Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Panic, Pestilence and a Nation In Crisis: Welcome to Blackout Britain

May 28th, 2008 | By Garry White | Category: International Investing

And last night was only the beginning… it’s certainly good news for candle makers.

Operations were cancelled as hospitals plunged into darkness… people got stuck in lifts, panicking as they waited hours to be rescued… traffic lights failed causing chaos on city centre roads.

We are not talking about some far-away developing nation stumbling into the 21st Century. Embarrassingly, this was actually the UK… and it happened yesterday.

Cleveland, Cheshire, Lincolnshire and parts of London were left in the dark as a mysterious outage crippled the network. This was no minor local event – and no-one who knows what went on is prepared to speak about it.

The cuts escalated as the day progressed and the National Grid was forced to issue its second-most serious warning: demand control imminent!

Two entirely unrelated power stations (one coal, one nuclear – one in Suffolk, one in Fife) suddenly shut down within minutes of each another… the cascade continued with nine “generating units” also going dark… four other power stations also suffered failures to varying extents.

This caused the price of wholesale electricity prices to jump 35% to £95 per megawatt.

Secrets fill me with rancour…

Mysteriously, both British Energy and E.On said that they could not reveal the source of the problem. They won’t even say when the power stations are expected to be fully back on line, because of the effect this will have the wholesale electricity market.

David Hunter an analyst at independent energy consultancy McKinnon & Clarke summed it up nicely. He told The Times:

“The Government’s inability to make long-term energy security decisions over the last decade is coming home to roost. Since the ‘dash for gas’ in the 1990s, the lack of political will to make tough decisions has left Britain short of power.”

So, there is a massive question mark over the future of the UK. Tony Blair is responsible for this… and so is Greenpeace.

Blair didn’t have the balls to make essential decisions that would have secured our energy future. He was too busy fighting someone else’s oil war. He did not have the guts to take on the greens – and this was a mistake.

He should have set us on the track to nuclear power a decade ago – and made sure everyone knew that coal would have to fill the gap.

Instead he dithered and fretted over what to do. Policymakers even listened to the type of people that love to be in “focus groups,” so men with beards and women in comfortable shoes had their say. There was delay after delay after delay.

Greenpeace made everything worse…

When the government actually did something about getting our nuclear strategy on track, it got it so utterly wrong that Greenpeace took it to court on a technicality! This caused another year-long delay.

We must all consider the following pertinent facts.

Our North Sea oil is running out and oil imports are becoming more and more expensive. Russia is sewing up the European gas market (and we do not want to beholden to the Putins of this world for our future energy security).

Biofuels are an expensive con and burning food is stupid. Wind and solar power are unlikely to be able to provide all the energy for the 75 million people that are expected to be living in this country by the middle of the century.

The solution is blindingly obvious. We need to build new nuclear powers stations – and accept we will have to burn coal in the interim.

If we don’t do this, we could easily find ourselves suffering from energy poverty in the future. We will then have to hand over all our wealth to Russia in order to buy their gas.

Energy poverty will lead to economic poverty and then personal poverty if we let it… and the blame for this can be laid firmly at the door of Tony Blair and Greenpeace.

I worry yesterday’s blackouts could be a mere taster of what we have in store in the future. I reckon you should be worried too.

Regards,

Garry White
Editor
Smart Commodities UK

P.S: If you like what I’ve got to say, you can become a subscriber to my Smart Commodities email and enjoy all the benefits of my regular readers…

Source: Panic, Pestilence and a Nation In Crisis: Welcome to Blackout Britain


AdvertisementAll major currencies available. Even some emerging ones.

Ready to diversify globally? At EverBank©, you can choose from more than 20 individual currencies, including some like the Czech koruna and the Brazilian real that are just emerging.

You understand the value of diversifying beyond the U.S. dollar. And at EverBank, you'll find a range of currencies and accounts that makes diversifying in foreign currency easy and convenient.

Apply today, get expert insights and more. Visit EverBank.com or call 800.926.4922.



More on this topic (What's this?) Read more on Investing in England at Wikinvest
Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

By Garry White

Related Articles



About the Author

Garry WhiteGarry White is the editor of financial newsletters Garry Writes and Outstanding Investments UK.

See All Posts by This Author

Garry Writes

Three times a week Garry Writes reveals the hottest trends that tells you exactly where you should be looking to invest. Editor Garry White delivers well-rounded, timely investment research that's always always one-step ahead of the mainstream.

See All Posts from This Publication

One comment
Leave a comment »

  1. One of main reason UK is having energy crisis is gloalization of its precious resources. North Sea oil from UK is normally sold here in Ontario! Even though we Canadian have lots of oil — about five trillion barrel. Strangly enough our resources are sold to Chinese, and American. This why we pay so pay at pump station. Now it is having its affect on other sectors too.

    There is something wrong with this system. Precious resources should benifit indigenous population before exported to other nations. This is the only way to solve energy crisis, other upcoming multiple problem.

Leave Comment