.... the lights might go off.
This time it is no joke. The National Grid says that it has only 1.2% spare capacity and is spending £36m to keep plants on standby and paying large users to switch off in order to try to achieve 5%.
Prof. Ian Wells, energy expert and former board member of the old CEGB, said that we once had 27% spare capacity, then it dropped to 20%, but when it got as low as 15% it was deemed critical. He blamed the dash for gas and the wind rush more than the gradual closure of coal plants. He also said that this was a known problem decades ago yet still we failed to replace and increase the infrastructure.
So 1.2% must be urgent and 5% is nowhere near enough, and through it all our bills will go up.