UK's National Grid says back-up coal plants stood down for Monday evening
24 Jan 2023
Britain's National Grid has
stood down plans to fire up coal plants on Monday evening which it had asked
operators on Sunday to get ready in case high power demand meant they needed to
provide extra electricity.
A spokesman for National Grid, which is
responsible for ensuring the country's electricity supply, said by telephone on
Monday the supply picture had improved since it issued the notice.
(This story has not been edited by
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Europe an Union
proposals to overhaul its electricity market will attempt to better protect
consumer energy bills from short-term swings in fossil fuel prices, the Europe an Commission said
on Monday. The EU is reforming its power market to attempt to avoid a repeat of
last year, when cuts to Russian gas
supply drove Europe an electricity prices to record levels, hiking
bills for households and forcing some industries to close.
In a public consultation launched on
Monday, the Commission laid out numerous options to overhaul the way
power plants sell electricity, as part of the market reform it will propose in
March. "We need to make the electricity market design fit for the future,
allowing it to deliver the benefits of affordable clean energy to
everyone," EU energy commissioner Kadri Simson said.
The EU proposal will aim to expand Europe 's
use of long-term contracts that provide power plants with a fixed price for
their electricity - "contracts for difference" (CfD) and power
purchase agreements (PPA), the Commission said.
Expanding these types of contracts would create a buffer between energy
consumers and volatile prices in short-term energy markets, yielding more
stable energy bills for households and companies, it said.
This could be done through introducing
specific EU rules for CfDs and leaving it up to national governments to decide
to use them, or requiring new power plants that receive state support to sign CfDs .
More radical changes, like allowing national governments to impose CfDs on
certain existing power plants, were also possible - though the Commission said
this could create uncertainty that would risk deterring much-needed investment
in renewable power.