electricity without coal UK independent 2018_04_19
https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/uk-no-coal-power-renewable-energy-record-electricity-climate-change-wind-solar-a8312116.html
Britain goes more than two days without using coal power for first time in 136 years
Majority of country's electricity needs powered by nuclear and renewable energy
Britain has gone more than two days without using any coal-fired power
for the first time in more than a century.
The record run of almost 55 hours of coal-free electricity generation
between Monday and Thursday is a mark of the fossil fuel's "rapid
decline", experts said.
It is the first time the nation has been powered for so long without
using coal since the world's first coal-fired power station for public
use was opened in London in 1882.
The country's previous record was around 40 hours at the end of October
last year, though the National Grid said it occurred over a weekend when
demand is generally lower.
The UK benefits from highly diverse and flexible sources of electricity
and our energy mix continues to change, Fintan Slye, the National Grid's
director of UK systems operations, told The Independent. He added:
"However, it's important to remember coal is still an important source of
energy as we transition to a low carbon system."
On Tuesday, more than 60 per cent of Britain's electricity was generated
using zero or low-carbon energy, including nuclear (20.1 per cent), wind
(33.7 per cent), solar (3.3 per cent), biomass (5 per cent) and hydro
(0.9 per cent). Wednesday saw similar figures.
Carbon Tracker, a think tank specialising in the energy sector, said it
expected "more records to be broken this summer as coal continues its
rapid decline". UK news in pictures
High levels of renewable output and the comparatively low price of gas
were the two drivers of the unprecedented streak, the National Grid said,
adding it was possible the record could be broken again in the coming
months.
It comes just weeks after wind power set a new record in the UK by
generating 14 gigawatts of electricity for the first time - nearly 37 per
cent of the country's needs.