Coal Only Supplied 2% of U.K. Electricity in the First Six Months of 2017

Authored by blogs.scientificamerican.com and submitted by mvea

According to data from the U.K. government, coal-fired power plants only supplied 2% of electricity in the United Kingdom during the first six months of 2017. This is a stark contrast to just five years ago, where coal supplied about 40% of the U.K.’s electricity needs each year. At the same time, renewables have quickly ramped up and now supply a quarter of electricity in the country.

As previously discussed here on Plugged In, Scotland has already gone "coal-free" after more than a century, shuttering its last coal-fired power plant in the spring of 2016. This closure was a significant step toward Scotland’s goal of supplying 100% of its electricity demand using renewables by 2020.

While coal power is still operating elsewhere in the United Kingdom it is supplying so little power at times that in National Grid announced on April 21, 2017, that the United Kingdom had gone without electricity from fossil fuels for the first time since 1882. It was in this year that Thomas Edison opened the country’s first coal-fired power plant at Holborn in London.

Even starker numbers appear when looking at coal-mining in the United Kingdom where just 10 active coal mines are in operation, down from more than 1,000 in the 1960s. Once a “bedrock of the economy”, coal has quickly declined in the U.K. as the country moves to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions and tackle its air pollution challenges.

MCvarial on November 6th, 2017 at 13:20 UTC »

This is a graph with the evolution of UK's electricity mix.

Coal phaseout has been achieved by a decrease in demand, mainly due to the economic crisis. Increased imports and increased usage of gas, biomass and wind. At the moment coal supplies about 12% of UK's electricity as winter is comming.

bunjay on November 6th, 2017 at 13:03 UTC »

That's a really impressive achievement. After Fukushima it seemed like the anti-nuclear rhetoric was so strong that new coal plants were inevitable, but I guess not.

The Ontario government completely banned coal-fired plants, which brought the province from a little over 20% coal-fired capacity to 0% in under 10 years. People complain about the cost of electricity but the air quality is measurably better across southern Ontario and upstate NY.

vincentfahrenheit16 on November 6th, 2017 at 11:34 UTC »

If they can, then hopefully America can too. That’s not considering factors like politicians or pesky lobbyists obviously but still, one can 🤞 hope for this