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meldrewreborn
The game changer for renewables will be battery technologies that can be implemented at sufficient scale and spread around at the right locations to serve population areas with enough capacity to balance out demand across the peaks and troughs of generation.
It is my thought that renewable technologies can provide more than enough capacity for domestic demand if augmented by local and regional storage, subject to a few caveats. Industrial and commercial users are a separate matter. I'm of the view that heavy industry should be on a completely separate 'grid' from domestic energy and industries such as steel making or aluminium smelting should not put any demand on the domestic energy supply. Industry can continue using fossil generation and in fact tend to be co-located with major power stations for the obvious reasons, so it wouldn't take too much engineering to separate the UK electrical system into an 'industrial' and 'domestic' energy grid system. Grids could be cross-linked with interconnects in the same way as countries are so that a surplus of renewable energy could be given to industry and if domestic sources were struggling, they could be topped up in an emergency.
I would set limits for household usage. Calculate an average daily per capita consumption, with adjustments for individual circumstances, and then allocate each household an energy budget, say 10kWh per person per day in winter months and 6kWh a day in summer months. Anyone exceeding that budget would be billed at a higher rate per unit. Anyone coming in below the energy budget would get a rebate. Extra budget can be based on specific needs, medical, disability needs or whatever.
Gas is being phased out, allegedly, but gas for home heating will still be needed for the foreseeable, but if the gas is not being used routinely for domestic electricity generation, then electricity prices will come down significantly.
Nuclear is a fantastic solution but new nuclear won't come on stream any time soon. Older nuclear should have had the investment to extend it's safe working life. They are spending ten times the money for the next hundred years decommissioning older plants with all the associated hazards and risks, when a tenth of the money spent on extending the life of the older Magnox reactors would have been a better investment in my opinion. Wylfa 1 and 2 in Anglesea and the Trawsfynedd reactors in Gwynedd could happily power the whole of Wales without a single therm of gas being used for generation.
Of course, the downside of Magnox is the ratio of plutonium produced relative to the power generated - power from Magnox is a by-product of the process of creating weapons grade material, but changes to the way the reactors are operated can easily mitigate that to a great extent.
I'm a big fan of nuclear, but smaller, more local modular reactors which are being developed by Rolls Royce are a better solution than huge great white elephant projects that take decades to bring on stream and cost tens of billions to build, and ten times that to decommission at the end of their working life.
A reactor as used in an Astute class submarine could power a city the size of Southampton for twenty years and take up no more space than a couple of shipping containers. At end of life, they can just be taken away for reprocessing and new ones craned into place. To me that sounds much more sensible than behemoths like Sizewell or Hinckley Point which will never generate 'cheap' electricity.