Power Cuts after Storm - a week on
Discussion
Apologies if I’ve missed a thread on this, but it seems fairly extraordinary to me that we still have tens of thousands of people without power - my aged parents amongst them - a week down the line.
Does this demonstrate a fundamental failure of preparedness and resilience, or was last week’s storm truly exceptional?
Does this demonstrate a fundamental failure of preparedness and resilience, or was last week’s storm truly exceptional?
Edited by skwdenyer on Thursday 2nd December 13:01
Bannock said:
It demonstrates privatised utilities cost cutting by failing to have enough staff available when these events (inevitably) happen.
Public utilities should be nationally owned and not run for profit.
I don’t necessarily disagree with you. But equally we are supposed to have a competent regulator who would - one assumes - set basic minima for preparedness. Or am I hopelessly optimistic? Public utilities should be nationally owned and not run for profit.

skwdenyer said:
Bannock said:
It demonstrates privatised utilities cost cutting by failing to have enough staff available when these events (inevitably) happen.
Public utilities should be nationally owned and not run for profit.
I don’t necessarily disagree with you. But equally we are supposed to have a competent regulator who would - one assumes - set basic minima for preparedness. Or am I hopelessly optimistic? Public utilities should be nationally owned and not run for profit.


Bannock said:
skwdenyer said:
Bannock said:
It demonstrates privatised utilities cost cutting by failing to have enough staff available when these events (inevitably) happen.
Public utilities should be nationally owned and not run for profit.
I don’t necessarily disagree with you. But equally we are supposed to have a competent regulator who would - one assumes - set basic minima for preparedness. Or am I hopelessly optimistic? Public utilities should be nationally owned and not run for profit.


It's like the 'empty hospital beds' situation. How much spare capacity should a system have built in? Should you have enough staff for the necessary repairs from a once-in-decade storm? What about a once-in-a-century storm? What should these people be doing during a normal winter season? How should all the additional equipment be funded? Should the end user (i.e us) pay to keep repair teams on standby, just so services can be restored that little bit quicker during these rare(ish) extreme weather events?
It really doesn't matter, if you have people sitting round waiting for a storm so they can rush to repair a fallen cable, you will pay for them. If they are government run it will come from taxes, if privately owned it will be added to your bill, the only difference is the big cats will not earn the big bonuses, they will still be paid a lot as this has to happen to get someone to do the job.
I would just accept it and make sure you claim compensation https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/consumer/energy/...
Our local supplier are refusing to answer the phones so you can't claim (apparently). The more who claim the more they will think about how to man it under these circumstances.
I would just accept it and make sure you claim compensation https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/consumer/energy/...
Our local supplier are refusing to answer the phones so you can't claim (apparently). The more who claim the more they will think about how to man it under these circumstances.
Bannock said:
And that's it. The main motive is profit and shareholder value, not service. So we end up like this.
Have you considered founding your own utility company with your vaues? People of a similar mindset will flock to your banner & be your customers.Good luck with your new venture- let us know how it goes.
Biggy Stardust said:
Bannock said:
And that's it. The main motive is profit and shareholder value, not service. So we end up like this.
Have you considered founding your own utility company with your vaues? People of a similar mindset will flock to your banner & be your customers.Good luck with your new venture- let us know how it goes.
Up in Aberdeenshire, there have been workers from Wales and Ireland dotting about to assist the usual SSE workers with it being announced today that the Army are also being drafted in to help.
To make matters worse, a lot of areas also lost water and some lost gas too.
Catering vans have been set up in some of the worst affected areas (arranged by SSE) and hotels / town halls etc opened to allow folks hot water / drinks / food / phone charging etc.
The winds were certainly up there with the worst I have seen (onshore) in my life and have caused unprecedented levels of damage to the infrastructure but bad storms aren't uncommon so I'm surprised at the response from the authorities in the delays etc. Community spirit has been good though!
To make matters worse, a lot of areas also lost water and some lost gas too.
Catering vans have been set up in some of the worst affected areas (arranged by SSE) and hotels / town halls etc opened to allow folks hot water / drinks / food / phone charging etc.
The winds were certainly up there with the worst I have seen (onshore) in my life and have caused unprecedented levels of damage to the infrastructure but bad storms aren't uncommon so I'm surprised at the response from the authorities in the delays etc. Community spirit has been good though!
A bit of both I think
I live in the sticks, in the NW, and we get a lot of wind - we were off for 48 hours over the weekend and do get the odd power cut during winter but it's usually no more than a few hours
Last Friday was windy but to be honest I've experienecd it windier and not had any interurptions. The wind direction was unsual this time - strong, protracted rather than gusty, and from the north not the usual SW. I think this 'discovered' some vulnerabilities in rural poles and lines not previously tested. Most of our local cuts, and there were many separate incidents, were due to trees felling lines - perhaps they need to extend buffer zones near to distribution lines and fell out more trees.
I'm no apologist BTW and think that public services should be in public onwership
I live in the sticks, in the NW, and we get a lot of wind - we were off for 48 hours over the weekend and do get the odd power cut during winter but it's usually no more than a few hours
Last Friday was windy but to be honest I've experienecd it windier and not had any interurptions. The wind direction was unsual this time - strong, protracted rather than gusty, and from the north not the usual SW. I think this 'discovered' some vulnerabilities in rural poles and lines not previously tested. Most of our local cuts, and there were many separate incidents, were due to trees felling lines - perhaps they need to extend buffer zones near to distribution lines and fell out more trees.
I'm no apologist BTW and think that public services should be in public onwership
Bannock said:
And that's it. The main motive is profit and shareholder value, not service. So we end up like this.
How does that square with the immense loss of revenue due to no one using their services as they can't be supplied?Power consumption for the average household more than doubles in winter compared to summer - so it's likely they're losing something in the region of 4-5% of the full year revenues and profits for that whole area...
Shareholders will be screaming at that loss.
Sway said:
Bannock said:
And that's it. The main motive is profit and shareholder value, not service. So we end up like this.
How does that square with the immense loss of revenue due to no one using their services as they can't be supplied?Power consumption for the average household more than doubles in winter compared to summer - so it's likely they're losing something in the region of 4-5% of the full year revenues and profits for that whole area...
Shareholders will be screaming at that loss.
Public ownership with private motivation - i.e. you are allowed to improve service/make a profit, some of which can then go to staff in the form of bonuses, etc.
However, above a certain threshold, national utilities then contribute to a UK fund for insurance/training/resilience provision.
If the initial benefits of privatisation were some additional or needed investment, then offer the same benefit to those who invest to help with raising some needed funds with a slug of interest or a bond repayment.
It went from public ownership which in some cases was dire (British Rail - at times) to private ownership for which we are now seeing the failings of underinvestment.
You cannot solve a problem with the same level of thinking that helped create the problem in the first place (or words to that effect, courtesy of Albert Einstein).
However, above a certain threshold, national utilities then contribute to a UK fund for insurance/training/resilience provision.
If the initial benefits of privatisation were some additional or needed investment, then offer the same benefit to those who invest to help with raising some needed funds with a slug of interest or a bond repayment.
It went from public ownership which in some cases was dire (British Rail - at times) to private ownership for which we are now seeing the failings of underinvestment.
You cannot solve a problem with the same level of thinking that helped create the problem in the first place (or words to that effect, courtesy of Albert Einstein).
Bannock said:
Biggy Stardust said:
Bannock said:
And that's it. The main motive is profit and shareholder value, not service. So we end up like this.
Have you considered founding your own utility company with your vaues? People of a similar mindset will flock to your banner & be your customers.Good luck with your new venture- let us know how it goes.
Alternatively don't complain about how others do it.
Bannock said:
Sway said:
Bannock said:
And that's it. The main motive is profit and shareholder value, not service. So we end up like this.
How does that square with the immense loss of revenue due to no one using their services as they can't be supplied?Power consumption for the average household more than doubles in winter compared to summer - so it's likely they're losing something in the region of 4-5% of the full year revenues and profits for that whole area...
Shareholders will be screaming at that loss.
So you believe the taxpayer should pay for that inefficient use of resources?
Of course, it's not as simple as just 'standing up resources' - there's access to be cleared and made safe, there's materials and equipment that need to get to site. There's testing and checks post work to confirm safety and appropriate reconnection for the Grid.
These things take time. Throwing bodies at them doesn't mean reductions in overall lead time.
We also as a nation don't help ourselves. In plenty of developed world countries, it's quite normal to have a household UPS/backup generator. Indeed, I've just bought one as I'm installing a large marine aquarium that'll wholly die (costing thousands, let alone the loss of livestock) within two hours of no power...
Of course, the beauty is that we've got directly comparable examples of both private sector provision and public sector.
Do you really believe that multiday power interruptions didn't occur under public sector provision?
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