UK Grid Runs Without Coal for First Time in 100 Years

"At midnight on 10 May 2016, the UK hit an energy milestone. For the first time in over 100 years, the amount of coal being used by the national grid to power Britain’s kettles, computer and televisions fell to zero. And then it stayed at zero for four hours.

Two days later, this time for five hours, coal usage fell to zero again. Nuclear, wind, hydro and solar energy powered the national grid in coal’s place. By 13 May, the needle had hit zero four times, for a total of around 25 hours.

This historic turning point came on the eve of a Government consultation on phasing out coal energy completely by 2025."

Hazel Sheffield reports for the Independent May 21, 2016.

SEE ALSO:

"Portugal Runs For Four Days Straight On Renewable Energy Alone" (Guardian)

"FERC: Virtually All New Electric Capacity Added In Q1 2016 Was Renewable" (Utility Dive)

"Renewables Are Leaving Natural Gas In The Dust This Year" (Climate Progress)

"Green Really Is The New Black As Big Oil Gets A Taste For Renewables" (Guardian)

"Germany Just Got Almost All of Its Power From Renewable Energy" (Bloomberg)

Source: Independent, 05/23/2016