I could be pushing up the daisies by then. And recall we already buy from te global market so problems in one individual country doesn't necessarily mean a problem as such. Apart from price. The thing is to be aware of the issue and do something about it. (And the left hand knowing what the right is doing would help - consider the push to get cars to run on batteries, that'll be a drain on supply !)
funny enough for once i don't think it is scaremongering. Though for totally different reason i recall working three day weeks when they cut the the power down, off, and that wasn't funny at all.
I know that we can all wring our hands in anguish, but i reckon that this is quite serious, and the matter hasn't been firmly looked at by respective governments.
I don't want to think about going back to no electric at 10 pm (I think it was, I was a child at the time)
Too much depends on electricity, although hospitals may have a back up (for example)
Unless 'they' sort something out inside 18 months, it does not bode well.
I suggest 18 months as a minimum as it could take longer.
Yep - not sure whether 2015 is right but it's certainly in that ballpark.
A direct result of sucessive governments failing to grasp the nuclear nettle.
For nearly 20 years now successive governments have said companies will have to pay decomissioning costs if they want to build nuclear and companies have said "No".
If that is not fixed then the only option is to continue to buy gas shipped in from coubtries who could turn off the lights at any time
I thought the idea of privatising the electricity industry was for them to sort out our problems. Every body that has been privatised has meant much higher bill whether it was water, gas, phone charges, rail or electricity. Maybe we should denationalise the lot.