Electrification has become the default answer to almost every energy and climate question. Heat? Electrify it. Transport? Electrify it. Industry? Electrify it. In policy circles, electrification is often treated as a frictionless substitute for fossil fuels: cleaner, simpler, and largely inevitable. In this new report I take a look at what electrification would mean for the GB power grid, if it went ahead as planned. I also consider the impact of additional demand from AI data centres.
Electrification policy rests on optimistic assumptions
Across heating, transport and industry, electrification targets rely on a similar set of assumptions: that consumers will change behaviour rapidly, that costs will fall quickly and predictably, and that electricity infrastructure will expand smoothly to accommodate new demand. The report tests these assumptions sector by sector and finds them wanting.
The good news is that electrification targets are unlikely to be met without some form of compulsion. In heating, rapid deployment of heat pumps is implausible under current conditions. Consumer resistance remains high, installer numbers are growing too slowly, and both capital and running costs are materially higher than for gas heating. Even where heat‑pump subsidies reduce upfront costs, households still face additional expenditure on larger emitters, pipework and insulation, as well as higher ongoing energy bills because electricity prices remain far above gas prices. These are not marginal issues – they are fundamental barriers to mass adoption.
Transport electrification faces a similar gap between ambition and delivery. Mandates for electric vehicles are running ahead of public willingness to adopt them, while grid and charging‑infrastructure constraints remain severe. These problems are magnified for larger vehicles. There is currently no credible fast‑charging solution for HGVs, and electrifying buses outside dense urban centres is far more challenging than policy documents typically acknowledge, particularly where vehicles do not return regularly to a single depot.
In industry, the constraint is both technical feasibility and economic viability. High electricity prices have driven deindustrialisation across large parts of the UK economy, reducing electricity demand far more quickly than electrification can increase it. In practice, deindustrialisation is the dominant trend, and a stronger driver of demand than electrification across the economy as a whole.
Across all three sectors, the modelling used by both NESO and the Climate Change Committee depends on behavioural and technological assumptions that are optimistic, weakly evidenced, and often inconsistent across scenarios. My report does not assume electrification will fail entirely, but it does find that current targets are unlikely to be met without significant compulsion, which brings its own political and social risks.
The system is under strain even without electrification
The bad news is that, even without electrification, the electricity grid is likely to struggle unless action is taken. One of the most important findings of my report is that the GB electricity system is already heading towards a serious adequacy problem even if large‑scale electrification largely fails.
Renewables cannot provide security of supply during prolonged low‑wind winter events, and reliance on interconnectors is risky when neighbouring systems face similar weather patterns. Meanwhile, just under 5 GW of nuclear generation is scheduled to close by 2032 at the latest, and around 12 GW of CCGT capacity is at risk of closure due to age and declining utilisation.
While Hinkley Point C and perhaps a small amount of new open‑cycle gas capacity may come online over the next five to seven years, this does not come close to offsetting expected closures. Under plausible assumptions, the system could face a capacity shortfall of around 12 GW on cold, low‑wind winter days. In such conditions, meeting demand without rationing would be impossible.
Replacing or upgrading ageing gas generation is constrained by long lead times. New rotors typically require around 5 years, and entirely new gas turbines 7-8 years, reflecting global supply‑chain bottlenecks. These are physical constraints that cannot be resolved by market reform or policy ambition alone.
Britain is not alone in facing a potential problem with system adequacy. Norway, the Netherlands and Germany were all considered as part of the report and in each case, possible shortages are identified. Norway assumes that flexibility, demand response, or batteries will full the gap. The Dutch are less confident and intend to monitor the generation mix in neighbouring countries in the hope of persuading them to maintain enough firm generation to secure the Dutch grid on low wind days. Only Germany has explicitly identified a need to build more gas generation, although its target is likely inadequate.
Flexibility helps, but does not replace firm capacity
One of the report’s central findings is that electrification does not increase demand evenly. Heat pumps, EV charging, and industrial electrification all tend to concentrate demand in time (cold evenings, post‑work charging windows), and concentrate demand in space (residential feeders, urban substations, motorway corridors). Annual energy numbers hide this – a system can look comfortable on a terawatt‑hour basis while becoming acutely stressed for a few hundred hours a year.
Flexibility features heavily in electrification plans with smart charging, demand response, batteries, and thermal storage. While flexibility can shave peaks, this only works where consumers tolerate loss of convenience. In many cases, policymakers ignore real-world constraints such as fire risks associated with overnight operation of domestic appliances, and noise restrictions within multi-occupancy residential buildings. Batteries are energy‑limited and cannot cover prolonged stress events. Many flexibility services depend on digital systems that introduce new operational and cyber risks. Flexibility may reduces costs at the margin, but it does not eliminate the need for firm capacity, resilient networks, or system strength.
Infrastructure challenges present further risks
In addition to the issues with reliable generation capacity, there are further difficulties with distribution and transmission constraints which arrive earlier and are also hard to fix quickly. Key points from the report include:
- Local distribution networks were not designed for mass electrification of heat and transport
- Reinforcement timelines are measured in years, and often a decade or more
- Connection queues and “paper capacity” obscure real‑world deliverability
The report also identifies risks with aging grid infrastructure and the recently identified risks that premature closure of offshore gas pipelines may constrain gas supplies to the grid on cold winter days, limiting the gas available for electricity generation.
What this means in practice
Taken together, the findings point to an uncomfortable conclusion. The GB electricity system is likely to struggle to maintain today’s level of demand reliably, let alone accommodate the additional 7–10 GW of load in 2030 implied by current electrification agendas. AI data centres are therefore likely to pursue off‑grid solutions, not because of technological failure but because the grid is no longer perceived as sufficiently reliable for mission‑critical loads.
Large‑scale electrification of heat and industry before 2030 appears improbable, and likely remains so for several years thereafter. Without decisive policy action, the probability of regional rationing, blackouts and cascading grid failures rises materially.
To restore Britain’s energy security, government must pivot from aspirational modelling to credible planning. This means supporting life extension of ageing gas generation, accelerating procurement of new dispatchable capacity, reforming network investment incentives to prioritise resilience, and reassessing electrification timelines. Net zero targets cannot be allowed to override public safety. Security of supply must once again become the foundational principle of UK energy policy.
ABSTRACT
Britain’s decarbonisation strategy assumes rapid electrification of heating, transport and industry, yet deployment trends and infrastructure constraints indicate these ambitions are unlikely to be met. Heat pumps, EVs and industrial fuel-switching are stalling, while ageing gas and nuclear assets are retiring faster than firm replacement capacity can be delivered. At the same time, AI-driven data-centre growth is adding material new load that the grid is increasingly unable to accommodate.
Without urgent action to secure dispatchable generation and stabilise the gas network, the UK faces escalating risks of supply shortfalls and widespread system failures well before 2030. It will be difficult to meet existing demand without rationing, let alone any additional demand from electrification.
The Government must urgently pivot to ensuring there is sufficient dispatchable power generation available to meet demand on low wind days, making realistic assumptions about what can be delivered by 2030. The UK would do well to follow the example of Germany, which despite its strong commitment to renewables, has identified a need for significant new gas-fired power generation capacity.
Without such a plan, electrification ambitions risk remaining theoretical while exposing the electricity system – and the public – to unacceptable levels of risk. Net zero promises should not be prioritised over public safety. To ensure the electricity system remains secure, new investment in gas generation is essential, even if it is unabated.

Excellent piece from the ever better `Watt-`Logic. What tends to be forgotten is that a significant proportion of the UK population is getting older and may start to simply switch off from the bombardment of internet communications altogether. I for one, at 74, delete and unsubscribe to more emails than I read everyday, wondering how the hell the endless streams of “financial advice” actually came my way!
The fragility of the current ‘dash for electricity for everything’ has major risks. Not least its basis built upon the shifting sands of ideology prevalent within the UK establishment and elsewhere!
https://chp4.org/energy-policies/electrification-can-the-grid-cope
Spot on
Ms. Porter consistantly incorrectly uses the word optimistic when the facts in her own data show something to be not economically possible under any government scenario. There is a real difference, something optimistic can be achieved economically. Most of what this report states as government policy is not economic under any possible scenario. Unless the government forces people and business to implement uneconomic or unreliable solutions none of UK governments policies can ever actually be implemented. That is a fact unless you believe natural gas is going to be given away for free for the extended future.
Not optimistic, try suicidal.
It was never going to work.
The Third World War against CO2 has been lost.
https://rafechampion.substack.com/p/losing-the-war-on-co2
And coal is holding its ground.
https://rafechampion.substack.com/p/the-green-energy-transition-is-all
This is an A,I generated summary from an article in the Spectator written by David Turver
Here’s a clear, structured set of **main points** from your text — distilled so the core arguments stand out sharply.
—
## Key Points on the Cost of Net Zero
### **1. Early warnings about high costs**
– **Philip Hammond (2019)** warned that legislating net zero could cost **over £1 trillion**, raising household bills and harming energy‑intensive industries.
### **2. Large system‑wide cost estimates**
– **Neso (2020)** estimated net zero could cost **£3 trillion**, with **£5–6 trillion** in gross outlays when discounted over time.
– Surprisingly, Neso suggested the most aggressive decarbonisation scenario was *slightly cheaper* than failing to meet net zero.
### **3. CCC’s sharply falling cost projections**
– **CCC’s 2020 estimate:** £1.4 trillion in capital costs (2020–2050), reduced to £957 billion after assumed savings.
– **CCC’s 2023/24 estimate:** Net cost slashed to **£108 billion** (2025–2050), just **0.2% of GDP**.
– This reduction was achieved by comparing to a hypothetical baseline rather than presenting absolute costs.
– These projections rely heavily on **dramatic assumed cost reductions** in renewables.
### **4. Real‑world renewable costs contradict CCC assumptions**
– **Offshore wind:** CCC assumes £37.80/MWh for 2035; actual 2024–25 contract prices range **£85–118/MWh**.
– **Floating offshore wind:** Costs jumped to **£282/MWh**.
– **Solar:** CCC assumes £43/MWh; actual contracts **£72/MWh**.
### **5. Low‑carbon technology costs are higher than CCC forecasts**
– **Heat pumps:** CCC projected £6,415 falling to <£5,000; actual median costs in 2025 are **£12,000+** (air‑source) and **£28,854** (ground‑source).
– **Electric vehicles:** CCC estimate £23,160; actual VW ID.3 starts at **£30,860**.
### **6. Discount rate assumptions distort the picture**
– CCC uses a **3.5% discount rate**, far below:
– 30‑year bond yields
– Typical consumer finance rates (5.7–14.9%)
– This makes future savings look larger and upfront costs look smaller.
### **7. OBR estimates are far higher**
– **OBR (2023)** projects **£803 billion** in fiscal impacts alone — far above the CCC’s £108 billion whole‑economy figure.
– The discrepancy is not fully explained.
### **8. Neso’s 2025 update still underestimates costs**
– **Holistic Transition scenario:** £7.6 trillion gross, rising to **£9 trillion** with carbon penalties.
– **Falling Behind scenario:** £7.2 trillion gross, nearly **£10 trillion** with carbon costs.
– Neso assumes:
– Offshore wind at **£53/MWh** (less than half current prices)
– Carbon prices nearly doubling
– No “Do Nothing More” scenario is provided, making comparisons incomplete.
### **9. Overall conclusion**
– Public bodies are accused of **systematically underestimating costs** through:
– Unrealistic price assumptions
– Low discount rates
– Selective reporting of net rather than gross costs
– Without transparency, net zero risks becoming **financially unsustainable**, with supposed savings described as “a mirage.”
—
@Donald – Just provide a link to the article, please! If we want to generate a slop-summary, we can do it ourselves. This sort of stuff simply pollutes the Internet.
Sorry to be blunt, but it is a pet hate of mine..
The problem with an AI summary is that I simply cannot trust anything that it says.. Who has written the ‘system prompt’ which affects what bits to include, what to leave out, and how to bias the wording of the summary? Are the facts that it chooses to cite even correct?
Facts are muddled and biases are concealed, in favour of the tech companies that control the source data and system prompt of these ‘so-called AI’ statistical soups.
And then the AI slop, biased by unknown prompts, gets re-ingested by the statistical machine as if it were authentic human-written text, and the whole system poisons itself with its own excrement.
It occurs to me that we could save an awful lot of energy by simply turning off these bullshit-machines. Kathryn mentions 6GW of mostly gas-fired slop-generating capacity being added to the UK by 2030. Meta alone recently announced plans to build between 10 and 100GW globally. All for a loss-making industry that has scant positive societal impact and innumerable negatives, before even counting its energy cost. But you are unlikely to see that in an AI summary 😉
It’s also shame that articles like Kathryn’s (and David’s, apparently) are so long that people have to resort to AI summaries in the first place. I confess I haven’t read the entirety of the report yet – At ~40k words it’s as long as an MSc thesis. I find this length not only makes it hard to read, but detracts somewhat from its credibility, because if it is so long that it takes AI to read it, then one naturally suspects that perhaps AI has contributed to writing it, even if it hasn’t. This is exacerbated by the imagery, which is mostly if not all AI-generated, that fills every blank space on each page and slows my PDF reader. (Some of them are artistic and I appreciate that, but they don’t need to be on every page..)
I love your work, Kathryn, but please banish the slop. I want to be confident that what I am reading comes from your brain alone, not polluted by some language model.
Hi, I didn’t provide a link as the Spectator is behind a paywall.
My attitude towards A.I is that for the current mass users, the novelty will eventually wear off
It will of course be used for serious research, hut just think of a future where we have reached the physical limits of designs, computer, everything in fact.
What do we do then?
A very good summary.
However, all of this was known by technical people who either worked in the utility business or to support them, a very long time ago, back when the climate change fad started. They talked about it, but the politicians and the activists pooh-poohed it and shamed into silence everyone who presented the hard evidence. None of the climate change faddists have any idea about what you say, and have no rebuttal other than hope and the expectation that rationing will occur, and only the evil consumers will be cut off – the righteous ones will continue to be comfortable.
The great masses will not understand anything you say. They get their “news and information” from the MSM and activist websites, which will refuse to publish your report. The great masses will not realize what has happened until they start to freeze in the dark, and start to look for someone to blame. The climate change industry already has a scapegoat available – the techlords who are building data centers and “hoarding all the electricity that should be going to consumers”. That is the message that will go out when the lights go out, and the data centers will suffer the modern-day fate of the peasants attacking them with pitchforks-in-hand. The activists will remain untouched and unblamed, because they are holy “scientists”, and the politicians will blame their predecessors for their corruption by the techlords.
Maybe if only the UK goes down, first, while France and Switzerland and Germany stay energized, they may notice who is suffering, and who is not, and notice the different in the energy planning. Maybe.
Hi, I didn’t provide a link as the Spectator is behind a paywall.
My attitude towards A.I is that for the current mass users, the novelty will eventually wear off
It will of course be used for serious research, hut just think of a future where we have reached the physical limits of designs, computer, everything in fact.
What do we do then?
Fury as Ed Miliband’s net zero fanaticism set to cost taxpayers ‘more than £9 trillion’
Daily Express
Thank you for your work Ms. Porter, you are a very valuable source of great information. Unfortunately I feel very pessimistic about the future stability of the electrical power generation/distribution system in the the UK. And in the USA where I live.
I know you have concerns about the stability of the power grid when renewable prime mover energy source is utilised. Have you seen this development in China?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVbXI3RTm9E Kevin Walmsley discusses problems that China has experienced with the stability problems you have written about.
They have developed a solution: A “DC Transformer” that they insert into their HVDC distribution lines. Apparently it stabilises the grid.
Actually it isn’t a “DC Transformer”, such a thing doesn’t exist:
https://www.ourmechanicalworld.com/archives/798
Whichever way you slice it this is an amazing piece of equipment: 1.2 million VDC in and out, 750 MVA, with power electronics providing a high frequency transformer with “power through” controls.
I find myself trying not to think of the impact on UK Defence capabilities.
Thank you for your work Ms. Porter, you are a very valuable source of great information. Unfortunately I feel very pessimistic about the future stability of the electrical power generation/distribution system in the the UK. And in the USA where I live.
I know you have concerns about the stability of the power grid when renewable prime mover energy source is utilised. Have you seen this development in China?
They have developed a solution: A “DC Transformer” that they insert into their HVDC distribution lines. Apparently it stabilises the grid.
Actually it isn’t a “DC Transformer”, such a thing doesn’t exist: Whichever way you slice it this is an amazing piece of equipment: 1.2 million VDC in and out, 750 MVA, with power electronics providing a high frequency transformer with “power through” controls.
Sorry about the double post. I thought your filter may have trashed me because of the links.