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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Dan Bloom & Aletha Adu & Kirstie McCrum

Government's emergency energy plan could bring blackouts this winter

The Government has put together an emergency energy plan which could bring blackouts this winter. The measures would be put in place to tackle cold weather gas shortages.

Households in Britain, under a worst-case-scenario report, could be without energy for four days. The plans would be to conserve gas supplies due to a fall in imports from Norway and France, Bloomberg reported.

The information comes after fears energy bills could climb to around £3,582 in October as inflation skyrockets to 13%. The runaway costs are largely due to the soaring price of energy, after the Ukraine conflict has pushed gas prices up, reports MirrorOnline.

Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Kit Malthouse said hospitals are preparing for fuel shortages. "We are making plans for all sorts of contingencies across public services, particularly critical areas like health," Mr Malthouse told Talk TV.

"One of the plans we talk about is coincidence of events, but we need to make sure that all those hospitals that need access to power have their standby generators properly serviced, they've got diesel tanks full with diesel that might be required."

It has since emerged officials are asking food and drink experts if the power outages could lead to empty supermarket shelves, Politics Home reports. Prices are soaring as supply has become disrupted.

Officials are understood to be planning for extreme pressure on the UK’s supply of energy. It's understood the "reasonable worst-case scenario" document is genuine and was drawn up a few weeks ago to deal with the escalating energy crisis.

However, a government source stressed it was not a reflection of what ministers expect to happen. They said: "The government creates extreme scenarios and then we model our response to the fake scenario we create for ourselves."

If the winter is particularly cold, the Government may rely more on shipments of gas from Europe, where gas supplies are already tapered thanks to Putin's cuts. It’s understood the “central” case - rather than the worst-case - shows there are enough electricity and gas supplies to meet demand.

They will be relying more on gas supplies in pipelines across the North Sea from Norway. And three large coal-fired power stations are due remain open all winter instead of closing in September.

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