The UK’s power grid operator has issued a call for electricity providers to bolster output this evening to avert the risk of blackouts.
The National Energy System Operator (NESO) issued an alert “to encourage market actions to increase system margins”.
It was the first such precautionary measure of the winter to date and issued at a time when much of the UK is shivering under sub-zero temperatures.
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The NESO is worried about a lack of spare capacity in the grid from 4pm until 7pm due to “system constraints”.
The body, which is in public control having been part of National Grid until last autumn, said in an update that it was seeking 1,200 megawatts (MW) of power as part of the so-called system margin notice.
Such notices are a call for a greater safety cushion between power demand and available supply.
The NESO was at pains to point out that it does not signal that blackouts are imminent or that there is not enough generation to meet current demand.
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There is strain on the system due to a lack of wind and bitterly cold temperatures, which stoke stronger demand for electricity and gas.
Lows of minus 16C, the coldest of the winter so far, are forecast for parts of the UK on Thursday.
A yellow warning for snow and ice has been issued for northern Scotland and Northern Ireland from noon on Wednesday until midnight on Thursday.
Sub-zero temperatures are expected across the country for the foreseeable future.
It is the first winter the UK has seen in living memory…

