Britain
'was just six hours away from running out of gas': And experts say a
new power crisis looms
- Senior energy boss Rob Hastings reveals crisis closer than first thought
- 'If it had run any lower it would have meant interruptions to supply,' he said
- Combination of bitterly cold weather and pipeline failures blamed
24
May, 2013
Britain
came within six hours of running out of gas earlier this year, it
emerged yesterday.
The
severe winter weather coupled with a faulty import pipeline led to
supplies being rapidly used up at the end of March.
The
revelation that the country almost ran out of gas came as officials
warned there could be a similar crisis next winter.
Household
fuel bills, already at record levels, are expected to rise further as
a result of the shortage.
Rob
Hastings, director of energy and infrastructure at the Crown Estate,
the property portfolio managed by the Queen, said: ‘We really only
had six hours’ worth of gas left in storage as a buffer [at the end
of March]. If it had run any lower it would have meant interruptions
to supply.’
The
Crown Estate owns the rights to gas storage sites under the seabed.
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With
continuing cold weather – this spring is expected to be the coldest
since 1979 – reserves could be partly empty heading into next
winter.
This
could force energy companies to buy gas on the open market at a
higher cost, which would likely be passed on via household bills.
With eight of the UK’s coal plants shut down last month to meet EU
diktats, the nation will be left relying on wind farms and imported
gas for power.
Angelos
Anastasiou, an independent energy analyst, said: ‘This won’t
trigger price rises immediately, but if it causes companies to spend
more buying gas over the winter then [energy firms] will definitely
recoup their costs later on.’
The
National Grid, which pipes gas around the UK, insisted the UK has
'substantial resilience' and diverse supply sources including imports
of liquefied natural gas
He
added: ‘This is most likely to be felt over the next two or three
winters as prices creep higher.’
Peter
Atherton, utilities analyst at stockbroker Liberum Capital, said it
would be likely to have a ‘significant’ impact on wholesale gas
prices.
It
comes only days after energy giant SSE, Britain’s second biggest
power firm, warned that a price hike of £80 was ‘highly likely’
for its customers because of rising costs.
Leaked
documents seen by the Mail, which come from within a government body,
assessed the impact of the gas crunch in March.
The
document revealed energy firms had to start drawing on emergency gas
reserves, which are said to be more volatile than standard gas, after
supplies dwindled to almost nothing.
Companies
make money by buying gas cheaply in the summer, putting it into gas
stores, and selling it in the winter.
But
summer prices have been rising, and the difference with winter rates
is now so small that it is not economical for investors to build any
new gas stores – leaving Britain with a maximum of 20 days of
storage.
This
compares with more than 100 days in France, 92 days in Germany and 70
days in Italy.
The
US protects itself against gas shortages by storing contingencies for
up to six months.
It
also emerged that the number of ships bringing liquefied natural gas
from Qatar – the UK’s other main source of gas – has halved in
the last 12 months.
These
ships, which are the most expensive way to get gas, take more than
two weeks to reach Britain.
It
was only because one arrived at the end of March that Britain avoided
gas shortages, experts believe.
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