It seems the natives are getting restless.
The cold weather has been accompanied by high pressure and a lack of wind, which meant that only 0.2pc of a possible 5pc of the UK's energy was generated by wind turbines over the last few days.
Jeremy Nicholson, director of the Energy Intensive Users Group (EIUG), gave warning that this could turn into a crisis when the UK is reliant on 6,400 turbines accounting for a quarter of all UK electricity demand over the next 10 years.
Back to January 2003 - the last time gas demand was this high He said the shortfall in power generated by wind during cold snaps seriously undermined the Government's pledge on Friday to build nine major new wind "super farms" by 2020.
"If we had this 30 gigawatts of wind power, it wouldn't have contributed anything of any significance this winter," he said. "The current cold snap is a warning that our power generation and gas supplies are under strain and it is getting worse
Coal stations are currently used as back-up generation when there is a surge in demand for gas and the wind does not blow – which both tend to happen during cold weather.
The bold of course, is mine, not that there is any surprise - to me at least - that the wind and solar industries, weak as they are, are not interested in doing what I regard as totally essential, the total phase out of dangerous fossil fuel mining and dangerous fossil fuel waste dumping.
The dangerous fossil fuel industry knows this quite well, which is why they are quite happy to fund guys like Amory Lovins and Joschka Fischer.
But they're whistling happy songs in the dark about their gas future in the UK, as the article continues:
Last week, National Grid was forced to issue two warnings about gas supply as demand surged to a record high, forcing it to ask 95 companies to turn off their pipelines.
It lifted the warning on Friday, after problems with Norwegian pipeline gas supply were fixed, but demand may continue
to rise next week with experts forecasting more snow.
In his latest podcast from Number 10, Mr Brown insisted that the UK was not running out of gas.
"National Grid has confirmed that it expects supplies to meet demand. I can assure you: supplies are not running out.
"We've got plenty of gas, of course, in our own back yard – the North Sea – and we also have access to the large reserves in Norway and Netherlands via pipelines."
They have plenty of gas, and if they don't, they can get it from Norway. Isn't that a happy thought?
The source article is here:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/6957501/Wind-farms-produced-practically-no-electricity-during-Britains-cold-snap.html">Telegraph, Jan 11, 2010.