This discussion is locked.
You cannot post a reply to this discussion. If you have a question start a new discussion

Generation

I'd noticed recently on www.gridwatch.templar.co.uk/ that gas-fired generation had been surprisingly flat - normally it seems to be the first choice for responding to changes in demand after the renewables have done what they can - usually increasing in a morning as demand increases, then dipping as solar generates more during the middle of the day and then increasing again for the late afternoon/evening peak. Recently though it seems to almost flat-lining at around 15GW all day every day (other than early Sunday morning).

My guess was that we were running gas flat out and exporting the extra to the continent to make up for their shortfall due lack of generation from Russian gas ... but it sounds like they're having a lot more problems than I anticipated: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-62524551 (not just drought as the story title implies, but serious corrosion problems with many Nuclear plants too).

   - Andy.

Parents
  • It is not obvious in the rolling graphs but if you download the data, I think that coal has been doing a daily cycle as well, maybe they'd rather shed coal before gas so gas is less wobbly  also it looks the day/night demand variation has not been so noticeable - perhaps the hot weather  having an effect ? I must admit I'd expect an inverse to the day night solar peak but it is not obvious.

Reply
  • It is not obvious in the rolling graphs but if you download the data, I think that coal has been doing a daily cycle as well, maybe they'd rather shed coal before gas so gas is less wobbly  also it looks the day/night demand variation has not been so noticeable - perhaps the hot weather  having an effect ? I must admit I'd expect an inverse to the day night solar peak but it is not obvious.

Children
No Data