By Andrew Stuttaford
Saturday, November 01, 2025
Well, this is an extraordinary development that no one,
absolutely no one, could have forecast.
Via the Daily Telegraph (October 28):
The Government has slashed
forecasts for the amount of electricity it expects wind farms to generate in a
blow to Ed Miliband’s net zero plans.
In documents published before an
auction of green energy subsidies this week, officials said they were revising
down the predicted efficiency of wind turbines by more than a quarter as a
result of “updated modelling”.
Experts said the change would mean
that the Energy Secretary would have to pay higher subsidies to wind farms to secure the same amount of
energy, making it harder to hit Labour’s clean power targets.
Updated Modeling.
The government had (reportedly) stuck with their
estimates until now despite being told by developers, the people who actually
know how wind turbines work, that its numbers were “statistically absurd.”
Central planners always know best.
Related:
Separately on Tuesday, Spanish
utilities giant Iberdrola, which owns Scottish Power, also reported a 5pc drop
in UK wind farm generation because of “lower wind resource”.
But surely the “updated modeling” won’t make that much
difference.
The Daily Telegraph:
The Government’s new estimates
slashed the predicted “load factor” — the proportion of the year turbines are
expected to generate power — from 61pc to 43.6pc for offshore wind. The
estimated load factor for onshore turbines was also revised down, from 48.7pc
to 33.4pc. . . .
Oh.
Less efficient wind turbines still
face the same construction costs, pushing up the amount of subsidy needed to
make projects viable. Industry experts said the latest round of subsidies was
not generous enough to deliver the level of wind power needed to hit the Energy
Secretary’s goals.
Wind power was cheap energy, Brits were told.
But surely the green “transition” is generating all those
jobs that climate policy makers promised?
Now we learn that the supposed
“clean energy jobs boom” promised by Energy Secretary Ed Miliband is to be
achieved in large part by rebranding plumbers, electricians and welders as “clean energy workers”.
Jürgen Maier, the boss of GB Energy, meanwhile, believes it could take 20 years
to create the 1,000 jobs at its Scottish headquarters promised by Sir Keir
Starmer.
Simply renaming jobs is a nonsense.
Calling something by a different name does not change its fundamental nature,
and if the Government is going this far it may as well redefine gas, coal and
oil as “aged biomass” and announce its net zero targets met. It would, after
all, be far cheaper than the alternative.
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