London nearly had a power blackout last week, forcing the UK to pay Belgium a record price for electricity to keep the capital connected.
National Grid’s Electricity System Operator (ESO) paid £9,724.54 per megawatt hour – more than 5,000% higher than the usual price – to avoid an outage in southeast London last Wednesday, as first reported by Bloomberg.
Extreme heat across the European continent saw soaring demand for power as people cranked up fans and air conditioning – especially in the UK, where temperatures surged above 40C for the first time ever.
A bottleneck in the grid added to pressures on the system, leaving Britain with no alternative but to pay its highest ever price for electricity.
Planned maintenance, outages of overhead lines and a storm in Belgium that impacted solar power caused further issues.
The transaction could see households pay more in their upcoming energy bills as energy suppliers pass on the costs.
A spokesperson at National Grid ESO said a specific circuit had been needed to get electricity to the right place.
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“We were bidding in a tight market and market prices were high that day because Europe also wanted the energy,” they said.
“We managed the system and kept the electricity flowing to the South East.”
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Read more: Britain braces for chances of another heatwave this week
The UK relies on importing electricity from interconnectors overseas, especially France, Belgium and the Netherlands.
Only a small quantity of electricity was purchased at the record price – reportedly enough to supply eight houses for a year.