It might seem my e-mail of Thursday was not effectively obtained within the Clark family.
I’m delighted to be taught Mr Clark is a buyer of Octopus Power – thanks. The e-mail in query was an invite to participate in a sensible power trial we have been working.
This experiment supplied on a regular basis prospects free electrical energy in return for halving their power use throughout two particular hours.
Throughout these two hours, Nationwide Grid was planning to supply as much as 10 occasions the traditional worth of electrical energy to fossil gasoline mills as an incentive to change on and assist meet demand (Mr Clark is mistakenly below the impression Octopus Power needed to pay these costs, however our costs are hedged and stuck months forward).
Mr Clark has ascribed this week’s difficulties in balancing the grid to our “over-reliance” on renewable wind era.
It might seem Mr Clark wasn’t factoring within the deliberate outages of a number of of the nation’s nuclear reactors – so typically touted as bastion of reliability in opposition to the whims of renewable power – nor the long-term unavailability of three gasoline energy crops after their proprietor entered administration.
However what strikes me most about Mr Clark’s writing, is he appears to be of the impression worth volatility in power is a brand new phenomenon – a symptom of the “sensible electrical energy grid”.
In fact monetary merchants have been profiting from the ups and downs of power markets for many years – the precise new information right here is that expertise now permits prospects to profit from these actions, moderately than simply the town boys.
And what a time to be becoming a member of in: in keeping with the IEA, photo voltaic PV is now the most affordable type electrical energy in historical past, coming in cheaper than the price of new gasoline or coal fired electrical energy everywhere in the world, and wind energy is there or thereabouts, and each are getting cheaper 12 months in 12 months out.
Easy economics is driving the renewable power revolution as a lot because the crucial to sort out local weather change. Put merely, with no enter prices, wind and photo voltaic are extremely low cost – and our grid is more and more benefiting from this.
Certainly, hundreds of Octopus prospects have been having fun with low cost – even free – power from the abundance of renewable electrical energy over a lot of this 12 months.
Clients on Agile Octopus, our sensible power tariff that follows the half-hourly wholesale costs, have truly been paid for the power they’ve used on greater than 20 completely different events over the previous 12 months, as plentiful renewable power has pushed costs into detrimental figures.
I typically discuss to Agile prospects who common sub 10p / kWh costs – a superb 30% lower than at the moment’s least expensive fossil-fuel offers.
Which ought to go some technique to allay Mr Clark’s sense of impending doom over the dearth of battery storage, which he bemoans as important, and but too costly.
What higher means to enhance the economics of batteries, than to permit them to take advantage of that volatility, and be paid to absorb the fantastic extra produced by a rustic uniquely blessed with simply captured wind power.
And like different applied sciences, batteries are getting cheaper yearly. Lithium Ion batteries have fallen from $1160 per KWh to $153 during the last 10 years, and proceed to fall.
Electrical automobiles are quickly turning into the brand new regular, with gross sales 185% up on a 12 months in the past. At this fee, we’re simply three or 4 years from these being the most well-liked automobiles.
With the flexibility to absorb considerable inexperienced electrons in batteries parked in streets and garages throughout the nation, they’re the proper accompaniment to a dynamic power system.
The paradox of Mr Clark’s fulminations is that if he’s keen on fossil fuels, he can simply ignore my e-mail and pay what he was going to pay, and do what he was going to do.
Ought to he change his thoughts about when he needs to make use of his electrical energy, in addition to how his electrical energy is generated, then he can also benefit from the financial advantages of the most affordable type of electrical energy within the historical past of the planet, and be part of tens of hundreds of consumers who’ve already “gone with the wind”.
I don’t see the draw back.
ps. for a learn of Mr Clark’s article:
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/gone-with-the-wind-why-electricity-shortages-are-becoming-the-norm/amp