Share.

    20 Comments

    1. quackquack1982 on

      And yet just a couple of weeks ago, Octopus Agile was charging 99.9 per kW so basically £1 a unit for over 4 hours, 4x what most pay on fixed/standard tariffs. Why? Because demand was high and wind was useless as it was not windy and being this time of year solar was no help.

      Smells like propaganda to me.

    2. what a load of bollox. They gunna pay me to take this electric then by that logic. I bet my energy bill still goes up.

    3. Feeling-Signal1399 on

      What it shows is that we need to invest in storing electricity or this move to renewables just isn’t going to work. Pumping water into mountain reservoirs is the cheapest way.

      The problem is we don’t have a joined up strategy to deal with this yet. We’re giving lots of money (the most in the world proportionally) to industry and hoping that they sort it all out for us.

    4. Butterscotch-Bean on

      This is like when a company makes hundreds of people redundant and tells them, on the way out, that it’ll make the company stronger and more efficient.

    5. I’m on a time of use tariff so I benefit from this. From 10:30pm tonight I’m being paid 4.62p/kwh I burn. I’m planning to put everything electrical I can in. The downside is for a few hours a fortnight ago I paid 99p/kWh

    6. This is not the price consumers pay it would be the system price, if you really want to know about it look up BETTA. It’s also not the first time it’s happened, I remember negative prices several years ago in the early hours of the morning

    7. Yes we get this story at least once a month. Yet somehow my energy costs keep rising and are a long way from zero.

      One can only assume that the renewable energy generators are absolutely raking it in as we’re forced to pay the price based on gas generation and not the actual cost.

    8. You all know that’s a bad thing right? When energy is less than free it’s harder to invest new carbon free energy.

    9. Negative wholesale prices in the short term for a couple hours when the wind blows hard, only head to wholesale price instability and therefore a higher unit per kwh price to customers! Surely this is obvious!

    10. ProfessionalCar2774 on

      Cool. Can’t wait for that to reflect on my bill.

      Because it will reflect, right?
      .
      .
      .
      …Right?