cromwell wrote:I think it's closed for repairs atm but it's well worth a visit. And like WM says there must be thousands of sites like this that could be used. Hardraw Force waterfall just down the road from Hawes being another.
I did a real deep dive into this today. The key problem with renewables is a two word phrase
"Capacity Factor".
Essentially the capacity factor of standard power stations is around 90%. The station is rated to the max capacity, it runs 24x7 and delivers almost exactly that capacity. The capacities for renewables are significantly lower. Large dams are around 23%, solar is between 10% and 30% depending on how close to the equator you are. Small river wier based systems are nearer 50%, tidal river flow is near 50% and wind is around 48% for offshore but drops to 15%-30% on land.
Nuclear is 90%, waste and geothermal are both around 65% and biomas is just under 50%.
So you can see why the government is investing in offshore wind, biomas and nuclear. Wind is cheap and easy, not wonderful but a quick win. Biomas is also cheap and easy and, whilst not so quick, is more consistent than wind.
I missed the part about tidal lagoons. The capacity factor of a tidal lagoon is normally 10%. Swansea would not be expected to be any more. The figures given out by the project were designed to confuse. They gave the
nameplate (Absolute max) and the
load factor but they did not give the all important
capacity factor. If you do a bit of digging, you see what the
capacity factor of a tidal lagoon is.
However, if you replace the tidal lagoon with 128 instances of the
Kirkthorpe hydro plant, you still wind up with a shortfall.
I messed about with the figures and if you take the status quo and use 128 instances of Kirkthorpe, you still wind up topping up the strike price of electricity to £90 per MWh for the next 40 years.
That is, if you keep things are they are. Wholesale electricity is £42 per MWh. But we buy it at £150 per MWh. The only way to make any of these things make sense is for the government to become a power utility. To do the builds itself and operated them for the next decade or so. The government can then sell the plants for 3/4 of the cost price of producing them (they have almost repaid themselves), and take that money to do it all over again.
Don't, however, expect any of the governments to think of that one. Labour is "Nationalise and to hell with it", the Tories are "No public utilities and to hell with hit" and the Lib Dems don't count, although they would be the most likely to follow that idea.
What are we left with?
Wind and Nuclear with a bit of Biomas going on in the middle.
Geothermal?? What's that!
Of course there is always the brand new NASA "kilopower". A hybrid of nuclear heat and sterling heat engines. 10 years, no maintenance and just take the power.