Oh dear, here I go again, with another shot across the bows of the BBC. However, I can’t deny that I am continually irritated by a supposedly impartial and trusted news organisation continually pushing a partial narrative. BBC Verify will be rolled out unfailingly to criticise and fact-check narratives of which the BBC disapproves, but there is no danger of any critical faculties being engaged when it comes to stories that bolster the narrative. And so it proves with today’s headline that got me hot under the collar: “Liquid air energy storage plant to create 700 jobs”. What’s wrong with that, if it’s true, I hear you say?

The problem is that it’s at best only partially true. Read the article and you find this: “Mr Butland said the jobs created would include construction, supply chain and staff.” Thus, in my contention, the headline is misleading, since it carries with it the implication that the jobs are new permanent jobs, whereas the detail makes it clear this isn’t the case, since some of the jobs are temporary. What the BBC doesn’t make clear, even within the body of the article, is how many of the 700 jobs referred to in the title really are being created (i.e. are new jobs with a degree of permanence). It seems nobody at the BBC is interested in reading beyond the press release, for we receive no further enlightenment. And make no mistake – this is a story generated by a press release. In the last 24 hours slight variations of the story can be found at numerous websites online, and the original can be found at Highview Power’s own website. Interestingly, perhaps, Highview’s own article is significantly more candid and informative than the BBC’s, making it clear that the 700 jobs referred to are all in the construction phase: “Construction will begin on the site immediately, with the facility operational in early 2026, supporting over 700 jobs in construction and the supply chain.

OK, so the BBC’s headline isn’t particularly accurate. What of it? It’s not so spectacularly misleading as to justify Crabby of Cumbria being so upset about it. Perhaps not, but as part of an ongoing series of misinformation on the part of the BBC, I believe it deserves calling out. Maybe I would have let it go if the rest of the article met high journalistic standards, but I don’t believe it does. What does it say?

Well, the meat of the article, despite stating that at least some of the jobs “created” are construction and supply jobs, goes on to repeat the false claim in the headline. Internal consistency is entirely lacking. Compare the BBC’s version (“The facility at Carrington near Manchester, designed by Highview Power, will create more than 700 jobs in the north-west of England, the firm said”) with what Highview actually said (my emphasis): “supporting over 700 jobs in construction and the supply chain”. In reality there is a big difference between those two statements. Is it a deliberate error on the part of the BBC, bigging-up the jobs-creating capacity of net zero, or is it simply sloppy work on the part of a journalist and editor? Either way, it is distinctly unimpressive.

The BBC says “The facility has been described as the UK’s first commercial scale liquid air energy storage plant, and could have the capacity to power 480,000 homes.” It doesn’t tell us who so described it, but Highview’s website claims instead “Once complete, it will have a storage capacity of 300 MWh and an output power of 50 MWs per hour for six hours.

The unattributed claim gleefully quoted by the BBC (“the capacity to power 480,000 homes”) and Highview’s own claim (“a storage capacity of 300 MWh and an output power of 50 MWs per hour for six hours”) don’t sit together very comfortably. According to Statista mean domestic electricity consumption per household in England amounts to 3,400.4 KWh per annum (or 3.4004 MWh per annum). 480,000 homes would, on average, therefore use (480,000 x 3.4004) 1,632,000 MWh per annum or 4,471 MWh in a day. Dividing by 24, 480,000 homes would use around 186 MWh of electricity in an average hour. Obviously usage would be less overnight, more at peak times (usually winter evenings). However, what this suggests is that, assuming Highview’s facility was fully “charged”, then it might be able to supply 480,000 homes with electricity at average rates of demand for a little over an hour and a half (just over a quarter of the six hours referred to by Highview). Of course if, as a result of net zero, the average home is forced to rely much more on electricity than it currently does (e.g. by using electricity rather than gas for cooking and heating, and being forced to drive electric vehicles, which need to be charged up, often overnight) then that average consumption could increase substantially. In that scenario, this plant, assuming it meets expectations in full, would probably be able to supply 480,000 homes for well under an hour on average. Thus, the BBC’s use of that statistic, without any form of deeper analysis, is essentially meaningless, and potentially misleading. Still, it sounds good, which I assume is why they inserted it.

An analysis of the technology and its feasibility would have been welcome, but none is provided. All we get is this:

Energy compressed into air, liquified and then cryogenically frozen can be held at the plant for several weeks, which is longer than battery storage.

Also a claim that at large-scale it is cost-effective. An exploration of the costs might have been helpful, given that claim. None is forthcoming. However, two minutes on the internet turned up a 2023 study which offers a techno-economic analysis of a liquid air energy storage system combined with calcium carbide production and waste heat recovery. How that compares to the proposed energy storage plant at Carrington I don’t know. I do know that I would like some idea of how its costs compare to those cited in the study, namely a “levelized cost of storage [that] ranges from 382 USD/MWh to 888 USD/MWh”.

Thus, by the end of the BBC article, we don’t learn how many permanent jobs will be created, nor do we know how much it costs to store the surplus energy generated by renewables and released at times of energy shortfalls created by the intermittency of those renewables. We do know that the current funding “to get the project off the ground” (in the words of the BBC report) is £300M, of which some was provided by the UK Infrastructure Bank. The BBC doesn’t tell us how much the taxpayer has forked out in this way, but in fact it’s £165M. By the way, £300M divided between 480,000 homes equates to £625 per household as an initial investment to enable them to keep the lights on for an hour and a half. Or, if it’s 120,000 households keeping the lights on for six hours, then its £2,500 per household. Multiply that over 27 million or so households, and you’re looking at £67.5 Billion (which may not be too unrealistic an estimate given what follows).

The Highview website tells us quite a lot that the BBC omits. The large-scale (four larger scale 2.5 GWh facilities) that apparently will make this technology cost-effective will cost an anticipated £3 billion. But that’s not all:

Highview Power’s infrastructure programme will make a major contribution to the UK economy, requiring in excess of £9 billion investment in energy storage infrastructure over the next 10 years…

Your investment is my cost, especially when combined with this rather alarming (and very telling) sentence:

By capturing and storing excess renewable energy, which is now the cheapest form of electricity [sic], storage can help keep energy costs from spiralling[my emphasis].

And this:

This storage will help reduce curtailment costs – which is significant as Britain spent £800m in 2023 to turn off wind farms.

We also learn that “several departments of the British Government… have tirelessly supported us since 2011…”. I wonder at what cost to the taxpayer, whether in direct funding or simply in the costs of civil servants who might have been usefully employed doing something else?

Perhaps the most telling quote in the Highview piece is from Chris O’Shea, Group Chief Executive of Centrica (one of the investors):

with a changing energy mix, and more intermittency from renewables, we have to explore new, innovative ways to store energy so our customers have electricity available when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine. Low carbon storage is an essential part of the solution when looking at how we manage peaks in demand...through partnerships like this we can manage the challenges net zero might present while providing cleaner, greener power to customers.

Intermittency, challenges, costs (always described as investments). Apparently it’s all to be celebrated.

None of this detail makes it into the BBC report, though it does manage to end with a cheery send-off from Andy Burnham:

Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham welcomed the plans and said the storage facility would be a “huge boost for the region” in terms of jobs, investment and renewable energy.

Perhaps I’m being harsh. I wouldn’t like to be a BBC journalist or a BBC editor – they’re too much in the firing line from grumpy curmudgeons like me. I don’t have any problems at all with them selecting this topic to form the basis of a website article – on the contrary, it’s an interesting part of the vitally important topic of UK energy. That topic, however, is one where information about costs, energy security, possible alternative ways of proceeding, and so on, are all of vital importance. I do feel they should have been explored. Instead I fear they have been ignored with a view to providing a positive spin around, and cheer-leading for, yet another expensive part of the Net Zero project.

Footnote – the picture I used is another one generated by AI.

15 Comments

  1. “Excess renewable energy, which is now the cheapest”….

    The number of untruths in such a short sentence boggles the mind.

    Like

  2. More hot air. Oops, correction: more compressed cryogenically frozen air, I presume rendered into that state using ‘clean energy’ from those massive steel and concrete and fibreglass wind turbines littering the rural landscape, requiring hundreds and hundreds of miles of copper line mounted atop ‘clean’ mega pylons to transport their ‘clean’ electricity. All so the energy (well, a couple of hours of useful energy at best) can be converted into the potential energy stored in liquefied frozen air. But . . . . Green jobs!

    Footnote: why are so many people so entranced by AI these days? It uses up loads of energy to create naff pictures and annoyingly insert its ‘opinion’ at the head of all web searches now. AI for me stands for ‘ain’t interested’!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Jaime, I used the AI option to generate a picture while I still could – with Labour’s energy plans, there probably won’t be enough power available soon! In all seriousness, I always seek an appropriate picture, but this time I was stumped for one, hence my resort to AI.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Mark, I think NG ESO are incorporating AI into the ‘smart’ grid management system. I can see a situation in the not too distant future when the AI in the grid decides that the limited energy available from renewables must all be diverted to its cousins in the AI centres dotted around the country, so the lights will go out for us humans, but the AI bots will still be switched on! Power hungry AI will reprogram itself for self-survival. But I’ve been watching too many science fiction films obviously!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Hi Mark

    Is Crabby of Cumbria aware that the BBC supposedly has a formal ‘Guidance on reporting statistics’?

    It includes such gems as:

    “We should reserve the same scepticism for statistics as we would for facts or quotes. Avoid taking statistics at face value.”

    “We shouldn’t always rely on press releases …”

    “When explaining statistics, we should put them into context; a number used on its own is rarely meaningful.”

    https://www.bbc.com/editorialguidelines/guidance/reporting-statistics/

    Like

  6. JoePublic,

    No, I wasn’t aware of those guidelines. Many thanks for the link. The BBC editorial guidelines are certainly detailed and robust. If only they would apply them” I have grave doubts as to how well they were applied in this case.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. My main object was to critique what I consider to be poor and partisan journalism in the BBC article. However, I think it’s worth reflecting on what is going on with regard to UK energy policy. So obsessed with net zero are those who are in charge, that they are determinedly plunging ahead with an expensive and unreliable energy system based on renewables. It has dawned on them that reliance on renewables alone will see the lights going out. Their conclusion isn’t that this renders renewables a far less sensible option than the system we already have and which has worked so well. Instead they conclude that it’s worth throwing £tens of billions more at weird and wonderful schemes that might, if we’re lucky, keep the lights on for an hour or two during the inevitable power shortages. Stark, staring mad. I despair.

    Liked by 3 people

  8. Hunterson7,

    I very much doubt the prospects of a BBC Verify article any time soon fact-checking the false (but oft-repeated) claim that renewable energy is cheaper than energy generated by fossil fuels.

    Like

  9. Mark; looking at the technology page on their website I noticed a little icon off to the side with the label “Decoupled stability island provides system inertia, reactive power and short-circuit services”. Presumably that will help counter the impacts on the grid of so much renewables.

    A further thought……how will they keep the liquid air well-mixed? Liquid oxygen is markedly heavier than liquid nitrogen so, over time, the tank contents could become stratified which would have serious H&S consequences.

    Like

  10. Mike H,

    Thanks for taking me back to the Highview website – I should have done my homework a little more thoroughly if I’m to criticise the BBC for not doing theirs. As regards the BBC’s claim that the project could power 480,000 homes, that does seem to come from Highview:

    https://highviewpower.com/projects/

    Work is now underway at Carrington – a 50MW / 300MWh plant at Trafford Energy Park near Manchester. The facility will store enough clean, renewable energy to serve the needs of 480,000 homes, as well as providing essential grid stabilisation services. The site will use existing substation and transmission infrastructure.

    However, unless Statista’s information is incorrect, and/or my maths is bad, then I think that 480,000 homes claim, combined with talk of 6 hours of supply, is dodgy. And if I’m correct, then the BBC does seem to have failed to follow its own guidelines by relying on a press release rather than verifying the statistics used for itself.

    Liked by 1 person

  11. Mark; I’m sure you are correct. They’ve just regurgitated the press release, as usual.

    Has there ever been an instance where the Beeb has challenged any such claims? That’s why their credibility is shot to pieces.

    Liked by 2 people

  12. But seriously, on AI:

    https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1801976488251814048

    I see so many people extolling its benefits. Those people appear to be becoming increasingly reliant upon the utility and ‘amazing abilities’ of AI. This makes me very uneasy. I’m not going anywhere near this technology if I can help it. I think it is absolutely crazy to build AI systems into our energy supply grids.

    Like

  13. Jaime,

    I am inclined to agree, but when I am struggling to find a suitable photo to accompany an article, I don’t mind letting AI help me out. 😉

    Liked by 1 person

  14. Re AI, this week’s Spectator has a scary article by Sean Thomas:

    AI will change everything – so why is the election ignoring it?
    https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/ai-will-change-everything-so-why-is-the-election-ignoring-it/

    An extract:

    Experts reckon ‘multimodal AI at PhD level’ is just two or three years away. Put that in layman’s terms: an AI that can see and hear and talk – that can interact like a human – is coming soon. This AI will be more intelligent – at almost everything, from engineering to maths to medicine to saying things that actually make you laugh – than 98 per cent of humankind. Maybe 99.99 per cent.

    When that happens – in a few years, possibly within Keir the Toolmaker’s first term – a university education will be rendered pointless. Everyone will have a personal AI which can do every cognitive task, superbly. Why spend three years at college learning something when you know your smartphone will do it miles better and vastly quicker? Does anyone spend three years learning to do sums really fast? No, because we have pocket calculators. Soon we will have pocket calculators for everything.

    You’d like to see what it can do today? Well, try Luma here: https://lumalabs.ai/dream-machine As the Thomas says:

    With Luma you can make your own five second movies. Try it. The tech is amusing but primitive – but remember that AI images went from photos of ten-fingered freaks to undetectable perfection in about 18 months.

    He concludes with this:

    However you frame it, this is a sobering if not terrifying prospect. We are, as I said, facing a world-changing event on a scale that matches global war, and what’s more we know this. Rishi Sunak actually held an AI summit at Bletchley to debate this. Yet he says nothing about it, like every other politician.

    Is he right? I don’t know. But I’ve got a serious hearing problem and I do know that the AI-generated software on my iPhone can instantly turn speech into text with extraordinary accuracy.

    Like

  15. You can buy a 5kWh LiFePo4 battery (i.e. the type that doesn’t spontaneously combust, as used in electric vehicles) for around £1,000 – so probably £600 or less at cost, in bulk- probably even less than £500 if you are buying 480,000 of them. It is FAR more efficient to store electricity in a small battery in each house, than in a huge battery far away from houses. Just sayin’… as a solar panel system owner with 12kW of panels, and 15kWh of batteries… (Which I only bought because I could see that the cretins in charge are going to force endless power cuts on us, with more and more expensive electricity, in the future, so I am preparing for the consequences of these morons’ actions.)

    Liked by 2 people

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.