Wind turbines take a break as heatwave set to hit UK

Bloomberg

Thousands of wind turbines from Germany to the UK are set to grind to a halt next week, cutting electricity supplies at the same time as the next wave of hot weather arrives.
As the warmest second quarter in 30 years draws to a close, next-month power prices in Europe’s biggest economy are already trading at their highest for this time of year since 2011. The drop in wind, coupled with forecasts for hotter-than-normal weather across Northwest Europe, could give wholesale rates another lift. “The potent combination of low wind availability and a heat wave could lead to power prices spiking, with utilities ramping up output from higher-cost thermal power stations,” said Elchin Mammadov, a utilities analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence in London.
German wind farms have underpinned the country’s radical shift away from fossil fuels. Since they get priority to feed electricity into the grid, they’ve hurt traditional utilities by preventing coal and gas plants from selling their power at times, reducing margins at those facilities.
Temperatures in England and Wales could reach as high as 32 degrees Celsius (90 Fahrenheit) next week, according to the Met Office.
Much warmer-than-usual weather will spread from the UK and southern Scandinavia into France and Germany by the end of the month, forecaster Radiant Solutions said in a report.
“We’ll certainly be looking at conditions which many of us would call a heatwave,” said Frank Saunders, chief Meteorologist at the Met Office.
All wind farms experience lulls from time to time. In Britain, turbines produced almost no electricity for more than a week at the start of this month. The UK also is due to have fewer breezes in the coming days than it did this week.
The current examples of Britain and Germany show that despite the boom in renewable energy, Europe still needs conventional power plants, Mammadov said.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend