Workingman wrote:These idiots need to move away from their spreadsheets and visit the real world.
I read the summary. Not located in time and place in sanity.
Electrified vehicles must be 80% of vehicle fleets by 2030 anyway, that has not changed. 100% is ambitious but actually Norway proved it could be done.
Offshore wind, not a chance, the inflation over the last few years killed expansion. Although they did say significantly change the CFD Which could drive a significant increase in uptake, even as much as 3x, but the government cost could exceed 10x for that. However physical reality intrudes again. We won't be AT our 2030 goal even if they do accept the new CFD because it takes about a decade to build these out.
Onshore is actually something interesting. The most powerful wind turbine in the UK today is 4.1mw and I understand there is ONE, singular, of these. This is because of planning restrictions. The most powerful wind turbine available today is 15MW and the power ratings keep going up. It would be possible, with planning relaxation, to easily double onshore wind generation simply by replacing about 20% of current existing wind turbines with the current highest capacity turbines placed in the highest generating areas of the UK.
Onshore wind is the single largest renewable source which can be very quickly deployed and have a high impact. However my take is that doubling would be easy however trying to put in place the same as offshore will rapidly run into location issues and capacity issues. Which is why I favour more offshore which also has the very highest generation time percentage now reaching over 50% with the very largest turbines.
Solar is another really interesting one. Pay for the solar, let people get the money from the panels and the entire business will go into overdrive. We did it under Cameron and it worked. However, again, you need to open the purse strings and let money flow like water.
In short the name "dreamscape" is fairly accurate for where we are today.
Offshore wind is never going to make it, the logistics and construction timeline will not allow. The rest? EV? Onshore wind? Solar? They are viable. Heat pumps? Again if they make them essentially free, the new gas boiler market would halve overnight.
So in the end it comes down to this. Does the government have the will to borrow the money to give away on making this change? Under the Conservatives, the answer was NO. Under this Labour government? Honestly only time will tell and I just don't know.
As for reducing the price of electricity artificially? Yes they need to get away from their spreadsheets and enter the real world. Ditto fixing government property in 6 years and some of the other touchy feely BS in there.