Between offshore and onshore, the 30 December the English wind industry has marked the 3 ths record of the year. Together with other renewable and nuclear, met 87.2% of national needs
On the penultimate day of the year, British turbines generated 20,918 GW of electricity
(sustainabilityenvironment.com) – The 2022 wind power British closes with the third record of the year. On December 30, the onshore and offshore turbines generated 20,918 GW of electricity, about 5 times more than will be produced by the future (and controversial) Hinkley Point C nuclear power plant. The national average of the winds that day was just over 22 km/h, but the Scottish coast and the North Sea have been swept by gusts of up to 96 km per hour. The new wind record in the UK thus exceeds 19.9 GW reached last May and 20,896 GW of 3 November, when the energy from the wind alone had satisfied 53% of English needs.
Record also for renewable generation
That of the penultimate day of 2022 is the new wind record in the UK also with regard to the generation of clean electricity. According to data provided by ESO, Britain’s electricity grid authority, partly because of the “windy weather and low electricity consumption”, the share of energy provided by renewables and nuclear that day covered 87,2% of the country’s total needs. On November 3, we had stopped at 70 percent.
To finish off 2022 we’ve seen a couple of new records as windy weather and low electricity use have pushed up generation in some key fields
— National Grid ESO (@NationalGridESO) January 3, 2023