The U.K. Just Went 55 Hours Without Using Coal for the First Time in History

Authored by bloomberg.com and submitted by moonocean

Coal, which fueled the world’s biggest economies for more than a century, is increasingly losing out to renewables.

The latest example of how one of the dirtiest fossil fuels is being squeezed out of the market came this week in Britain, which went for a record 55 hours without its any of its power plants producing electricity by burning coal.

No coal was used for power generation by stations in the U.K. between 10:25 p.m. in London on Monday until 5:10 a.m. on Thursday, according to grid data compiled by Bloomberg. At the same time wind turbines produced more power.

The U.K. was an early adopter of renewable energy and has more offshore wind turbines installed than any other country. It also has fields of solar panels that are meeting more and more demand as old traditional power plants close permanently. The government aims to switch off all coal plants by 2025 and has given renewables priority access to the grid.

The previous record of 40 coal-free hours was set in October.

thisguydabbles on May 16th, 2018 at 07:09 UTC »

What happened in this thread... All these deleted comments?

ChilliDogFries on May 16th, 2018 at 07:02 UTC »

This is a repost. The actual 55 hours happened like a month ago.

PM_me_your_sexyness on May 16th, 2018 at 04:37 UTC »

How does that work? Do they shut off the coal plants? Or do they still burn coal and export that power to others instead of using it?