UK power prices soar after key cable hit by blaze

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image source, Phil Moo

image captionThe fire at the National Grid site broke out just after midnight on Wednesday

A key electricity cable between Britain and France has been shut down, sending wholesale energy prices soaring.

National Grid said a fire and planned maintenance at a site near Ashford in Kent means the cable will be totally offline until 25 September.

Half of its capacity, or one gigawatt (GW) of power, is expected to remain unavailable until late March 2022.

On Wednesday, British electricity prices for the following day jumped by 19% to £475 per megawatt hour (MWh).

The fire at the Interconnexion France-Angleterre (IFA) site broke out in the early hours of Wednesday. The site was evacuated and there were no reports of casualties.

After the fire an electricity interconnector running under the English Channel was "not operating", the National Grid said in a statement.

Electricity interconnectors are high-voltage cables that connect the electricity systems of neighbouring countries, and allow them to share excess power.

A spokesperson for National Grid's electricity system operator, which balances power supplies in the UK, said it expects to "continue supplying electricity safely and securely" despite the incident.

The link can carry up to 2GW of power, and had been importing electricity from France in recent days, after UK prices hit a record high of £540 per MWh on the wholesale energy market.

The jump in prices has been fuelling concerns about inflation and the potential impact on businesses just as the country's economy starts to recover from the worst effects of the coronavirus pandemic.

Analysts are now closely watching National Grid's efforts to get the facility fully back online as winter approaches and with it higher energy demand.

"Our investigation is ongoing and we will update the market with any changes as necessary," the National Grid said.

Britain is a net importer of electricity and near neighbour France is its biggest supplier of power through the interconnectors that run under the English Channel.

The IFA2 interconnector, a second link between Britain and France, is currently operating at its full capacity and not affected by the problem.

The 1GW connection is a £700m shared investment with French power firm RTE and the UK's fourth power exchange with continental Europe.

Existing UK interconnectors

image source, Getty Images

  • IFA (England - France): Opened in 1986 (2GW capacity)
  • Moyle (Northern Ireland - Scotland): 2001 (0.5GW)
  • BritNed (England - Netherlands): 2011 (1GW)
  • EWIC (Wales - Ireland): 2012 (0.5GW)
  • Nemo (England - Belgium): 2019 (1GW)
  • IFA2 (England - France): 2020 (1GW)

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