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U.K. Faces Winter Blackouts Risk After Fire Knocks Out Cable

U.K. Gets Closer to Winter Blackouts After Fire Knocks Out Cable

Winter blackouts are now a real possibility after a fire took out a key cable that ships electricity to the U.K. from France. 

Electricity is now so scarce in Britain that any more grid mishaps or unexpected plant outages could leave millions without power. Even before the fire, National Grid Plc’s buffer of spare winter capacity was set to be the smallest for five years. 

“If we don’t start to remedy the situation we are going to be facing blackouts this winter,” Catherine Newman, chief executive officer of Limejump Ltd., a unit of Royal Dutch Shell Plc, said Thursday on Bloomberg TV. “If things don’t start to reverse soon we will see industry getting turned off across the board.”

U.K. Faces Winter Blackouts Risk After Fire Knocks Out Cable

With the cable to France knocked out, Britain has little margin of error to keep the lights on. 

“If anything goes wrong, we might not have anything left in the back pocket,” said Tom Edwards, a consultant at Cornwall Insight Ltd., an adviser to the government and utilities. “If a nuke trips offline or something else big, that could cause issues because we might not have anything to replace it.”

Beyond the immediate chaos a blackout would cause, a prolonged shutdown could have severe economic consequences. Just as Britain emerges from the pandemic, power outages would send energy prices even higher, compounding concerns about inflation and adding to the rising costs businesses are already shouldering for raw materials. 

Britain imports and exports power along six huge cables, and two of them are connected to France. The electricity flows to the market with the highest price. On average, about 7.5% of U.K. demand has been met by power from France’s 56 nuclear plants this year.

U.K. Faces Winter Blackouts Risk After Fire Knocks Out Cable

Now supply from France is set to be diminished. With half of the cable’s capacity expected to be cut off until the end of March 2022, the shortage will impact prices well into next year. The rest of the capacity is set to come online by Sept. 25, but that will depend on the extent of the damage and whether the cable can be operated safely. 

“The outage is going to lift the potential for price volatility as long as its offline,” said Glenn Rickson, head of power analysis at S&P Global Platts. 

Power prices have sailed through records this month as a period of calm weather reduced wind generation at the same time as nuclear outages were extended. The unprecedented rally in gas prices in the U.K. and Europe also pushed up the cost of using the fuel to make power. 

National Grid sounded an early warning back in July that the U.K.’s ability to meet peak demand would be more strained this year. For now, the situation looks manageable.

“We’ll have a clearer view on any longer term impact of the IFA-1 outage in the coming days,” a spokesman said. “Currently we’re still forecasting that we’ll have sufficient margin to continue securely supplying electricity over winter.”

The interconnector outage doesn’t necessarily mean a blackout today but as the weather gets colder and demand picks up in October and November, the system will get even tighter, Andreas Gandolfo, an analyst at BloombergNEF said.

What National Grid will do to keep the lights on:

1. Electricity Margin Notice

A warning to the market from the control room that the buffer of spare capacity isn’t as big as it would like. It’s a request to producers to ramp up output.

2. Capacity Market Notice

These are automatically published four hours in advance as a warning that there may be less generation available than the grid expects to need to meet demand. The notice signals that a system stress event is more likely than normal.

3. High Risk of Demand Control

This is a warning that demand for electricity is greater than the levels of supply available.

4. Demand Control Imminent

National Grid is instructing local grid operators to start cutting demand by reducing voltage, which may not affect supply, or in more severe situations they might temporarily disconnect some consumers for a short period of time to reduce demand. This is “extremely rare and unusual” according to the National Grid website.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.