GMB, the energy union, has called on Government and
the National Grid to develop a proper plan to power the rise in
electric vehicles.
According to one National Grid forecast there will be
up to 35 million pure electric vehicles on the roads by 2050,
with sales of new petrol and diesel cars halted by Government
2040.
That scenario sees peak demand from electric vehicles
rising by 30 gigawatts — the equivalent of 10 new Hinkley Point
power stations — adding to a current peak demand of 61GW.
[1]
Meanwhile in a recent report entitled 'The Future of
Gas: How gas can support a low carbon future’, the grid says that
gas will be fundamental to any realistic future energy scenario
and that it is not feasible to switch over to electric heating on
the scale required to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to 80 per
cent of 1990 levels by the middle of this century.
[2]
Justin Bowden, GMB National Secretary,
said:
“With the government committing to ban sales of new
petrol and diesel engine cars by 2040, the number of electric
cars on our roads is set to rocket to anything up to 35 million,
necessitating massive changes to network supply and charging
point access.
“National Grid is forecasting up to 30 gigawatts of
additional electricity capacity being needed by 2050 to meet peak
demand.
“Our current capacity is 61 gigawatts.
“GMB is calling on Government and National Grid to
plan and invest now in major infrastructure upgrading and
development to ensure we are ahead of the
curve.
“With the existing nuclear fleet reaching the end of
its natural life over the next ten years, and coal being removed
by 2025, an increase in electricity demand of 30 gigs translates
into an awful lot of additional power stations.”
END
Notes to editors:
[1] https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/when-every-car-will-need-charging-overnight-l5gbdlhc5
[2] http://www.gmb.org.uk/newsroom/national-grid-wake-up