiT scheme, both the installers and the PV components had to be accredited as safe by the Microgeneration Certification Scheme (MCS). However, it has never been a legal requirement and the scrapping of the subsidy means there is less incentive to use an accredited installer.

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  • 'Heat pumps for everyone': Octopus launches 'free' heat pump package
    www.businessgreen.com 'Heat pumps for everyone': Octopus launches 'free' heat pump package

    Energy giant says new 'Cosy Octopus' package will come at no cost for some households who can access government clean heating grant

    'Heat pumps for everyone': Octopus launches 'free' heat pump package

    > The UK heat pump price wars just cranked up a gear, after Octopus Energy unveiled a new clean heating package which it claims can be delivered at zero cost for some customers that redeem the government's £5,000 grant for low-carbon boiler upgrades. > > Revealing its latest offering at a tech summit in London this afternoon, the energy company said its new Cosy Octopus package - which includes a 6kW heat pump, controls, room sensors, service package, and energy tariff - would be available for homes from December. > > Installation of the clean heating system would be 'free' for households that do not need any additional work to fit the system in their homes after they have availed themselves of the Boiler Upgrade Scheme grant, Octopus Energy said. > > However, homes that need adjustments, such as new radiators, piping, or hot water tanks, would need to pay around roughly £3,000 to complete the installation, it said. > > ... > > Launching the package at the WIRED & Octopus Energy Tech Summit, he added that the Cosy 6 heat pump was "British designed, British manufactured [and] optimised for British homes". > > ... > > The heat pump was designed by Jason Cassells, CEO of Octopus Heating, and is the first built entirely in-house by Octopus Energy at a manufacturing site in Northern Ireland.

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  • New Partnership to Extract Rare Earth Magnets from Retired Wind Turbines for Use in New Ones
    www.offshorewind.biz New Partnership to Extract Rare Earth Magnets from Retired Wind Turbines for Use in New Ones

    Sustainable materials specialist, EMR, rare earth magnetic materials recycling company, HyProMag, Offshore Renewable Energy (ORE) Catapult, Magnomatics, and the University of Birmingham have formed a partnership which will focus on extracting the rare earth magnets from end-of-life wind turbines and...

    New Partnership to Extract Rare Earth Magnets from Retired Wind Turbines for Use in New Ones

    > Sustainable materials specialist, EMR, rare earth magnetic materials recycling company, HyProMag, Offshore Renewable Energy (ORE) Catapult, Magnomatics, and the University of Birmingham have formed a partnership which will focus on extracting the rare earth magnets from end-of-life wind turbines and enabling their use in new wind turbines, both onshore and offshore. > > Named Re-Rewind, the partnership, partly funded by Innovate UK, aims to establish the UK’s first circular supply chain for the rare earth magnets used in wind turbines. > > ... > > Looking only at the UK, it is anticipated that there will be a 240,000-tonne shortfall of rare earth magnets in 2040 and there is no consistent route to recycle these materials, due to safety, economy and technical challenges in extracting and recycling the magnets, according to Re-Rewind partners, who say their project is set to combat this impending shortage.

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  • Two UK Offshore Wind Farm Extension Projects Sign 'Good Neighbour Agreement'
    www.offshorewind.biz Two UK Offshore Wind Farm Extension Projects Sign 'Good Neighbour Agreement'

    The North Falls and Five Estuaries offshore wind projects, both extensions to existing offshore wind farms, have signed what is called a "good neighbour agreement" with regard to their connections to the UK grid.

    Two UK Offshore Wind Farm Extension Projects Sign 'Good Neighbour Agreement'

    > The agreement enables closer liaison, information sharing and joint planning, and is a result of feedback gathered through public consultation, which has shown a preference for more cooperation and coordination between the two projects on the landfall location, onshore corridor route, substation location and stakeholder engagement. > > ... > > Under the now-signed “good neighbour agreement”, each project has reduced the maximum number of export cable circuits it will include from four to two, which will result in the reduction of impacts both onshore and offshore, particularly during the construction phase, according to the North Falls joint venture. > > Furthermore, the combined construction corridor is now proposed to be 90 metres wide, rather than the previous width of up to 250 metres. > > North Falls also recently decided on the location of its landfall construction compound, which is now planned to be closer to Five Estuaries announced preferred landfall. > > The Five Estuaries offshore wind project has also recently selected its preferred substation search area which now overlaps with North Falls’ substation search area.

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  • First Turbines Up at World's Biggest Offshore Wind Farm
    www.offshorewind.biz First Turbines Up at World's Biggest Offshore Wind Farm

    The first two wind turbines have been installed at Dogger Bank A, the first of the three phases of the UK's 3.6 GW Dogger Bank Wind Farm, the world's biggest offshore wind farm under construction.

    First Turbines Up at World's Biggest Offshore Wind Farm

    > The first two wind turbines have been installed at Dogger Bank A, the first of the three phases of the UK’s 3.6 GW Dogger Bank Wind Farm, the world’s biggest offshore wind farm under construction. > > According to a Notice of Operations from the project, the first wind turbine was installed on the 29th of August and the second one was in place a few days ago. > > The work on installing the project’s 95 GE Haliade-X 13 MW wind turbines is being performed by Jan De Nul’s jack-up vessel Voltaire which left the Able Seaton Port with the first batch of components and headed to the offshore site at the beginning of last month. > > Major offshore construction work, besides the wind turbine installation, continues at the Dogger Bank A site, located 130 kilometres off the east coast of Yorkshire, with the installation of all 95 monopile foundations now completed.

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  • Anglesey tidal scheme gets green light to produce electricity for National Grid
    www.dailypost.co.uk Anglesey tidal scheme gets green light to produce electricity for National Grid

    The renewable project has been hailed 'a significant step forward for tidal stream technology'

    Anglesey tidal scheme gets green light to produce electricity for National Grid

    > Four green energy tidal stream projects have been given the green light. Marine Energy Wales has welcomed today’s announcement that tidal stream projects based in waters off Anglesey. They will provide electricity to the National Grid. > > It comes as part of the latest round of the UK Government’s renewable auction. Over 22 megawatts (MW) of tidal stream capacity has been contracted in Wales and will be deployed at Morlais Tidal Demonstration Zone on Anglesey. The projects include: > > * Hydrowing: 10MW > * Verdant: 4.9MW > * MOR Energy: 4.5MW > * Magallanes: 3MW

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  • Blow to Rishi Sunak as offshore wind auction appears to have zero bidders
    www.theguardian.com Blow to Rishi Sunak as offshore wind auction appears to have zero bidders

    Government’s goals of reaching 50GW of offshore wind by 2030 and reducing energy bills may be at risk

    Blow to Rishi Sunak as offshore wind auction appears to have zero bidders

    > No energy companies have submitted bids in the government’s offshore wind auction, sources have said, in what would be a significant blow to Rishi Sunak’s plans to meet climate targets and drive down energy bills. > > Industry insiders suggested not a single firm had taken part in the auction for financial support contracts after the government ignored warnings that the offer was too low to reflect soaring costs. > > The latest announcement, expected on Friday, could have brought an extra 5 gigawatts of power – enough to power 5m homes. Instead, consumers will miss out on savings of up to £1bn every year in annual energy usage, relying on more expensive gas instead. > > .... > > Ed Miliband, the shadow climate change secretary, told the Guardian: “If confirmed, this will be an energy disaster and a £1bn Tory bombshell that will push bills up for hardworking families. > > “The Conservatives have now trashed the industry that was meant to be the crown jewels of the British energy system … they broke the onshore wind market by banning it, they undermined the solar industry, and they caused chaos in the home insulation market. > > “Every family and business is paying the price for these failures in higher energy bills, and our country remains exposed.” > > ... > > The auction uses a mechanism known as contracts for difference, which guarantee consumers will pay a fixed price for the energy generated by the bidder. When wholesale prices are lower, subsidies added to customer bills top up the difference; when wholesale prices are higher, developers backpay the difference. > > In recent decades, the price of offshore wind power has fallen steeply. For this year’s auction, the government set a maximum price of £44 a MW hour, a similar level to the previous round. > > But the maximum seems to have been too low to attract bids. Offshore wind developers face soaring construction costs, owing to rising inflation and higher borrowing costs. > > This summer such inflationary pressures caused work to stop on a large-scale offshore windfarm off the Norfolk coast. The Swedish energy firm Vattenfall said it would cease working on the multibillion-pound Norfolk Boreas windfarm, designed to power the equivalent of 1.5m British homes, because its costs had increased by more than 40%, so it was no longer profitable. > > At the time, industry experts told ministers that unless the government’s financing approach was changed to take into account the steep increase in costs, developers would be forced to scrap or delay their plans.

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  • Offshore Construction Begins on RWE's Sofia Offshore Wind Farm
    www.offshorewind.biz Offshore Construction Begins on RWE's Sofia Offshore Wind Farm

    Offshore construction has started on RWE's 1.4 GW Sofia offshore wind farm on Dogger Bank in the central North Sea off the northeast coast of the UK.

    Offshore Construction Begins on RWE's Sofia Offshore Wind Farm

    > The offshore works are kicking off with the laying of the first section of high voltage direct current (HVDC) export cable which will be done by Prysmian’s Leonardo da Vinci vessel. > > Prysmian’s 170-metre-long vessel will operate out of the Middlesbrough Port and will lay two 130-kilometre sections of cable in parallel. > > ... > > Leonardo da Vinci will then move away from the coast, laying the full length of cable along its set route towards the offshore wind farm, located 195 kilometres from the nearest point on the UK’s northeast coast. > > Installation of two remaining 90-kilometre sections of marine export cable is planned for next year. By late 2024, Leonardo da Vinci will have laid four sections of ±320kV HVDC marine export cables with XLPE insulation, totalling 440 kilometres plus the accompanying communications cables.

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  • UK households to lose £5bn if proposed solar farm law passed
    www.independent.co.uk UK households to lose £5bn if proposed solar farm law passed

    Restricting infrastructure on farmland means electricity supply will need to be generated by more expensive methods, analysts claim

    UK households to lose £5bn if proposed solar farm law passed

    > UK households could collectively lose up to £5bn a year if a law blocking large-scale solar farms on productive agricultural land is passed, energy analysts have said. > > Tabled as an amendment to the Energy Bill, the proposed legislation would stop projects over 500 acres in size from being built when at least 20 per cent is classified as “best and most versatile agricultural land”. > > If approved, it would leave each UK household up to £180 a year worse off because the equivalent electricity would be produced by using more expensive gas instead, analysts from the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU) said.

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