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Ron Hughes's avatar

Other outfits that don't have a clue are:

House of COMMONS Library researchers, and (remarkably), the British Hydropower Association (BHA).

Earlier this year (19/4/2024), the former published their Research Briefing on Battery Energy Storage Systems

https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-7621/CBP-7621.pdf

Page 10:

"Other types of energy storage systems

Some examples of long-duration energy storage include:

• Pumped hydroelectric storage: Electricity is generated when water is released from a reservoir and travels downhill through a turbine. The water is pumped uphill during lower energy demand. According to the British Hydropower Association, the UK’s pumped hydropower capacity

was 2.8 GW or 32 GWh (see box 2 for an explanation of the difference)."

Ummm. 32GWh of pumped hydro??? That didn't pass the sniff test.

The late Prof Sir David Mackay's pumped hydro table in 'Without the hot air' informs we've 26.7GWh.

Since the HoC referred to BHA, I looked at its site

https://british-hydro.org/pumped-storage-hydropower/

Scroll down to, and expand 'Key statistics'.

We are informed by "... the leading trade membership association solely representing the interests of the UK hydropower industry." that:

"There are four operational PSH plants in the UK:

Dinorwig (1983) 1.7 GW, 10.4 GWh

Foyers (1974) 300 MW, 6.4 GWh

Ffestiniog (1963) 360 MW, 7.6 GWh

Cruachan (1966) 440 MW, 7.6 GWh"

It claims Ffestiniog stores 7.6 GWh whereas the ex-Chief Scientific Advisor to the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change stated Ffestiniog has an energy storage capacity of 1.3GWh.

The only way to settle that was to contact Ffestiniog's owners.

https://i.postimg.cc/FKmHPmPX/temp-Image-Ta-TNl-P.avif

A change/error of 0.1GWh in a 16-year old pamphlet is tolerable; a 6.2GWh / 590% exaggeration in 'THE' trade association's webpage really isn't.

Worse, when a member of the HoC research team was personally informed of its error, all that resulted was an auto-reply that the email had been received. They clearly did sweet FA, their error is still visible to the world today.

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Ian Douglas's avatar

Chris, historically the pump storage uses night time “cheap” electricity to pump the water from the lower to the upper reservoir. The operators tend to be wait for peak electricity demands to release the energy over a 30-60 minute window. This maximises revenue and is not designed to support a government’s macro “green” ethos.

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