The first 8MW were installed in the last 2 years and there aren't that many of them out there yet.
Burbo Bank 2 has them and has installed capacity of 254MW or less then 1/4 of Heysham.
It is currently operating at 37%, one of the best rates in the sector, so that's an actual capacity of 94MW.
And Heysham is old technology you are comparing the capacity of wind turbines that might be running in the UK in 5-10 years at 30-40% with a 40+ year old technology that's due to close in 5 years.
There are wider issues with wind as well, as have been touched on by others.
Richard Taylor
"William Tell could take an apple off your head. Taylor could take out a processed pea."
Sid Waddell
87 8MW off Walney, so there are a few, plus a bunch more off the East coast, I agree Heysham is old tech, I only picked it as it was local I am a nuclear fan, modern process control will prevent any major disasters barring operator error but this not withstanding, nuclear has and does leave a terrible legacy for future generations
Not MSR Daletown. MSR will help remove the legacy from old nuclear tech. We really should be pushing for it.
Simon Blease
Monmouth
I think the animal kingdom will do a whole lot better when we humans are not around.
https://news.nationalgeographic.com/...ed-extinction/
We must not forget that Humans are just a part of the planets Eco System and as such no more important than any other particular part of our planets elements, however because we think we are intelligent we are potentially the most harmful and destructive element on the planet, that smart that we are hell bent on destroying ourselves
The older I get the Faster I was
There's no doubt we are just a mere hiccup in a long and turbulent history. There was a time when land masses were covered with dense forestation and the atmosphere would have a been a toxic brew of way too much oxygen. There were other times of severe vulcanism that would have spewed out volumes of CO2 and other gasses that make our current pre-occupations look pathetic! The difference is that the organisms who were affected by the mass extinction events that took place in these times were mere passengers whereas we can think about trying to survive the change. But it must be about trying to survive not influence. All this bleating about trying to reverse climatic trends ignores the massive latency in the system. We wont reverse what is already happening for considerable time....measured in generations. But I guess we try to make the swing less severe so that whoever survives after the next, say 10 generations, can return to something like a more equitable environment.....maybe!
Simon Blease
Monmouth
Richard Taylor
"William Tell could take an apple off your head. Taylor could take out a processed pea."
Sid Waddell
It depends whether you are considering centralised or local distributed generation.
I have 5kw cells on a roof in north west that are invisible in the sense that they cannot be seen from the road, and a big 14 kWh tesla battery in the garage. So I generate 85 percent of what I use, only dipping below in Dec and Jan. I also Generate enough to heat water by electric for six months of the summer during which my energy bills are near zero. The battery is what turns useless to useful. In those numbers we cook electric, and have a heat pump tumble drier. I will have some left over to power an electric runabout for local journeys in summer, although I am waiting for the specs to improve to buy one.
I cannot do that with wind and certainly not invisibly.
Last edited by Oracle; 18-04-2019 at 10:32 PM.