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The hidden cost of net zero

https://www.thegwpf.org/content/uploads/2020/07/Travers-Net-Zero-Distribution-Grid-Replacement.pdf?utm_source=CCNet+Newsletter&utm_campaign=85fbfa3557-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2020_07_16_12_54_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_fe4b2f45ef-85fbfa3557-36405153&mc_cid=85fbfa3557&mc_eid=1127dc9b41


If you aren't aware, worth a read through.
Parents
  • I have been aware of most of the issues mentioned for quite some time, I rarely see a domestic property that has an electrical supply suitable for the installation of an EV charger, it is easy to see why those carrying out EV charger installation work do a “remote survey” with potential customers being told to send photos rather than a surveyor wasting time and money going to have a look prior to submitting a quote as there are so many properties where it is just not viable.


    This section made interesting reading:

    ”Before 1990, when new streets and houses were built, a three-phase cable was buried down the street. The wires had dif- ferent colour insulation on them, – red, yellow or blue – so it was easy to identify the phase of the supply for any given house. Next- door houses would be connected to different phases – in other words to a different one of the three wires. So No 2 would be con- nected to red, No 4 to yellow, No 6 to blue, and No 8 to red again. This meant that the load on the three phases should be roughly the same. Later EU ‘harmonisation‘ meant that this simple and ef- fective system was thrown away. In more recent cabling, the three live phases are all insulated in brown (with neutral in black and the earth green and yellow). So now it is nearly impossible to identify which phase goes into which house. “


    I had not realised that phases are not being identified in cables supplying new buildings. 


    Andy Betteridge
Reply
  • I have been aware of most of the issues mentioned for quite some time, I rarely see a domestic property that has an electrical supply suitable for the installation of an EV charger, it is easy to see why those carrying out EV charger installation work do a “remote survey” with potential customers being told to send photos rather than a surveyor wasting time and money going to have a look prior to submitting a quote as there are so many properties where it is just not viable.


    This section made interesting reading:

    ”Before 1990, when new streets and houses were built, a three-phase cable was buried down the street. The wires had dif- ferent colour insulation on them, – red, yellow or blue – so it was easy to identify the phase of the supply for any given house. Next- door houses would be connected to different phases – in other words to a different one of the three wires. So No 2 would be con- nected to red, No 4 to yellow, No 6 to blue, and No 8 to red again. This meant that the load on the three phases should be roughly the same. Later EU ‘harmonisation‘ meant that this simple and ef- fective system was thrown away. In more recent cabling, the three live phases are all insulated in brown (with neutral in black and the earth green and yellow). So now it is nearly impossible to identify which phase goes into which house. “


    I had not realised that phases are not being identified in cables supplying new buildings. 


    Andy Betteridge
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