Qatari
tankers sail to the rescue of Britain's gas supply crisis
The
UK is working at 40 per cent above its usual gas capacity for the
time of year as thousands of homes remain without power
24
March, 2013
Britain’s
rapidly dwindling gas supplies will be boosted by the arrival of a
giant tanker from the Arabian Gulf tomorrow, as the unseasonably
severe March weather continues to place increasing demands on the
National Grid.
The
350m Varga is expected to dock at Milford Haven in Wales to supply
Britain with 266,000 cubic metres of liquefied natural gas (LNG).
Another tanker, the Mekaines, docked at the Isle of Grain in Kent
today. Both vessels have come from Qatar. Together they carry enough
gas to meet Britain’s needs for just 12 hours.
The
continuing wintry weather had depleted gas reserves to about 10 per
cent of capacity – enough to supply the country for just 36 hours.
Stored gas is used as a back-up, so low reserves do not mean an
imminent blackout. The Government has insisted gas supplies will not
run out despite the extended cold snap. The Energy minister, John
Hayes, has admitted that storage levels are low and has also told the
National Grid to increase the flow of gas from Norway and the North
Sea.
The
country is currently working at 40 per cent above its usual gas
capacity for this time of year and the price of gas hit record levels
of 150p per therm (100 cubic metres) on Friday after a key pipeline
between the UK and Belgium temporarily broke down.
Increasing
gas insecurity has made the UK an attractive market for Qatari gas. A
recent delivery of LNG from the Gulf kingdom was reported to have
been worth £40m. Buying in LNG is not considered a long-term
solution to Britain’s gas needs, but is increasingly used to plug
holes in demand.
Even
as the much-needed gas reserves arrived yesterday, thousands of homes
throughout the country remained without power as supply lines were
disrupted by further snow. Outages affected 12,500 properties in
Northern Ireland, as many as 10,000 in Scotland, 500 in Wales and
around 200 in west Cumbria in England.
In
some of the worst-hit rural areas, police said villagers had been
“cut-off” and were at risk of running out of food. Chief
Inspector Derry Crorken of Lancashire Police said officers “simply
couldn’t get to” villages in the area where a man was found dead
under a foot of snow on Saturday.
Police
believe that 25-year-old Gary Windle, who was found near Briercliffe,
Burnley, had tried to walk home in sub-zero temperatures after
meeting friends on Friday night. Ch Insp Crorken said conditions in
the area, including the villages of Brierfield, Briercliffe and
Wycoller were “absolutely treacherous”.
In
Northern Ireland, another of the worst-hit areas, an RAF helicopter
carrying a military mountain-rescue team has been drafted in from
Wales to assist the police with “weather relief”. In Scotland,
rural parts of the Highlands and Islands were left without power for
a second night running.
Flights
were suspended at Leeds Bradford Airport and passengers faced delays
for a second day at East Midlands Airport. In Cumbria, dozens of
people were forced to abandon their cars and spend the night in local
hotels after snow drifts caused by 45mph winds made driving
impossible on the A595 late on Saturday.
The
unseasonal weather has so far claimed at least three lives. The body
of a 57-year-old man was found in the Scottish Highlands on Saturday.
He is believed to have been hill-walking in the Streap area near Fort
William.
On
Friday a woman was killed after her house in Looe, Cornwall,
collapsed in torrential rain. Police are also investigating whether
wintry conditions contributed to the death of a man found in the Wick
River in the northern Highlands.
There
will be little respite from freezing temperatures anywhere today,
although any snow showers will be mainly light and confined to the
eastern and central UK, according to the Met Office. But unsettled
conditions are likely to return over the Easter weekend, with rain
possibly preceded by heavy snow – cutting the odds on a first white
Easter since 2008.
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