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The Natural Philosopher[_2_] The Natural Philosopher[_2_] is offline
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Default Smart meters, nearly fell off my stool.

On 19/05/2021 12:33, tim... wrote:


"Steve Walker" wrote in message
...
On 19/05/2021 09:15, Theo wrote:
Pancho wrote:
On 18/05/2021 19:36, Theo wrote:
Steve Walker wrote:
We should have built more baseload power stations - particular
nuclear.

That ship sailed 10+ years ago.Â* For the one we are building, the
wholesale
price per unit is roughly double that of renewables ( in normal
conditions)
so it's going to need subsidy to sell its power.Â* It's not cheap
baseload
it's expensive baseload.


I doubt that your figures are true.

Hinkley Point C has a guaranteed purchase price of its nuclear
electricity
of £92.50 per MWh (9.25p per kWh):


But how much lower could it have been if the government funded the
build, so there was no need for far more expensive commercial loans,
while also making a profit on top?

Plus repeats of the same design will be a lot cheaper.


there will be no repeat builds of the same design

HMG wont sign off on this price again (realising that they made a
mistake agreeing this deal)

and no-one will build commercially at a lower strike price



Of course they will.

SMRs are specifically designed to come in at the £40/MWh mark.

What has to happen however is that the government undertakes it wont -
even if some random collection of Greens get into coalition - ban
nuclear power without compensation, or require that completely
unrealistic insurance policies be taken out by nuclear power companies.

ArtStudents„¢ and Ecowarriors have stacked the regulatory deck against
nuclear in any way they could, TRIPLING the build costs.

It has to stop, or the country will collapse from 'renewable' lack of
energy.


--
Future generations will wonder in bemused amazement that the early
twenty-first centurys developed world went into hysterical panic over a
globally average temperature increase of a few tenths of a degree, and,
on the basis of gross exaggerations of highly uncertain computer
projections combined into implausible chains of inference, proceeded to
contemplate a rollback of the industrial age.

Richard Lindzen