Britain’s electricity grid struggled this week due to surging demand and reduced domestic energy production, driven by the country’s ongoing heatwave and poor energy policies, forcing emergency power imports at extraordinary cost.
| PULSE POINTS |
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: The British government has paid Europe 15 times the normal rate for emergency electricity imports as energy demand surges past domestic supply amid an ongoing heatwave. At the same time, it continues to block new oil and gas drilling in the North Sea. 📺 DETAIL: The United Kingdom was hit by a record-breaking and ongoing heatwave this week. The British heat record for the month of June was broken for a third day in a row on Friday, with 36.9C recorded in Suffolk, southern England. The heatwave has caused a spike in demand for energy as the British public tries to stay cool and hydrated. In response, the National Energy System Operator (Neso) hurried to secure emergency energy suppliers as domestic generation fell short of demand and the nation’s power grid was plunged into crisis. On Wednesday evening, it was revealed that Britain paid almost £1,400 per megawatt hour for European electricity, approximately 1,600 percent above typical European rates and around 15 times normal wholesale prices. The emergency electricity imports, which mainly came from the Netherlands, totaled 2.3 gigawatts, costing an estimated £11 million for just one evening. Neso required permission from the European Union to import the emergency energy. The crisis was exacerbated by several factors, including reduced solar panel efficiency created by extreme heat, gas-fired power plants undergoing routine maintenance, and four of Britain’s nuclear reactors being offline for repairs or unplanned maintenance. 🎯 IMPACT: The energy crisis has highlighted critical vulnerabilities in British energy infrastructure. Critics have pointed to Neso’s failure to accurately predict demand and prepare ahead of time. Britain already has some of the highest energy costs in the developed world. As such, the crisis underscores both the priciness of British energy and the heatwave’s impact on the cost of living. 📺 FLASHBACK: Local councils have ordered Britons to remove air conditioning (AC) units from their homes to achieve Net Zero targets. Officials in London councils are enforcing a “cooling hierarchy” that treats AC as a last resort after passive measures like opening windows or using fans. Some residents have been told to permanently dismantle units already installed. Prior to his resignation, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer was warned by President Donald J. Trump that he was failing on immigration and energy extraction, particularly with respect to North Sea oil and gas. |
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