Wind farm paid £1.2 million to
produce no electricity
A wind farm has been paid £1.2 million not to produce electricity for eight-and-a-half hours.
By
Edward Malnick and Robert Mendick
The
amount is ten times greater than the wind farm's owners would have received had
they actually generated any electricity.
The
disclosure exposes the bizarre workings of Britain's electricity supply,
prompting calls last night for an official investigation into the payments
system.
The
£1.2 million will go to a Norwegian company which owns 60 turbines in the
Scottish Borders.
The
National Grid asked the company, Fred Olsen Renewables, to shut down its
Crystal Rig II wind farm last Saturday for a little over eight hours amid fears
the electricity network would become overloaded.
The
problem was caused by high winds buffeting the country in the wake of Hurricane
Katia.
In total, 11 wind farms were closed down
last week, receiving a total of £2.6 million. The money - detailed in
calculations provided by National Grid - will be added on to household bills
and paid for by consumers.
As Britain pushes for more and more wind farms,
critics claim the size of the 'constraint payments' will grow accordingly -
raising serious concern about the long-term suitability of wind power to meet
Britain's energy needs.
Crystal Rig received by far the largest single
payment because the National Grid runs an auction, inviting energy companies to
say how much they want in compensation for switching off.
Crystal Rig's owners asked for £999 per
megawatt hour of energy they would have produced had they been switched on.
Incredibly, the figure Crystal Rig had bid was accepted by the National Grid.
Had the turbines remained on, Crystal Rig's
owners would have received the going rate of about £100 per megawatt hour
instead. Half of that is in the form of a generous consumer subsidy.
Tim Yeo, chairman of the Energy and Climate
Change Select Committee, called for an urgent inquiry into the prices paid to
the wind farms.
"The very principle of paying wind farm
owners for not producing is one that is offensive to consumers," said Mr
Yeo, "It looks like a new version of the Common Agricultural Policy where
people are paid not to produce things.
"It looks on the face of it like an
extraordinary overpayment by National Grid, for which an urgent explanation is
required. This requires an immediate investigation by the energy watchdog
Ofgem."
The National Grid runs a 'balancing mechanism'
to ensure electricity supply meets national demand. Electricity cannot be
stored.
In a further twist, traditional coal- and
gas-fired power stations were also running on reduced power last week - but
energy companies actually paid the National Grid to do so. That is because the
companies made savings by not having to burn as much fossil fuel.
Dr John Constable, director of the Renewable
Energy Foundation, an energy think tank which spotted the size of the payment
at Crystal Rig, said: "This system appears to be unreasonable, is
certainly not in the consumer interest, and requires the urgent attention of
the regulator, Ofgem.
"These very high constraint payments show
that the scale and pace of government's subsidy-driven push for wind has
outstripped National Grid's ability to integrate this uncontrollable source of
energy at tolerable cost. A pause for thought would seem to be wise."
The National Grid spokesman said: "The
payments are based on what the operators bid and how many megawatt hours are
constrained off."
The spokesman said they took the cheapest bids
first before being forced to accept the Crystal Rig bid in order "to
operate the network safely".
A spokesman for Fred Olsen Renewables said:
"Crystal Rig is one of the largest wind farms in the UK so it is one of
the last farms we intend to get switched off, so the price is set that high.
"There are about four or five developers
who do the same thing, set it at the £999 level to try and keep it up as long
as possible. Crystal was one of the last to be shut off."
An Ofgem spokesman said: "We routinely
monitor the market and over the past few days we have been looking carefully at
the bidding behaviour of generators behind constraints, including wind
generators.
RenewableUK, the industry trade body, said wind
farms were not the only sources of energy to be occasionally paid to be shut
down.
A spokesman said: "Wind turbines are
generating a great deal of clean, green energy – the problem is that the
National Grid simply doesn't have the capacity to take it all in.
"This shows that we urgently need the
National Grid to be upgraded to cope with the extra electricity that the wind
industry is generating with increasing efficiency."
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