spread-tee wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2024 6:04 pm So what?? In the UK we have about 75GW of generation connected yet we rarely if ever need the full 75Gigs, there has ale=ways been capacity sitting around idle costing money to staff and maintain for when it is needed, curtailed if you like. This has been the same ever since Mr Elec built the first Tron, so why we are getting jumpy about it now baffles me. The argument we need to build a load of reserve to back up heatpumps made up there is not really true either. We already have a perfectly good back up system in place and in use as we speak, build the heatpump system to cope with 95% of the demand and revert to our existing heating systems when needed.
A bit of creative plumbing and policy making is needed though so don't hold your breath
It's not the same thing it'd not even an order of magnitude close to each other
A 1GW CCGT might operate say 2,000 hours of the year
If it cost £500m to build at 7% interst that's £35M over 2,000h = £17.5k / 1000MWh = £17.50/MWh
But your marginal transmission cost €2.5B /GW
And you only need it 1 week in 30 years to power your heat pums in the coldest winter week in memory
So that's 170 hours you need it
But it cost you €2.5B x 7% interst x 30 years = 5.25B / 170h / 1000MWh = €30,900 /MWh
That's about 2,000x more costly
That's the issue with building infrastructure You only need for 1 weeks worst winter in memory
Or.... just don't do it and accept a few hundred thousand frozen old people when half the grid fails
This hasn't been a issue for us becuase for the best part of 20 years we have had falling peak demand thanks mostly to LEDs replacing incandescent lights. But going forward if you want yo buuld out 40 million heat pumps you are going to need transmission and distribution built to feed those heat pumps not on average winter days but the coldest winter nights every generation