The UK recorded its greenest ever winter in 2018/19, as mild conditions, high renewable output and system flexibility combined to send carbon intensity tumbling.
National Grid ESO’s Winter Outlook document, published yesterday, revealed that the average carbon intensity of power generation over the period established a new record low of 242.8g CO2/kWh, almost half the figure witnessed just five years ago.
Significant wind generation sent coal’s contribution tumbling, while transmission system demand was suppressed by large amounts of wind output on distribution grids.
But while supply margins remained healthy throughout last winter, National Grid confirmed system management was not without its challenges. High renewables output sent inertia from conventional plants falling, and managing significant quantities of wind power raised its own difficulties, the ESO said.
More prominent whole system interaction was triggered by higher quantities of renewables, which meant that gas demand varied wildly over the winter period. Nevertheless, a preference for gas over coal meant that on one particular day this winter, the highest demand for gas was recorded at 97.2 MCM.
Fintan Slye, director of UK system operator at National Grid ESO, described the new record as “another milestone” emblematic of the progress made in decarbonising the UK’s power system.
“In our role operating the electricity system, we are committed to the continued innovation and transformation necessary to build on this so we are ready and able to operate the electricity system at zero carbon by 2025,” he said.
Read more: Current News