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grw_ | 1 year ago

That's great- but UK has almost highest energy cost in Europe- almost €0.48/kWh. By comparison France (which has consistently invested in nuclear for the past half-century) has almost half that. Until UK has enough energy that it can be priced as in other European nations it will suffer with low competitiveness of energy-intensive industries.

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energy123|1 year ago

Okay, but why is it expensive? The insinuation of your comment is that wind energy is to blame for high costs, and nuclear is the reason for low costs. But in the US, some of the cheapest energy is in states with wind higher than the UK at 60%, such as Iowa.

Perhaps the blame is because the previous Tory government banned onshore wind, the cheapest form of wind energy, a ban only lifted recently under Starmer? I don't know the reason, but it deserves a more serious analysis.

grw_|1 year ago

My comment wasn't implying that importance of wind in the UK energy mix (or lack of investment in nuclear) is specifically the reason for high costs but I agree that government policy is indeed to blame.

As to whether the cause is Tory ban of onshore wind- I'm skeptical. I don't think wind is any cheaper than gas once you include the necessary energy storage capacity- especially when there is huge amounts of gas sitting under the north sea which the new Labour government is planning to ban pumping: https://www.forbes.com/sites/gauravsharma/2024/07/12/sudden-...

secondcoming|1 year ago

In the UK energy prices are linked to natural gas prices.

verzali|1 year ago

Where do you get that price from?

This report - https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-... - from a few days ago says "the average price of electricity 23.4 p/kWh", which is €0.28/kWh.

France is generally cheaper, but I can tell you I pay more than €0.20/kWh and probably closer to €0.25 if I actually check my bills...

rjwilmsi|1 year ago

23.4 p/kWh sounds about right. When prices go up next month (October 2024) I will be paying 30.5p / kWh day and 13.2p / kWh overnight (midnight to 7 am). Those are retail/consumer prices subject to government price cap, I believe commercial customers pay more.

happymellon|1 year ago

Unfortunately electricity is priced at the most expensive rate. So wind is significantly cheaper to produce than gas, however since gas turbines are still part of the overall grid we pay gas prices for wind power.

We have the most expensive electricity, and its either going to require complete replacement of gas produced electric or replacement of all contracts. I think I can have a good guess as to what is most likely to happen first.

tialaramex|1 year ago

No, the wholesale prices are the most expensive clearing price as otherwise somebody is getting paid less than they agreed and why should anybody participate in a "market" where that happens?

Maybe it's easier to see why this is how it works with physical goods in a model rather than fungible electricity and numbers that make no human sense.

We want to buy 100 oranges.

Alice has 40 oranges, and she's willing to part with them for 60p each

Bob has 18 oranges, he wants 56p

Carol has 36 oranges, wants 70p each (!)

Dave has 60 oranges for only 49p

If we insist on having Alice's Oranges and Dave's Oranges but only paying 49p each for them, obviously Alice is going to be very angry about that, we're stealing her oranges, she didn't agree to be paid this little. Also Bob would likely be somewhat angry, he thought we'd buy his cheaper oranges, and instead we just stole Alice's !

So, what we actually do is we take all Dave's oranges, all Bob's oranges, and twenty two of Alice's oranges, and we pay Alice's price for all 100 of them.

Now, Dave has a lot of power here, because we need 100 oranges which the other orange suppliers couldn't cover without him, he could set his price as high as he likes. So it's important under a system like this to ensure you have lots of suppliers so that nobody gets as much power as Dave has.

Unlike our model orange market, the wholesale electricity market is thirty minutes at a time. So 48 prices per day. So if the wind picks up for a few hours at night, for those hours most likely the clearing price will be set by wind prices, the gas generators stay online (typically better to lose a few quid per MWh to idle at low power than eat the restart cost on those generators although you might want to schedule any maintenance for predicted high wind periods) but the prices are set by wind.

In spring that happens fairly often, might even happen for several days in a row. Mid-winter, not so much.

sirk390|1 year ago

> France ("consistently invested in nuclear for the past half-century" ).

Not really and this is currenctly causing a big problem. France stopped building new reactors after 2002. They only built 1 new generation EPR, which was very late and 6x the cost. Many of the reactors are very old and need to be replaced, but it's difficult to do because of the bad experiences of Flamanville's reactor.

BenoitP|1 year ago

1 > 0. And most of the cost comes from maintaining engineer's salaries on a single project.

If new projects get ordered I'm quite confident costs will move closer to the actual bill of materials, per unit.

mattlondon|1 year ago

I had the same thought back when the Ukraine war started and gas prices soared. "It's ok" I thought " I am on a tarrif that pays a penny more per kWh to use 100% renewable energy so my price should not be impacted by gas prices". How naive was I - prices obviously shot up.

They just charge for the most expensive generation method for all electric usage on the grid from what I can tell, regardless of source.

Not sure if this is a "UK problem" in terms of regulations or legacy infrastructure, or if there is some more general economic-theory behind it.

Someone|1 year ago

> I am on a tarrif that pays a penny more per kWh to use 100% renewable energy so my price should not be impacted by gas prices". How naive was I - prices obviously shot up.

> or if there is some more general economic-theory behind it.

It’s economics 101: supply and demand. If electricity from renewable sources wouldn’t get more expensive, demand for it would soar. Since supply can only follow slowly (it takes time to build wind farms/install solar panels), demand would outstrip supply, so prices go up.

rjwilmsi|1 year ago

To me it made sense to price electricity at retail based on gas price when gas was the main source and the cost for that source is mostly about the market fuel cost. (There were and are other price guarantee schemes for nuclear where the ongoing fuel cost is only a small part of total costs. And the grid electricity price for wind is agreed by another set of rules - strike price).

However, we're now beyond that point so it seems to me that the pricing model should change. With the planned growth rate of new wind (and solar) by 2030 for the UK I assume it's going to happen one way or another.

mavhc|1 year ago

Why should the wind farm get paid less than the gas power station? They should be paid more for not polluting

tialaramex|1 year ago

Nobody else seems to have explained what happened here so I guess I'll attempt to do so.

As you probably noticed, although you have a "100% renewable energy" tariff, the company who sold you this tariff did not lay new cables to your home to supply this energy. Indeed, they don't lay any cables, anywhere, they're just a paper company, they have an office maybe, a call centre, maybe a few web servers in the cloud. Clearly they do not make "100% renewable energy" and they couldn't deliver it to you if they did.

Instead your home is hooked up to exactly the same electricity as everybody else in your area, by a specialist supplier who deliver electricity to everybody (well, all ordinary residential customers and most small businesses, the situation for an industrial Aluminium Smelter or whatever isn't the same) but don't have you (or any of your neighbours) as direct customers. This is good news - when it's dead calm and dark, but freezing cold, your electricity still works because it's the same electricity as your neighbours.

So what were you buying for one penny per kWh extra? In the UK when a wind farm makes electricity they get an imaginary coupon for the fact that this is "green" renewable energy called a Renewable Energy Guarantee of Origin or REGO, they can snip this coupon off the electricity and sell these two things separately. The electricity is valuable (in another response elsewhere I might cover why it might be more valuable for them but it's irrelevant to you) and so obviously they should sell that for the prevailing market price or better if they can. But the REGO eh, not so much. But they can sell it, even if for not very much, and so they do.

You are paying one penny per kWh for a promise that your supplier will buy enough REGOs to add up to the amount of electricity you used. That probably cost them much less than a tenth of a penny per kWh. So, really you just gave them free money.

In theory if most electricity users in the UK cared, and bought these "100% renewable" tariffs, the REGOs could go up in value and you'd make a real difference and it would all be worthwhile. In reality very few UK consumers even bother to pick a cheaper electricity tariff, let alone seeking a "renewable" tariff. So, next time your tariff renewal comes up, ignore whether it's "renewable" that's not better or worse, just focus on price. Wanting to do good is an excellent motive, but this is the wrong place to attempt that.

IshKebab|1 year ago

> €0.48/kWh

This is way off. It's actually capped at €0.29/kWh at the moment. If you're talking about wholesale prices it's even more way off, and basically the same as France.

https://www.ofgem.gov.uk/energy-price-cap

https://tradingeconomics.com/united-kingdom/electricity-pric...

brnt|1 year ago

I wish I as a consumer could pay wholesale prices! Naturally, there is a whole cottage industry, namely consumer energy market, trying to trick us into overpaying.

zipy124|1 year ago

That's because of the way pricing is set in the UK.

If the UK Grid needs 1001 MWs for a day and can source 1000 MWs at £0.05/Kwh from wind and 1MW at £0.50/Kwh from gas, then it pays £0.50/Kwh for both. This gives larger profits to cheaper sources of electricity, therefore hoping that it will accelerate the growth. Whether this works or not is up for debate.

TLDR: We pay the most expensive price for all electricity regardless of its cost.

Easy explainer: https://www.sustainabilitybynumbers.com/p/electricity-pricin...

oezi|1 year ago

What I don't understand: If solar and wind cost 5-7 cents / kWh, but really is able to charge double or triple, then it should be a very lucrative investment. Shouldn't this lead to massive build-out?

gnfargbl|1 year ago

The actual mean price I have paid for electricity this calendar year is £0.14/kWh (€0.17/kWh). This is using Octopus Agile, which is an hourly tariff which tracks the market.

I do have an EV and try to charge it at the lowest possible rate (including an occasional negative rate when it's very windy), which brings the average down.

tlocke|1 year ago

Comparing electricity costs between countries probably says more about government subsidies than the underlying cost of generation. Nuclear fission is an expensive source of electricity (see the high subsidies for Hinckley C) and so I suspect France's nuclear power is heavily subsidised.

throw0101c|1 year ago

> Nuclear fission is an expensive source of electricity (see the high subsidies for Hinckley C) and so I suspect France's nuclear power is heavily subsidised.

There are no subsidies in Ontario, Canada, and nuclear is the second cheapest (CA$ 0.101/kHw) after hydro-electric (6.2¢/kWh); see Table 2:

* https://www.oeb.ca/sites/default/files/rpp-price-report-2023...

ZeroGravitas|1 year ago

If the UK adopted regional pricing, Scotland would have the lowest electricity costs in Europe. (And, every region would see cost go down).

Notably, the previous Conservative government managed to effectively ban onshore wind power in England, but not in Scotland.