https://www.cornwall-insight.com/cornwa ... yvbsNZ2LFQ
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Exactly, what we have is producers selling for what "the market" is willing to pay rather than what the product costs to supply. I am not convinced this is how strategically important resources should be traded. This is not how we were sold privatisation and free markets, I well remember Thatchers bullshit at the time, now the chickens have come home to roost and a lot of us are in for some very hard times. This is demonstrably terrible for the country and anyone who hasn't got very deep pockets.nowty wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 10:39 pm One way of looking at it is,
I'm a wholesaler of aluminium (or whatever) and I have two tonnes for sale and there are buyers for both tonnes which are of the same specification.
Each tonne comes from a different manufacturer and they can only supply me with one tonne each so the supply and demand is exactly equal. Manufacturer B has a manufacturing process cost 6 times higher than that of manufacturer A.
Manufacturer A still sells me the aluminium at the price its competitor B sells it for even though its own costs are 6 times cheaper because it knows the buyers have to buy it and there is no more excess aluminium on the market.
So I as a wholesaler also have to charge the buyers the same high price for both tonnes of aluminium even though I know the aluminium from manufacture A cost a lot less to make.
Leccy is leccy no matter who or how its generated and there is going to be a shortage of it in Europe this winter to the point that power cuts may happen.
National Grid is already drawing up emergency plans, its all over the press today.