It’s all change for new energy technology in France, although in France, dominated for so long by nuclear, what ‘change’ means is slightly different from what it means in most other countries. However, although it still supplies around 67% of French electricity, nuclear did fall from grace when, in the early 2020s, generic faults were discovered in many of its increasingly elderly reactors. Dealing with that has been expensive (many of France's 56 nuclear reactors had to be shut down for tests/repairs), but, although financial problems continue, that did not lead to major policy changes- or too much of a lift-off for renewables, despite political pressure from the left for change. Energy and climate policy has clearly been a contentious political issue in France for decades, with the socialist government in the 2010s planning to cut nuclear back to a 50% contribution, but the right calling for more nuclear plants, to replace the old, soon to be obsolete ones. At one time 6 ...
Renewable energy is doing quite well in the UK, as the latest Office of National Statistics report shows, although it says there is uneven development . ‘What is working is now clear, with power generation, storage & transport electrification are delivering scale, investment & export potential. What is not working is balance. Jobs are volatile, heat is underperforming & delivery capacity is struggling to keep pace with ambition’. There certainly are some ambitious targets. In an interesting interview, Net Zero Mission Controller Chris Stark say how the UK energy team set a range ‘for all the clean technologies, so onshore wind, offshore wind, solar [and] also the energy storage technologies…that we’re trying to hit by 2030 that is right at the top end of what we think is possible. Then we went about constructing the policies to make that happen.’ And he says it is working, so far: the economics of clean energy ‘just get better and better’, with renewables being ...