We NEED to Talk About the Energy Crisis!

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  • čas přidán 3. 09. 2022
  • Between an eye watering energy price cap, the soaring cost of living, conspicuously absent political leadership, supply chain chaos and the climate crisis - we are not in for an easy winter. Here on the Fully Charged Show we've been banging the sustainability drum for over a decade and are frustrated when we see the sheer volume of low carbon technologies that, with the right incentives and policies, could immediately alleviate cost and climate pressures. However, none of us can afford to wait for that to happen. To tackle this, we want to equip our audience with a range of practical environmental solutions that suit different budgets to start easing the burden now. To explain more Dan, Robert and Imogen get together for a chat!
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    #EnergyCrisis #ClimateCrisis #EnergyPriceCap #Inflation #EnergyPrices #Energy #CleanEnergy #ClimateChange #Sustainability #CostofLiving #Electric #Gas
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 895

  • @mahon257
    @mahon257 Před rokem +64

    This channel has never been more important. Keep up the great work guys.

  • @robaire.b
    @robaire.b Před rokem +42

    “The Fully Charged Community” is a very comforting concept. So good to have, in this channel, a source of rationality and progressive thinking. So true that in the UK, the barriers to stopping burning stuff and implementing available (and improving) technologies are becoming largely psychological. All the things we spoke of back in the 70s and earlier in regard to moving away from fossil fuels and autonomous/offgrid and community/local based solutions are now becoming a reality and an imperative. It’s so frustrating that politically, the UK is utterly off the rails and moving in the wrong direction. We should look to greater collaboration with our mainland European neighbours in finding solutions, not the reverse

    • @Pedrombsantos
      @Pedrombsantos Před rokem

      Off-Grid living is being completely crushed by over-regulating Governments all over the world. They don´t want you living off of Nature in harmony with it, it makes it harder for them to control somebody if they are debt free, producing their own food and some clothing. They want people living in the Mega-Chicken Coops, pardon me, Smart Cities. I sound like a Tin Foil Hat guy talking but that´s the way all that´s been happening makes some sense. In my country (Portugal) they even require you to register your chickens (if you have more than 350). The policies and "Codes" are so derranged that it basically bans people from living in the hills. The forrests need people living in and arround them, people manage the dead wood and conservation of ib because they need it, thus reducing forrest fire hazzards and "for profit forrestry". I´ll shut my trap now... and, by the way, EU=USSR 2,0. There, I´ve said it...

  • @victorsvoice7978
    @victorsvoice7978 Před rokem +22

    The fossil fuel industry is not going to give-up without a fight. Because its all about money. Governments and politicians that support fossil fuels should be voted out.

    • @alanhat5252
      @alanhat5252 Před rokem

      money and power

    • @timsmith5339
      @timsmith5339 Před rokem +1

      I wouldn't have thought it was a very good strategy to force your customers elsewhere by becoming unaffordable though?!?

    • @Pedrombsantos
      @Pedrombsantos Před rokem +1

      @@alanhat5252 What do you think the owners of "Big Electric" will do when they become the Monopoly ?! Money and Power...

    • @5353Jumper
      @5353Jumper Před rokem

      @@Pedrombsantos which is why the Grid should be a government entity and definitely not a for profit organization.
      By nature it is a physical monopoly, and as such has no market forces to prevent profiteering harming the vendors, employees and consumers.
      The generation can be for profit, but the grid itself needs to be governmentally managed (of course helps if you actually have a benevolent representative government that makes decent decisions for the benefit of citizens)
      A centralized government owned grid could have incentive to encourage endpoint generation, reducing strain on the grid (reduce spending on grid expansion) and reducing the purchasing requirement from grid scale generators. A government owned grid can preferentially purchase from green grid scale generators. Or supplement green generation with high efficiency gas peeker plants and storage tech which has little financial incentive.
      The for profit grid is what is preventing wide scale adoption of green generation, endpoint generation, and because it is owned largely by the petroleum companies it also resists transition to EV.

    • @timsmith5339
      @timsmith5339 Před rokem +1

      @@david.j.bunney ....and the oil industry isn't? The problem with critics of the brave new world we are entering is that they find fault that is obviously there but they have never bothered pointing it out for the previous technology where it is substantially worse. The perfect world is still some way off but we are getting towards it and I am loving where it is taking us. Incidentally, I am what you would call a petrol head. I have always loved my car and motorbikes and still do, they are just electric ones now to reduce my polution levels. I did a calculator recently to see how I was doing. It was a rudimentary thing only taking into consideration CO2 but my average is where we need to be to prevent things getting worse. I could reduce it further by ditching the car and/or eating less meat but I reckon if I'm at the level required then I shouldn't feel too guilty about actually living. My point is that I've not really made any sacrifices to get to this level, so why do so many people bleat on about it and refuse to do the blinking obvious?

  • @xandermarjoram8622
    @xandermarjoram8622 Před rokem +19

    Definitely happy to be a Patron of Full Charged. I initially joined so I could help to fund the production of high quality, entertaining and informative videos, but now it feels almost like a public service; this channel seems to be in the right place at the right time to help educate the nation on energy.

  • @hollyandtheev6519
    @hollyandtheev6519 Před rokem +169

    Great to see you being overtly political.
    What faces us over the coming months and years is potentially so horrific that staying silent is simply not an option.
    Well done, Fully Charged!

    • @Dev255
      @Dev255 Před rokem +8

      Think how we will feel when our kids are suffering in the future and ask us what we did to help.
      This is an emotive subject, but as you said, needs to be a focus priority.
      Would Robert run for Government?

    • @steveedwards5280
      @steveedwards5280 Před rokem +18

      "little to choose between the two candidates".
      I did hear someone else say it's like having to choose whether you want cat shit, or dog shit in your sandwich.

    • @dwc1964
      @dwc1964 Před rokem

      @@steveedwards5280 Corbyn's Labour 2017 and 2019 manifestoes had lots of really good stuff.
      Unfortunately, as has been revealed in the Forde Report (and feverishly swept under the carpet), the Labour right, who never considered Corbyn a legitimate party leader, diverted funds and otherwise sabotaged the 2017 campaign, potentially costing the margin of victory in what was an astonishingly close election (especially given that May had called the election with the expectation, commonly held, of dealing Labour a death-blow).
      Since then, of course, the Labour right with Starmer at the helm have purged Corbyn and anyone who supported or ever said a kind word about him, and brought the party back to the age of Blair and Brown.
      As an American, I recognize that party - it's our Democratic Party, of which you already have one - the LibDems - so why do the Labour right feel like they need to be another? Except of course that Labour took a spot in your duopoly after WWII and relegated the Liberals to the sidelines, while we've never had a working class party in power & so the people who might be able to build one have buried themselves in the Democrats instead. The difference being, even when Blair & Brown ran Labour, it was still, in its DNA and at its core, a working class party; whereas the Democratic Party, even at its most left under FDR and LBJ (with the New Deal and Great Society programs, respectively), was _never_ a working class party, but _only ever_ the element of the capitalist party that was willing to make a deal with the working class in order to keep them contained and constrained.
      Don't let Labour become like our Democratic Party. If it is still possible, it is _necessary_ for the working class to regain control of its party. If that's not possible anymore, the only other alternative is for the working class to build _another_ party for itself. That's where we're at in the USA, and while it's actually, technically, quite doable right now, it's _psychologically_ impossible because, as noted, the people & groups with the skill sets and other assets necessary to build one don't _see_ it as possible, and so they remain buried inside an enemy party, doing the only thing that party requires of them - to stay in, and not break out.
      *The working class needs its own party* one way or the other.

    • @Lookup2Wakeup
      @Lookup2Wakeup Před rokem

      Most of the Muppets in this country stayed silent when unelected so called scientists shut down the country, so I don't expect much reaction now.....😡

    • @pinkelephants1421
      @pinkelephants1421 Před rokem +6

      There's a Dutch external insulation called Enegiesprong, who will scan the outside of your house, manufacture the insulation off-site in a factory, then deliver it to site and crane it in etc.

  • @intothemultiverse1033
    @intothemultiverse1033 Před rokem +118

    Ripple energy have the right idea. Instead of nationalising energy, each county/area should produce nearby as a co-op. Own and invest in your own energy, produced in your own area with the excess sold to the grid/heavy industry.

    • @markjones6873
      @markjones6873 Před rokem +5

      Yes yes yes 🙌 and ripple should expand to battery storage. I live in a Victorian terraced house like at least 5 million other people. Once you've insulated your roof you can't do anything else. So Ripple all the way.

    • @oracleoftruth
      @oracleoftruth Před rokem +6

      Doesn't make sense. Scottish Islands with MWs they can't use and manufacturing urban areas without enough energy.

    • @TheVOTN
      @TheVOTN Před rokem +9

      @@oracleoftruth "excess sold to the grid/industry" covers your objection quite nicely I think.

    • @ShadowJamchan
      @ShadowJamchan Před rokem +8

      Yes absolutely. I picked up a share to cover 50% off my energy usage earlier this year, and a couple of weeks later after the Ukraine conflict kicked off and it became apparent there could be long term impact from Russian energy dropping out of the equation I upped to 100%. I consider myself incredibly fortunate that I will have only 12 or so expensive months before my turbine removes my electricity bill for the next 25 years. However, I'm also very aware that its a classic example that those well enough off can help themselves out, whilst those unable to spare several thousand pounds may end up paying that directly on their bills instead.

    • @markjones6873
      @markjones6873 Před rokem +5

      @@oracleoftruth my ripple windmill is in Ayrshire, I live in Bristol. And I can move and the benefit moves with me.

  • @oneworldfamily
    @oneworldfamily Před rokem +35

    My issue with the Government providing handouts to British households to cover inflated energy bills is that it's our (tax payers) money. So whatever happens, British households pay for it. Instead, Government should be acting to reign in the BPs of the world.

    • @r0bbyr0b98
      @r0bbyr0b98 Před rokem +1

      Exactly, the general public dont realise that the governent doesnt have any money. It comes from taxpayers and QE. It has to be paid somehow.

    • @keithhobbs1
      @keithhobbs1 Před rokem +4

      Isn't that what Labour are proposing? The cost of their plan would be paid for by having an effective windfall tax on the likes of Shell & BP? At least that's my understanding of it.

    • @rhysbevan429
      @rhysbevan429 Před rokem +1

      @@keithhobbs1 Yep, pay the money "this end" to hold down the prices for the citizens and recover it at the other end when the BPs, Shells and Ineos's of the world get their profits.

    • @oneworldfamily
      @oneworldfamily Před rokem +1

      @@keithhobbs1 That approach seems to make far more sense to me. When you have the likes of BP alone posting quarterly profits in the region of £7 billion while the country is seriously struggling, something is clearly significantly amiss.

  • @geoffmewing5270
    @geoffmewing5270 Před rokem +23

    Great discussion Fully Charged team. We can't wait to see you here in Australia for Fully Charged Live in 2023. So much is finally changing here with a change of federal government and now support for renewables and the transition to EV's but a long way to go. A suggestion for the new programs on efficient heating and cooling products for the UK might be a review of reverse cycle inverter Air conditioning units. eg: split systems. Really popular in OZ and the right sized system is cheaper to run than any gas heating.They cool in summer and heat in winter and with solar and batteries on homes could be a winner. Seeing the UK seems to be unfortunately joining Australia's hot summers and droughts these kind of cooling and heating systems might really work. Just a thought.

  • @markyates5744
    @markyates5744 Před rokem +7

    I remember reading about the model Katie price. That her energy bill was £20000/month when bankrupt 2 years ago! She had the heating running 24/7/365 even when not home. It kinda speaks volumes to what's wrong with the country. People just paid the bill. Didn't make sensible long term choices about payback for insulation. Some insulation will pay for itself in under a year at current prices!

  • @MagicianMan
    @MagicianMan Před rokem +20

    It's somewhat naive to simply say that energy production costs on renewable haven't changed. The reality is that almost all of the energy production prices are agreed for a set number of years well in advance. The government has granted a guaranteed, inflation linked price of £92.50 per megawatt hour for the electricity to be produced by Hinkley Point C. Compare this to the cost of offshore wind, which under a 2019 contract for difference auction, saw prices come in at £39.65 per megawatt hour. In addition to this approx 90% of our Gas is supplied from the North Sea with only 10% coming from other sources. To be clear the North Sea gas is pumped directly to the UK, there is no other destination and its in gaseous form, not liquefied gas so can't, easily, be sent/sold anywhere else. Fully Charged SHOULD be talking about the difference in consumer energy price costs that the UK is experiencing versus Germany who are 50% reliant on gas from Russia. You SHOULD be talking about the £10 BILLION that the Oil/Gas Industry receives every year from the UK Government in grants etc. You SHOULD be raising awareness of the financial penalties that will take affect in 2035 (currently £8 BILLION every year based on our CO2 emissions). You should be talking about the fact that the Windfall tax that has been applied to the Oil/Gas industry only took affect from June 2022 and that it can be reduced by upto 90% simply by those same companies investing in the same things that they were going to invest in already....... How about we talk about the "government help" that has already been announced, the fact that most of it ensures the money goes directly back to the Energy suppliers. If they invested that £10 Billion/year in installing Solar PV onto every house in the UK it would be approx £110 billion in total (circa 22million homes with £5k Solar PV cost) or the equivalent of 11 years of oil/gas subsidies. But that is never going to happen with a the Tory government as they are more than happy to let the fat cats of energy producers and suppliers make massive profits and pay "taxes" rather than actually helping the UK consumers. The current crisis can be traced back to the 1980's Thatcher Conservative government. In her effort to reduce the power of the unions, under a guise of free markets, they decided to privatize Energy and Water. Those things that are necessary for people to survive should NEVER have been privatized. Profits on the utilities are inconsistent with ensuring stable pricing and continued investment to improve services. Just look at what happened to the railway stock maintenance - the private firm, arising from the 80's, cut costs and jeopardized safety until the government had to step in an re-nationalize to ensure the continued running of the rail services and the safety of passengers.......

    • @peterjones6640
      @peterjones6640 Před rokem +2

      The supply of gas from U.K. waters is only around 50%, 30% comes from Norway and the rest is a mixture of LNG and some from the European inter-connector. Unfortunately gas is an internationally traded commodity so U.K. gas prices follow world prices.

    • @rhysbevan429
      @rhysbevan429 Před rokem +3

      The North Sea is criss crossed with pipelines sending gas to different countries. At this time, we are landing LNG in UK ports and then pumping it to Europe to fill their storage before the winter. We'd fill our storage too if it hadn't been closed down by the Tories.

    • @trevorheley1045
      @trevorheley1045 Před rokem

      I think everybody commenting here should use their actual name. It really bugs me that on social media it is all to easy for anybody to use a platform to slate governments (of any colour) and yet we have no idea what political agenda is behind the comments. And yes lots of governments have done a lot of bad things with regards to energy, often influenced by external parties be-it corporations or unions but continuing to go on about the past just helps polarise opinion when we actually need people to work together.

    • @keithoneill6273
      @keithoneill6273 Před rokem +1

      What ever you think about Boris, his government has put in place plans for a massive increase in offshore wind power (more than quadruple by 2030) and also onshore solar. They've also supported the creation of the battery factory in Blyth and other energy storage methods. Credit where credit's due. They've also steadfastly resisted the siren calls for fracking, to date. Indeed, it could be argued that they've been the greenest government we've ever had. It's too easy target them just because (in some cases) you despise the Tories. It's incredibly disappointing to hear the word "scum" used. To my mind, reducing the debate to that level is totally counterproductive.

    • @johnw2677
      @johnw2677 Před rokem

      @@trevorheley1045 in the uk we have a government that is openly flirting with making criticism of the UK government an offence, the reality, as much as you may choose not to see it, is that Britain is dealing with incipient fascism. Only a fool would deny the need for circumspection in Britain in 2022.

  • @timo23
    @timo23 Před rokem +6

    Good to hear Robert not holding back!
    Also, I would love PV and batteries, but everytime you look it's companies that seem dodgy and it's hard to get simple quotes. It would be great to have a fully charged site that would put genuine people in touch with professional and competitively priced suppliers / installers ⚡👌🏻
    The same goes for heat pumps.

  • @malcolm8564
    @malcolm8564 Před rokem +17

    The government needs to claw back every penny of the Oil and gas companies windfall income and return it to the people forced to pay it. And they should be required to invest 100% of their profits in renewable energies.

    • @waywardgeologist2520
      @waywardgeologist2520 Před rokem +1

      No one is forcing one to pay it. Switch to electric and renewables means that people have options.

  • @pinkelephants1421
    @pinkelephants1421 Před rokem +4

    What I have never understood is why is it SO HARD to decouple the price of electricity from the price of gas. I know this has long been acknowledged as being necessary & that it is being looked at, but it just never quite seems to happen. Energy bills would plummet in this country if the decoupling were to happen. This isn't to say that electricity generated using natural gas wouldn't remain hideously expensive, but an awful lot of load shifting would naturally occur as the public began to understand when renewable energy was plentiful; the use of the currently existing apps would proliferate to the point of being stratospheric in nature.

    • @udishomer5852
      @udishomer5852 Před rokem +1

      The UK still uses lots of natural gas for electricity so unfortunately that's a part of the equation.
      As you get more renewables every year, that share of the cost will drop.

    • @patdbean
      @patdbean Před rokem

      @@udishomer5852 until we have bulk energy storage you need gas to balance the grid when the wind dose not blow and the sun dose not shine.

    • @MichaelGreenLagos
      @MichaelGreenLagos Před rokem +1

      We need nuclear energy

    • @pinkelephants1421
      @pinkelephants1421 Před rokem

      @@udishomer5852 But surely it should be possible given the highly sophisticated software monitoring systems the National Grid has, to differentiate between types of generation and have prices adjust accordingly. I remember Fully Charged going to their control room & National Grid could see where the electricity was being generated at any given moment. Electricity pricing is granular where supply and demand is matched instantly - it's called the Spot Market.

    • @pinkelephants1421
      @pinkelephants1421 Před rokem

      @@MichaelGreenLagos So you prefer to pay even more for your electricity than you do now, both directly via energy bills & indirectly via taxation for huge subsidies & 24hr armed police guards? Then there's the 10,000 year+ ☢️ waste storage headache. And since nearly all UK ☢️ power plants have to be located at the coast, climate change exacerbated increases in storm frequency, intensity & sea level rise, pose not a small level of risk over the 30-50ish year life of the average plant. Since no magic wand exists to wish away faster than expected tipping points such the Greenland & Artic/Antarctic sea ice/land ice sheets collapsing far sooner than predicted, should that happen, as an island nation, the UK will be well & truly totaly fluffed.
      ☢️ power is THE most expensive form of electricity generation across-the-board.

  • @petestuart6584
    @petestuart6584 Před rokem +33

    We live in a brick built Edwardian semi and over the last few years I have slowly been adding extra insulation round the house. The difference you can feel is almost instant. When we first moved in there was no insulation at all in the loft, so that was the first thing we got done (under the last green energy deal). The next area needed was under our sitting room floor, which is suspended, and lastly I have nearly completed putting a circuit of insulation along the outside walls under the first floor with only one area to do. This has helped to keep as much heat within the building as possible . Lastly I've installed smart thermostats on nearly every radiator in the house.
    We do have a cavity but it's not insulated. If that is to be done, it needs to be done properly. I have heard and seen lots of horror stories about poorly done cavity wall insulation.
    Yes insulate your house well and you will feel the difference ( but don't forget to provide enough ventilation too!)

    • @colinmacdonald5732
      @colinmacdonald5732 Před rokem

      Can you quantify what the actual reduction in energy bills is?Professor David MacKay in his "reality check on renewables" said wall and loft insulation would reduce your bills by 25%. And he actually had got the "fluff men" in so I guess he knows what he's talking about. If you want Swedish levels on insulation you need insurance on the building exterior, good luck doing that on a Victorian semi. Or you completely got the house and install kingspan or such like. Done with great effect on a Glasgow tenement, £40,000 per flat. Multiply that by 10million for the UK... well it gives you an idea of the scale of the challenge. Screaming "INSULATE BRITAIN" and gluing yourself to some tarmac won't necessarily achieve this.

    • @colinmacdonald5732
      @colinmacdonald5732 Před rokem

      INSULATE the exterior. GUT the building. Sheesh!

    • @rooroo1982
      @rooroo1982 Před rokem

      @@colinmacdonald5732 yep, destroy the outside of a beautiful old house.

    • @salibaba
      @salibaba Před rokem +1

      We don’t have a cavity so managed to get external insulation and render applied. As well as sealing up some draughts it’s cut our heating consumption by 1/3. Get that cavity filled!!

    • @colinmacdonald5732
      @colinmacdonald5732 Před rokem +1

      @@salibaba Indeed. You put the insulation on the outside which gave you a pretty decent heat saving. I myself don't have that option. I live in a flat. However I can cut my heating bills by simply grasping the thermostat and giving it a good yank to the left.

  • @barneyomulligan9739
    @barneyomulligan9739 Před rokem +7

    A great show, thank you. I love you dearly Robert, never stop doing what you do, how you do it. But Dan has a great turn of phrase that is direct and to the point. You compliment each other perfectly. Do more of these.

  • @epatrickt
    @epatrickt Před rokem +5

    Honest and blunt about the current politics is great. We can't keep pandering to the delicate feelings of those that don't care. Wouldn't it be nice for any kind of incentive for smes? No overnight tariffs, nothing to get solar+battery installed. Would love to do that for my warehouse. Good demonstrator for the team that works there too. Keep it up!

  • @Claymore1314
    @Claymore1314 Před rokem +4

    People on minimum wage cannot hope to afford any of the solutions you spoke about.
    People on the average wage cannot hope to afford any of the solutions you spoke about.
    Upper middle income people and families cannot hope to afford any of the solutions you spoke about.
    Because of the costs involved, it would take 10-15 years minimum to recoup any benefit of adopting green tech. Basically, it's only worth adopting if somebody else will pay for it to be installed. That's not going to happen any time soon.

  • @markyates5744
    @markyates5744 Před rokem +36

    Over the last 5 years I've done about a dozen projects on my house to make it ready for expensive energy. 7.8kw solar 12kwh battery storage are the obvious. But super insulating exterior walls by replacing them with celotex, expanding foam and insulated plasterboard. To take my home from a D to maybe an A or B. Adding a AC heat pump. A wood burner. I've detailed some in my own videos if you want to click my profile. Would be very interested to have Dan or Robert visit. You should do a Grand Design style visit to see the homes of what people have done I think to give ideas.

    • @PathosBedlam
      @PathosBedlam Před rokem +7

      That sounds like a great idea for a series of Fully Charged shows. The Houses of The EV Fans of Fully Charged. I'd definitely watch all of them, and I know there's millions of people on CZcams who love home renovation type builds. You could intersperse a persons journey from old type house to a fully renewable home, with updates in each episode.

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Před rokem +8

      I bought near 3k worth of superwrap and tacked it to all my exterior ceilings , i can now keep an upstairs room warm on just a PC running and the silver ceilings work well with lighting . I have stopped using my wood burner too and just create wood heaps for wildlife with what i used to burn . The increase in my health with no ash or smoke is well worth the loss. A couple of solar panels needed to charge my ebikes and I'm sorted . My hot water solar panels worked well until a severe frost split some pipes so awaiting to repair those .

    • @autohmae
      @autohmae Před rokem +3

      The big issue is: you have to have money to invest into these things and probably actually own your home to be able to do it.

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Před rokem +4

      @@autohmae Yes , but i went without holidays and cars and a telly even and illegally rented my bedrooms out and we slept in the living room , but yes i managed to own my own home . I have no idea how people on low wages like me can even get a foot in these days ! I had to lie on my self certification earnings to get my mortgage,,no chance doing that now . It was the last of my savings that was going on a real holiday i spent on the insulation . No regrets now except life is for living really and i think i put my family through hardships to `own `a home .

    • @RandomNooby
      @RandomNooby Před rokem

      @@autohmae Small boat is a much cheaper option.

  • @cosmodoc
    @cosmodoc Před rokem +6

    Great discussion! It is just so frustrating how much resistance there still is against sustainable solutions. The two gentlemen are great. Imogen is just amazing!

  • @keithhobbs1
    @keithhobbs1 Před rokem +16

    Be nice if the energy companies increased their SEG rates in line with the unit price for electricity.

    • @rodden1953
      @rodden1953 Před rokem +3

      I wish they would bring back FIT . i have extra panels i cant get SEG for so my neighbour pays for my excess and her energy company has free power

  • @debbiehenri345
    @debbiehenri345 Před rokem

    I'm 10 years younger than Robert, but still remember the panic surrounding the energy crisis in 1974. He remembers strings of cars outside petrol stations in Bath, but as I'd just moved to a new town with a lot of excellent public transport, I saw nothing of traffic queues outside petrol stations. Very few people bothered to own cars or seldom used them because there were buses and trains going everywhere.
    This current situation - however - is much, much different. Lately, my local council has cut bus services so they are unusable on Saturday, completely absent on Sunday, and unreliable the rest of the week. When they do run, I've just discovered fare prices have risen 50% to pre-pandemic prices. I only just learned to drive a (petrol) car in time to meet with the pandemic, but the cost of just a couple of gallons of petrol is eyewatering now.
    I'm not in any financial position to buy an EV, buy solar panels, or a wind turbine. All of that, the batteries, installation, the post-installation maintenance and battery replacement is just way out of our league.
    However, my family reviewed our energy needs back in April, before energy prices went up 30%. We cut back and actually 'reduced' our monthly energy bill by £10. When the latest price hikes were announced, we reviewed again, cut back again - and the government assistance payment covered all but £1.41 of our bill...phew!
    So we know now, we can afford to relax just a little bit. It was the just 'not knowing' that worried us most, not knowing how much more stuff we had to reduce/switch off permanently and how these would affect our bills.
    Now, of course, with everything still up in the air - bills no longer covered for 2 years, assistance now reduced to 6 months - we have to start thinking of what to do when April comes around (depending, of course, what the next PM plans to do... Doesn't it all just get on your wick?)
    Even if we could afford them, solar/wind turbine options with these fancy battery installations aren't the best for us: Scotland, clouds, high humidity, woodland, fusspot neighbours living to the south of us).
    We're looking to perhaps using the stream by the side of the garden to drive a mini turbine (there's no fish in the stream, so not a problem for wildlife). We've begun looking into how we might be able to put one together using bits and pieces and using it to charge a leisure battery or two.

  • @rushja
    @rushja Před rokem +19

    Last year we were lucky enough to start a renovation of a Victorian detached house. We decided to really push our budget and externally insulate, put in solar, put in a heat pump and underfloor heating. These measures have more than doubled the cost of the renovation and we got zero help for the insulation. The solar is VAT reduced and the heat pump has a reasonable good grant to make it around the same as gas. I think the lack of support for insulating your property is madness.

    • @mrslowly9985
      @mrslowly9985 Před rokem

      Your property, your cost unfortunately.

  • @andyl2201
    @andyl2201 Před rokem +10

    As a retired couple living off state pension and limited savings, we would very much like to have increased house insulation, solar panels and a power wall, heat pump, infrared heaters etc etc but at our age we are facing an uncertain future and are powerless to do anything about it.
    I subscribe to Fully Charged but it’s all a dream for us 😢

    • @bambit08
      @bambit08 Před rokem +1

      There are grants available if your income is less that £31,000 - what's your county council? They should have a scheme going funded by BEIS ... but need to register soon.

    • @andyl2201
      @andyl2201 Před rokem +1

      @@bambit08 thanks bambit08 live in Hampshire Barton on sea, New Forest council and our income is less than that. I will make some inquiries. Many thanks.

    • @bambit08
      @bambit08 Před rokem

      @@andyl2201 EPC needs to be E, F or G as they are prioritising least energy efficient homes.

    • @andyl2201
      @andyl2201 Před rokem

      @@bambit08 we are band D 😟

    • @udishomer5852
      @udishomer5852 Před rokem

      You can start from the cheap stuff like an Infra-Red Heater (which is more efficient) and a smart thermostat. Maybe double glazed windows.

  • @annking1576
    @annking1576 Před rokem

    Here's a little help to keep warm & fed this winter. In case you missed my last post - Get a Hydroponics set up for indoor winter gardening with grow lights or tape an emergency blanket to a large piece of carboard with the reflective side out to redirect suns rays to plants & move as needed thru out the day / Put a tent in your livingroom to live in / sleep in to retain heat in a small area / drop plastic to keep a smaller area of home warm / 8 hr candles in a clean paint pail or similar can with terra cotta pot on top - I would put bricks around it to help stop anyone from bumping it. You'd have to figure out something else if you have small kids or playful pets / wrap copper tubing around stove pipe & drill holes to put tubing to other rooms for heat & wrap 1 around water pipe to stop pipes from freezing - & you may have to turn water on & off while soaping up in order to get enough warm water for a QUICK shower. God Bless Us All!

  • @christines5430
    @christines5430 Před rokem +7

    Excellent discussion! I was wondering about the name change and am so happy that you have decided to widen the scope of the channel and talk more about sustainability and home energy efficiency and alternatives. Looking forward to the future discussions . Thank you.

  • @deanfielding4411
    @deanfielding4411 Před rokem

    I’ve been saying it for years and will say it again; If you look back historically the most successful civilisations have been ones who have unlocked access to abundant and cheap energy, Victorians with coal, Americans with oil, Egyptians using the Nile, and right now in front of us we have the cheapest, cleanest energy around us, wind, solar, tidal, hydro. If we step out of the regressive oil industry methods we could the best civilisation on earth.
    Whoever does it first and fastest will attract businesses with cheap energy, create jobs, an amazing economy and most of all a nice place to live with clean air. 😊
    Thanks Fully Charged Show!!! Amazing video! Kee ip the amazing work!

    • @gilian2587
      @gilian2587 Před rokem

      Unfortunately... it looks like China has the most coherent energy policy right now.

  • @abucketofelves
    @abucketofelves Před rokem +3

    Decoupling the cost of gas and electricity should surely be the number one aim here.

  • @TeesTrev
    @TeesTrev Před rokem

    Robert you are The Admirable Crichton and I take my hat off to you. Keep doing what you are doing and call out the bad decision making of our politicians. I have a solar PV array , a battery system , a Zappi charger for solar diversion to my EV and an earthing rod so I can run emergency circuits when I loose the grid earth. If a dustbin mans son like me can see the benefit of planning to ensure continuity of supply why did an Eaton educated Prime Minister give the goahead for our energy storage system (Rough storage system) to be shutdown . Keep educating Robert you have helped to educate me. We need to spread the word on the benefits for individuals and society as a whole for these new technologies. There is such a thing as society and we are all members of it. Apologies all. Well meaning rant over

  • @adcs88
    @adcs88 Před rokem +1

    The Labour government did a lot to subsidise U.K. household insulation, I know, I benefited. Cameron was “going to be the greenest PM ever” until elected when HE decided to cut Labour’s “green crap” and overnight household insulation take-up dropped by 90%, followed by him cancelling of solar feed-in tariffs and on-shore wind farms and the start of the sale of fracking licences. DON’T pretend Labour are equally to blame and “they are all the same BS”, just to try to sound balanced, you should know better. Credit where it’s due or nothing will ever change.

  • @kevincolyer
    @kevincolyer Před rokem +6

    You can cut that bit!!!! (7mins) Love it! Thanks Robert for saying what, I for one, have been thinking!
    Just to add that watching Fully Charged Show gave me the confidence to buy a second-hand Nissan Leaf. First electric car for me and I am very pleased with both being able to go electric. Thanks.

    • @6chhelipilot
      @6chhelipilot Před rokem

      I'll soon be getting an MG ZS EV Motability car. It should be cheap to run and great for local pollution but these cars are anything but good for the planet, even if we could supply enough green energy to run billions of them.

  • @amigang
    @amigang Před rokem +3

    One thing I notice is that with Solar, people seem to think you need the big Home Panels & big battery for a solution that cost £3,000 to £12,000, I get it they are a lot better solution but most don't have that money. However there are Solar systems designed for Caravan in mind, which cost about £500 to £800 with battery that could be use to power a Room of your house.

    • @mikecohen2400
      @mikecohen2400 Před rokem

      Small systems have merit, but if you have the money, or the borrowing capacity, building a properly sized system, and battery pack now, will pay for it self given energy cost.

  • @philgalpin9284
    @philgalpin9284 Před rokem +1

    I am deluged with adverts for insulation and heat pumps for 80p each.
    But then I live in France, where looking down on the populace gets a revolution!

  • @amacanuck
    @amacanuck Před rokem +1

    Looking forward to the future discussions! Thanks for inspiring our way!

  • @kassistwisted
    @kassistwisted Před rokem

    To give a perspective from outside the UK, I live in the Netherlands and subscribe to a green energy company. My monthly bill dropped €20 per month in August plus I had no bill in November at all. And then it just dropped another €20 per month for next year because my end of year "catch up" bill was negative for 2022. How? I have no solar panels or geothermal or wind turbines. I'm a renter. My house is powered by gas. But the amount of money my green energy company made in 2022 was so great that they were able to pay for gas for my house and pay me something back. This is not every house in the Netherlands. Some people are having horrible huge gas bills. But this is how you take advantage of green energy's low cost instead of how the US and UK are doing it.

  • @justinstephenson9360
    @justinstephenson9360 Před rokem +1

    Living in a coastal village in the north east which has never been on the gas grid, I am always being told to insulate, to add heat pumps or solar panels. What is never addressed is the cost and how do I and other home owners afford it.
    We already have roof insulation, double glazing, proper thermally efficient doors. The next job according to the experts are insulating the walls. Many of the homes in the village do not have cavity walls, all pre 1930s homes, but even for those with cavity walls there is no one within 100 miles (we haven't looked further afield) offering to do cavity wall insulation. External wall insulation is viewed with doubt, experience close by of new homes is that the salt laden sea breezes got behind the insulation and caused severe damp issues in less than 2 years (I am sure that most of the problem was the builder doing a bad job). Currently for a terraced house the cost of internal wall insulation, including replastering and redecorating, is just over £10k - not many in the village have that sort of money lying around.
    As for solar panels and a battery, the lead time of that here is that if I ordered it today I might be able to have it installed in January... and the cost is c.£12k.
    One of neighbours is installing an ASHP, but he has a relatively modern house for the village - merely 60 years old! Should be interesting to see how much it saves him.
    One thing in the video I completely agree with is the need for genuinely independent experts to advise ordinary householders what will work best for their home - currently we seem to only have people who are trying to selling their own products and that is a recipe for being scammed

    • @waywardgeologist2520
      @waywardgeologist2520 Před rokem

      Thanks for giving such a detailed report. Hopefully the rest of the country will take your lead!

  • @terrywells1512
    @terrywells1512 Před rokem +14

    Great show guys, What would be massively interesting is starting a directory of reputable system designers / installers that can design these systems, even if its on a homeowners plan to implement them over a few years. Or maybe this things exists? Keep up the good work.

    • @sammyb304
      @sammyb304 Před rokem +1

      Exactly my experience as well. I am left frustrated by a recent solar installation because I have been sold what they had to sell not necessarily what is best for my needs long term. The advice they gave on reflection was ‘need to know’ so they could sell me a system and I didn’t know any better. Only since then have I learned about what would be better and definitely would have been prepared to build up a complete system over time instead of getting an off the shelf one now. This week I contacted 6 ‘installers’ about expanding my array and adding batteries and one replied. There is a real lack of system designers vs sellers.

  • @danielmadar9938
    @danielmadar9938 Před rokem

    Thank you.

  • @AssaultedPeanut
    @AssaultedPeanut Před rokem

    Perhaps a practical, concise, well designed and readable guide for insulating and eliminating drafts in houses, perhaps 3 price brackets and a quick guide to implementing each item, e.g.:
    Low Cost: Foam core rods under skirting boards: ~£20-£40 (or free as newspaper), caulk gaps around windows and doors ~£15.
    Medium cost: Loft insulation ~£150-£300, interior external wall insulation via wooden frame and thermal foam boards
    High cost: Double/triple-glazed windows and doors with insulated frames from ~£2000, cavity wall insulation
    A similar set of guides for heating technologies, another for electricity generation

  • @elmojito
    @elmojito Před rokem +8

    When I first came to Europe from the US to work for a t-shirt company I remember that the UK was the main market for short sleeve t's in WINTER. Imagine this coming from Spain where many in the Malaga region wore sweatshirts inside their homes in winter and my salespersons telling me people don't buy short sleeve t's except in spring and summer. I also remember going to meetings in London and having to open the windows at the hotel because if was too HOT. Lowering thermostats can save lots of energy and does not cost any money. Installing smart thermostats also help reduce cost while maintaining relative comfort. It is not only a matter of insulation which a thorough job will take a long time to plan, design and execute, besides the money, which will not help you this winter.

    • @chow-chihuang4903
      @chow-chihuang4903 Před rokem +1

      It happens in the States as well. People who wear tanks and shorts in the winter and sweaters in the summer when they set their thermostats too far in the wrong direction, rather than let it move some degrees with the season and wear seasonal clothing.

    • @discodavid26
      @discodavid26 Před rokem +1

      Yep that’s a good point …… after a few years off having my winter heating set on 18c constantly ( which itself was a slight drop it had to be 20c minimum for a year or two when my kids were babies) … this year due to cost I’m going to set it a tad lower …… I’m thinking 14c … why that …… it’s the average earth temperature! If flat gets colder then that then the heating will kick in … but being 4c colder then before the heating will come on less often for not as long …… also at that temperature if you get cold unlike with no heating on …it’s as you say a different item off clothing or a tiny amount off exercise (literally seconds) can get you warm enough easily.

    • @elmojito
      @elmojito Před rokem +1

      @@discodavid26 For comfort I installed 3 years ago a Nest thermostat which ensures that it learns how long it takes to reach a temperature and set the heater on to be where set at a specific time. For me I like it cold my wife sometimes does. Between the Nest and some other adjustments makes a big difference. Plus, helps to also have efficient appliances such as heat pump water heaters and clothes dryers. In Spain electric rates are today CRAZY and with the new rates I don't yet know if heat pump heating, even with its great COP, is less expensive than gas - NUTS!

  • @johnjackson7918
    @johnjackson7918 Před rokem +1

    I see Amazon have put 11,000 solar panels on their warehouse in Tilbury. It has created enough energy to power 700 houses they say. That being the case shouldn't we be looking to cover EVERY warehouse, barn, supermarket, fast food restaurant and every new build with solar panels?

  • @richpate9436
    @richpate9436 Před rokem

    Thank you for mentioning how important EDUCATION of the public is concerning the solutions for today's energy crises. And you folks are at the forefront of that extremely important effort.

  • @clairer7039
    @clairer7039 Před rokem

    Really good to see these issues being discussed, looking forward to future episodes! I would love to see more discussion about what those of us who are renting can do. I live in a privately rented, very drafty, very energy inefficient basement flat and because I’m renting I’m very limited in what I can do with the property. Additionally landlord has zero interest in doing anything to improve the property from an energy efficiency perspective - including refusing to replace old wooden framed double doors at the rear of the flat that are so bowed a small gale blows through them on windy days 😣

  • @TheDeathCrafter
    @TheDeathCrafter Před rokem

    I love how honest Robert is!

  • @17addidas
    @17addidas Před rokem +1

    In sunny Spain ... during the "construction boom " from 1997 - 2007 solar panels private and commercial were seldom added . Later bureaucracy obstructed individual solar installations for self consumption with the " solar tax " which existed from 2015 - 2018 . Now everything is different and the Megawatts installed increases from year to year ..... But how much time was wasted and as consumers the scenario in the present circumstances would be ....so different .

  • @BenVost
    @BenVost Před rokem

    It's even more concerning with the new UK government, with ex-Shell employee Liz Truss in charge and climate skeptic Jacob Rees-Mogg as the Business and Energy secretary. While the US and Australian governments have "come to their senses", ours is going in completely the wrong direction!

  • @bigmark3449
    @bigmark3449 Před rokem +7

    I think a show on the actual cost of solar and battery installation would be helpful. I see adverts for 3.6kw solar and a 4.8 kwh battery installed from £11000. I know that is rip off, at those prices they are charging 7k just for the installation because the panels and battery are not that expensive. Let's make sure people are not being ripped of by solar salesmen like people were ripped off by double glazing salesmen.

    • @Hali88
      @Hali88 Před rokem

      price of solar has risen slightly due to the high costs of some rare earths and covid disruptions in China but yeh not that much!

    • @robbrookes4889
      @robbrookes4889 Před rokem +1

      It cost me £7500 for 5kw solar +5 KWH battery installed last year in Gloucestershire. Had 3 quotes all similar. Wonder if prices have increased because of increased demand and the high prices of energy.

    • @salibaba
      @salibaba Před rokem

      Costs will vary wildly dependant on equipment quality/brands, availability, job complexity, access equipment (scaffolding) geographic location for installer availability and also local cost of living means a down south installer is bound to cost more than in the north.

  • @robertsmart5600
    @robertsmart5600 Před rokem

    A lucky person who now owns the semi detached house I renovated in Ambarrow Crescent has cavity brick walls that I had insulated with ICI foam insulation back in the late 1970s It also has a double glazed Velux window where the chimney used to be and double glazed french doors onto the back garden :) North sea gas was cheap back then so I used gas for central heating and cooking? Our car was a left hand drive Renault 4 that my wife brought over from France.

  • @cg986
    @cg986 Před rokem +1

    Nice conversation.

  • @julianwilliams3713
    @julianwilliams3713 Před rokem +1

    INSULATE and avoid unnecessary usage, which is EDUCATE.
    Robert, et al, more videos on the above PLEASE.

  • @mickwilson127
    @mickwilson127 Před rokem +2

    As someone who is pressing the button on a solar/battery system this week, I fully endorse this.

    • @user-yn5sk5ru5g
      @user-yn5sk5ru5g Před rokem

      Me too, excited to get solar. Waiting time for installations is months though...

  • @hughbest3975
    @hughbest3975 Před rokem +6

    Great and very rational discussion as always. What I would love to see being discussed is not only topics for today e.g. insulation and gas prices, but also those for the future. Big containerships burn through dirty diesel like there is no tomorrow and we believe the technology is not there yet to replace it with batteries or green hydrogen. We have all electric ferries, but not ocean crossing tankers. I'd love to see an episode looking at the big industries we have not tackled yet due to technology not being there yet, but how are we hoping to solve this in the future. How much does it cost to cross the ocean for a diesel powered container ship and what needs to happen to match and lower that price with green energy.

    • @17addidas
      @17addidas Před rokem +1

      Presently there is no alternative technology to substitute Air and Sea transportation . Efforts should be focused for now - on those sectors that can be replaced with carbon neutral technologies and procedures .... Leave air and sea for last when the bulk of the carbon emissions have been reduced

  • @willswomble7274
    @willswomble7274 Před rokem +1

    I have a modern 2008 built townhouse and have stretched my retired finances to put 18 solar panels on my roof plus 10.6 kw of Li batteries in my double garage in June 2022. Octopus energy says they are promoting air source heat pumps for 2-4 bed houses but, on registering interest, they immediately responded saying they were not interested. I would investigate getting a nearby firm to install this anyway in the next couple of years but there is a 'catch 22'. The CH pipework is 'modern' too, ie plastic narrow bore, so the whole property would have to be ripped apart for old fashioned expensive copper throughout apart from 2-3 times more radiators!
    Most (panicking) neighbours say they are installing wood burners, but the flue in the next door 2 story plus velux's in added floor in roof cannot be installed at all as the flue would have to extend above the velux's and on the other side of the roof somehow, at vastly increased cost!
    I would like to add a pelletised burner as an alternate to the impossibly expensive heat pump detailed above, but Installing it in the cold 27 by 15 foot sitting room on the bottom floor turns out to be very expensive for the unit (~£3500) and seemingly illegal and impossibly expensive for a 4 storey flue. Plus feeding /cleaning the thing and sweeping a 4 story height flue 2 or 3 times a year!
    I have given up and am buying dreadful looking but dirt cheap hooded Chinese fluffy smocks on Amazon, sigh. I know I am old, grumpy and bewildered but can I go back to the late 1960's to live PLEASE! I dream of chicken in a basket, Deep Purple and an aubergine Cortina mark E.

  • @philipbroggio9315
    @philipbroggio9315 Před rokem +4

    Thanks for being a beacon of hope amongst all the madness around us. Interested to hear Dan say that the disruption is happening despite government. How much faster it could be if we had a plan and stuck to it rather than have sound bites that change on a daily basis ! One thing I would love to see is a discussion with Tony Seba from RethinkX on 100% SWB. Any chance of that ? Keep up the good work 🙂

  • @EugeneLambert
    @EugeneLambert Před rokem

    Excellent. I was actually moved (in a very manly way, obvs) by how much you guys care, and how hard you are working to help us achieve a sustainable world. You da best.

  • @happysporran
    @happysporran Před rokem

    Thank you for your rage Robert...it helps to know I'm not alone.

  • @paultrickett7134
    @paultrickett7134 Před rokem

    For many of us the cost to switch to renewable energy is out of our budget, the government need to support those of us that are in that situation. Looking forward to your future shows that may give guidance to help those of us on limited budgets.

  • @frejaresund3770
    @frejaresund3770 Před rokem

    I have been enjoyed, so thank you for delivering.

  • @j0de0Brabander
    @j0de0Brabander Před rokem

    Looking forward to the new content. Many thx and good luck.

  • @stijnbode8448
    @stijnbode8448 Před rokem

    Thank you for this video! love the views of you guys, looking forward to what's coming on the fully charged channel

  • @simhedgesrex7097
    @simhedgesrex7097 Před rokem

    The government should do cap prices for first 2000kWh that people use.
    Abolish standing charges.
    About 2000kWh cap prices at a much higher level (maybe £1 per unit)
    Remove the cap on subsidies for heat pumps.
    Offer 10 year unlimited and non-means tested interest free loans for people to install batteries, heat pumps, insulation, etc where it significantly cuts domestic usage. Even if this goes to wealthier people, it still reduces demand for the country as a whole.
    Enable local councils to require commercial building to have an energy audit, and drawn up plans to reduce energy significantly.
    For the Longer term: Set planning rules for Windfarms in England to be the same as in Scotland/Wales; permit tidal lagoons; continue with nuclear; subsidise grid storage.

  • @ElectricCarAustralia
    @ElectricCarAustralia Před rokem +1

    Great chat FCS Team. Tips for future shows would be simply, cheap DIY hacks like draught proofing, pelmets above windows and insulating curtains/blinds, redirecting sunlight via polished/reflective surfaces for heating, additional insulation on pipework etc.
    Oh and as an aside, we're really looking forward to seeing you guys 'Downunder'. We've booked our accommodation in Sydney for Fully Charged Live Australia. Just waiting on tickets to go on sale, then looking forward to an EV road trip from Brisbane to Sydney for the show. 👍

  • @crispynoges
    @crispynoges Před rokem

    Two areas I’d like explained are:
    1) Are high temperature heat pumps a useful option
    2) Why people with excess solar get paid so little to export power and the amounts have not increased with electricity prices

  • @AdrianSmale
    @AdrianSmale Před rokem

    Brilliant episode thanks, and glad you haven't held back addressing the obvious political backdrop!! Glad you are doing more episodes in future about the detail of DoingOurBit , the channel I use to share my experience to date, because you are right ..its not simple. Explaining the practical challenges so you make the right decisions so important. I'm looking at heating next and seriously considering air conditioning...would be interested in your take on that where air to water, over air to air is challenging in my small 2 bedroom property. Great work , and thanks for everything you do!!

  • @cassandra2249
    @cassandra2249 Před rokem

    Thank you for saying what you said about the people who are running this country. I love you for that.

  • @janhemmer8181
    @janhemmer8181 Před rokem +1

    Well what were you thinking?
    Wind and solar in a diagram showing our total energy needs are almost invisible to the naked eye.
    They have no impact whatsoever on the world price of energy.

  • @willtheelectrician8184
    @willtheelectrician8184 Před rokem +1

    Just found this channel. I think I've come to the right place.

  • @tomormiston6592
    @tomormiston6592 Před rokem +22

    Thanks guys n gals for keeping it 'real', so tired of the silly that permeates our governance. We desperately need clarity and informed options. Democracy needs enlightened minds with common decent social values. Middle policies give muddled thinking; We need to implement polices because they *are* right, not because they appeal to the right.

    • @travcollier
      @travcollier Před rokem +1

      Agreed. I tend to favor a moderate cautious approach to things. But moderate doesn't mean "centrist"
      Seem to remember a parable involving a baby which might be relevant ;)

    • @GrahamRead101
      @GrahamRead101 Před rokem

      Agree, I’d also add or because they appeal to the left

  • @IPC0101
    @IPC0101 Před rokem

    Fully agree there is a gap between wanting to do something on energy reduction, cost saving and knowing what offers the best ROI

  • @donincognito189
    @donincognito189 Před rokem +2

    A good introduction, but it is useful to have a bit of context when big numbers are being talked about to address the energy price crisis. In 2021, British households collectively spent around £30bn on their energy bills. In 2023 that figure is expected to be in the region of *£170bn*. Anyone who thinks the potential £100bn intervention by the government is going to sort the problem is going to be disappointed.

  • @trevorheley1045
    @trevorheley1045 Před rokem

    A lot of the problems about getting governments to take energy seriously is all down to the fact that all these politicians are more concerned about not working with each other (even within the same party) for the collective good. Put simply where is the plan to be energy independent using sustainable energy and design that all the politicians back so that the people who have to deliver can get on with it rather than wait for the next U turn in policy. Iam trying to do my bit and also convince others so maybe that doing more actually costs less long term. We, and not some very dubious groups who normally have other agenda, have to do more.

  • @robinwhitebeam3955
    @robinwhitebeam3955 Před rokem

    I live in a slate roofed ex-council house built 101 years ago. I am going to add solar panels to the out buildings I have ( coal shed, bath/wash house, log cabins, caravan), but have run into the problem of deciding whether the structures are strong enough to take the weight. I started to engage with companies to have a ground source heat pump fitted but realised that I needed to obtain cheaper electricity supplies and have shifted my focus to installing solar and battery technology. Wind power electricity generating Companies/Projects seem to be difficult to invest in, why is this. We have no wind generation here in South Worcestershire, some solar on a few houses, and possibly some of the worst insulated properties. I am trying to educate myself about how to install many of the 'New Technologies' as it seems also most impossible to engage knowledgeable and competent trades. I am looking forward to your Property Focussed episodes. While I wait for the next one I shall keep busy by insulating my loft spaces and digging trenches in the garden for a spaghetti of electrical trunking.

  • @sandponics
    @sandponics Před rokem +1

    I insulated my house in the UK when I still lived there during the 1974 oil crisis, although I left the country only a few years later. I would have thought that by now most houses in the UK would already be fully insulated. What have you all been playing at in the intervening years?

  • @gordonmackenzie4512
    @gordonmackenzie4512 Před rokem

    I live in Highland Region which is bigger than Belgium. We make hydro electric, pump storage hydro, onshore wind and offshore wind. We do not create gas generation, coal generation or nuclear. We pay the highest feed in tariffs in Europe for power generated, because We are far away from London. We pay the highest unit costs in Europe, and the highest daily charges. Something is very wrong with the entire market.

  • @GrowBagUK
    @GrowBagUK Před rokem +1

    You know who is really to blame?
    Market traders and the financial industry.
    The energy traders have driven the cost up for everyone.
    Capital is King...and it needs that pound of flesh.

  • @RangieNZ
    @RangieNZ Před rokem

    An amazing episode.

  • @anguswilson005
    @anguswilson005 Před rokem

    Great Show I have just ordered Solar Panels for my Narrow boat to avoid energy crisis in October currently on residential mooring linked to national grid.
    Hopefully will be able to unplug from the grid soon and be self energy sufficient.

  • @allencevans
    @allencevans Před rokem

    I sit in the category Dan and Robert bring up here. I've done everything I can to insulate my own home, I've reduced my consumption as much as I think I can. That was before the current energy climate. Although I want to, I can't afford to invest in expensive systems, so, as far as I know, I have to stomach the increasing cost. I wish it was a simple as "20 ways to reduce your energy bill" but I've been doing all those tips for years - aside from switching off the heat or the PC I work on, I cannot reduce consuption. It'd be great to know if there are any lower-cost tricks I've missed, so looking forward to the upcoming videos.

  • @RangieNZ
    @RangieNZ Před rokem

    I triple insulated my roof and underfloor. Added a solar hot water system (- that provides ~75% of annual needs, with immersion backup off-peak). Installed a log burner and have free firewood for all space heating needs. Run my car on LPG (- which costs ~40% of the petrol cost). I've tried to set myself up for low cost fuel pricing. I haven't quite got to the electric car part though. :)

  • @goatlady7761
    @goatlady7761 Před rokem +5

    You can't transition to a green economy from your knees.

  • @madpete6438
    @madpete6438 Před rokem

    The more people who put in their own generation and storage, the less demand on the grid and therefore energy prices fall over time.
    If you can afford it - Insulate, Heat Pumps, Generate and Store.
    I live in a fully retrofitted house and the difference is spectacular.
    Double glazing, Roof Insulation, Floor Insulation, Heat Pumps and then your own generation (& Storage)...In priority order.
    Robert is the most ancient in the room.

  • @Naultarous
    @Naultarous Před rokem

    I think many times the talk of moving greener can be more symbolic. More what could be done. It would be great to see the what actual physical actions can be done at the small, every home scale. And as more and more are pushed into renting as housing prices skyrocket, what can they do. A renter can't insulate an apartment. But there have to be good options for both the renter and business owners of rental units.

  • @markyates5744
    @markyates5744 Před rokem

    You only touched on it, but there is a special extra meeting of heads of EU to discuss energy. One topic is to make the price of electricity not determined by the cost of gas. It's crazy that ALL electricity in a half hour window is based on the most expensive energy source, the last and least efficient power station turned on! That's what drives electricity to £1000/MWh= £1/kWh as what happened in Europe in last few weeks!

  • @paulsutton5896
    @paulsutton5896 Před rokem +1

    It is strange that for many months my energy company (Eon) has been telling me that MY electricity comes only from renewable sources. So why am I paying for it as if it were generated from gas?

  • @travcollier
    @travcollier Před rokem +1

    Using natural gas for normal/base power generation is incredibly stupid right now. We need to be using gas for "peaking"... Filling in the gaps when better (and cheaper) variable renewables aren't putting out enough. It is a filler until we get energy storage tech a bit better developed and then built out.
    Also, shutting down well functioning nuclear plants is very dumb, but we won't be able to develop better 'advanced' plants fast enough or even build out conventional nuclear plants. That takes a few decades we don't have right now. Maybe it will be the "energy of the future" for the next transition, but we need to avoid diverting resources and attention away from the transition that is happening now.

  • @redrickratae
    @redrickratae Před rokem +4

    Thanks for this episode. Can't see how Fully Charged can avoid discussion of the energy crisis becoming political, so it's good to see the presenters being honest about this. It seems to me that no matter which party is in power over the next few years, they will have to intervene in the market to avoid many many of our citizens freezing and/or starving, especially in winter. Assuming "no bungs" Truss becomes PM, she will have to pivot on this issue sooner or later, however the big question that I'd like to see politicians being forced to answer is who will pay the eventual bill for this. If it's the tax payer as was the case with the banking bailout, then I think things could turn very ugly. A wise government will find a way to extract the cost from the profits of the energy companies. Good to see the Fully Charged team making the distinction between the generators (mainly oil and gas companies) and the suppliers who most of us deal with. Many of the latter have gone bust as a result of this crisis while the profits of the former have generally improved massively.
    In terms of future programmes, I'd like the team to explain the way the energy market works in terms of paying the generators, because as I understand it the current 'marginal cost' arrangement in which all generators who end up supplying to the grid in each 30 minute period get paid the same as the most expensive generator who is actually needed to meet demand in that period. That suggests that renewable energy generators (whose costs are often the lowest of all) currently make vast profits due to the high cost of gas. I'd like to think that these profits are being re-invested in new turbines and solar farms, but perhaps this is naive! Please investigate.
    Another issue I'd like to see explored is the legislation around new-build houses. Having just returned from a brilliant holiday on Orkney, we were struck by how many new build homes there and on the Scottish mainland have heat pumps and solar PV. Much more than one would see in England. Are the Scottish just more sensible or is there Scottish legislation to force builders (many are the same companies who build in England) to include clean tech in their homes?
    Lastly - I had to chuckle at Robert's observation of all the twinkling coloured lights in his garage. We have the same thing in ours (Mixergy, batteries, solar inverter, router, heat pump controller, etc) and it scares my wife when she considers my mortality...

    • @qman1b
      @qman1b Před rokem

      Good that you bring up the 'marginal cost' arrangement, Richard. This is definitely something that the wider UK population needs to be made aware of and is one of the only real things the government can intervene in to create proper system change - sadly though it seems to be a very tightly held Tory value that they should not intervene in markets or restrict companies and individuals from maximising profits. I think I recall Boris Johnson or some other member of the government recently saying that a Windfall tax on energy companies was not something they would consider because it is against Tory values.
      Changing this marginal cost rule, I would imagine, could allow renewable energy to be offered to consumers at a much lower rate than the inflated prices set by the international gas markets. This would be great for the energy transition because it would likely result in the movement of lots of consumers on to green tariffs and towards demanding more renewable capacity to supply their needs. It is a solution that could also be seen to fit well with Tory values of deregulating / low government interference in markets - effectively it would be freeing up the energy market to become more competitive and deliver better value to the consumers as a result.
      (As an aside, I have a query around the dynamics of the 'marginal cost' thing as it stands because I have heard of some of Octopus Energy's minute by minute tariffs resulting in people effectively being paid to use excess energy from the grid late at night, I think maybe Robby Lew mentioned it a few times in the Fully Charged channels' output, so I wonder if there is already some way around this 'marginal cost' thing for that to be able to happen? Or maybe there was only renewable generation going on at that moment? Clearly, there is more to understand about the UK energy market's workings because this is a little bamboozling..)
      Returning to the situation as it is, you mention how costs for renewable energy production remain low but it is also being sold for these higher prices, so the renewable companies should be making larger profits on the energy they sell. I suspect though that this is mainly still used to payback on the upfront investment in renewable generation infrastructure they have made. I say this based on my own experiences planning to install Solar at home and how it takes several years to repay the initial investment in energy cost savings. Whilst it is possible that these unexpected extra profits, or maybe it should be better termed the unexpectedly larger revenue stream could be going into executive bonuses and dividend payouts, I suspect it is mainly serving to bring the companies into profit faster as it pays off their initial investment, but that would depend on the company structures and policies to some extent and the source and terms of the funding they used to build their infrastructure. One would hope that it is seen as an encouragement to invest in more capacity due to faster payback and arrival at a stage of making real profit. Still, most will be aware that these prices aren't sustainable and won't likely hold long term, so will be cautious about making new investments based on current prices and payback rates. Perhaps the higher prices and faster transition to profit will encourage more ready investment from the financial sector. I'm clutching at straws here, trying to see some long-term benefits to the energy price crisis despite the desperate situation it will be putting so many in. Certainly, the inflated costs make renewables much more attractive, further extending their cost per Mw lead over fossil fuels and if people could afford to invest in their own solar panels on the roof and community windfarms it would be taking us in a positive direction with regards to self-sufficiency, efficiency and resilience. We just need a government that is prepared to invest in supporting people towards that. Zero interest long-term loans on the scale they are now proposing could be made available to energy suppliers and could be targeted at individuals and businesses to build their own renewable infrastructure instead, balancing the load on the grid, tackling energy costs for the 25 year plus lifetime of that infrastructure and so reducing inequality and eliminating fuel poverty whilst helping to make real progress in tackling the climate crisis in one fell swoop.
      Of course, installing all that infrastructure would require massive investment in training and the creation of lots of new jobs, plus many would be left struggling whilst it is built if the prices stay as they are, so combining the two proposals - freeing the energy market to reflect the lower costs of renewable generated energy, and massive investment in individually owned and community-owned local renewable generation and energy storage, should go hand in hand. House building regulation should be updated to require energy self-sufficient housing (maybe passive haus standards?) along with separate waste and grey water drainage, along with rainwater harvesting because this will also help reduce flash flooding by capturing and storing much of rain that falls, thus also reducing the incidence of toxic sewage released into rivers and seas that excess water in the sewage system from heavy rainfall leads to, and also reducing energy use by avoiding wasting energy on purifying drinking water that is only flushed down the toilet. To enable those living in leasehold or rented accommodation to benefit from funding for micro-generation; property law needs to be reviewed and amended so that property owners/ freeholders are not able to prevent tenants from getting these systems installed, and where long-term ownership/costs of install fall on their shoulders they should be eligible for the same long term low-cost loan scheme.
      As was pointed out in this episode, short-term subsidies/funding lead to a short-lived and precarious industry. We really need a long-term commitment with long-term goals which is unfortunately not what our current electoral system encourages governments to make. It tends to promote short-term "solutions" which are as much about appeasing the masses enough to win the next election as they are about anything else. Having been employed briefly in the insulation industry over a decade ago during a time of significant temporary funding I can attest to the fact that this not only encourages insecurity in the industry but it also attracts opportunist sharks who go after the money whilst it's there, they often don't provide enough training to the staff to do truly well informed and effective work which will hold up long term and as a result, they leave many problems behind like poorly installed or even inappropriate insulation which causes problems with the building structure. (It would be great if the Fully Charged team could gather some knowledge and advice for consumers and installers and dispel a few myths and fears around cavity wall insulation, setting people straight on when it's appropriate, possible problems, and alternative solutions). If we are to have a worthwhile long-term impact we need long-term funding and solid regulation so that companies can see a long-term future and invest appropriately in staff training, infrastructure and know how to do great work building homes and energy infrastructure that holds up over time.
      Blimey! I got a little carried away there. I think I'm almost halfway towards creating a new party political manifesto!

    • @salibaba
      @salibaba Před rokem

      Scotland have been offering 0% loans through HomeEnergyScotland and the Energy Saving Trust to help pay for stuff like solar and battery installs, Used EV loans, ebike loans. Im in the middle of trying to get a loan sorted for a planned ASHP. They don’t do the boiler upgrade scheme up here but do offer a more generous “cash back” scheme as part of the loans when installing renewable heating. A few catches to the loans though like, you must have minimum amounts of loft insulation first on your EPC or plan it in with the heating install.

  • @Moto_Miles
    @Moto_Miles Před rokem

    Very good. Important to keeping talking about this issues calmly and openly. This period could and should drive institutional changes in how we share vehicles (pay as you go) and trade and electricity locally in small neighbourhood grids.

  • @martinsoos
    @martinsoos Před rokem

    In the US, central air for heating and cooling usually break every 8 to 10 years now. I found it cheaper to use window units. I have learned to buy the units made for infants/babies because they are so much quieter. A new brand has even come out, sold by Lows Hardware that gets a EER rating of 15. My electric bill is half in the summer now, its cheaper for the units and when the AC goes out, I can relie on the other units in the house and I don't bake for three days for the scheduled repairman to show up.

    • @bubba842
      @bubba842 Před rokem

      Your AC should have a 10 year warranty. So it shouldn't cost you anything to get it fixed. And they should last for about 20 years. As of next year the minimum SEER rating is 16 for new units, well in Canada anyway.

    • @martinsoos
      @martinsoos Před rokem

      @@bubba842 When the company you bought it from disappears there is no warranty. They expect you to hire someone to come out every year and refill it at $300 a pop. I will never do central again.

  • @nickuipers8815
    @nickuipers8815 Před rokem

    Very good conversation here and it's great to have such an honest chat. Keep it up!

  • @bradleyanderson4315
    @bradleyanderson4315 Před rokem

    Europe was warned about dependence on Soviet gas. Little can be done in the short term. In the long term more nuclear power, better insulation, electric bicycles etc.

  • @stuartboys260
    @stuartboys260 Před rokem

    Will look forward to see your future videos for people starting there journey into renewable energy in the home as we are thinking of adding solar to our house in the new year . Keep up the good work 😊

  • @judebrown4103
    @judebrown4103 Před rokem

    Ah I wondered why the name change. Thank you, I'm looking forward to some even more interesting content.
    I wish I could get to the FCS to talk about my own house. Two reasons, first I'm not sure a house built with a cavity wall can breathe properly if you fill it...condensation problems? Second, all these air source heat pump installers seem to presume you want to heat to 21°C but that's far too hot for us, would that a) be help calculations and b) get taken into account in the calculation.
    So far it's not been possible to get to the show, maybe next year now we have an ev we won't feel so bad about driving to Farnborough.
    I'd say to anyone working in the oil and gas industry if you want a "job for life" get into the renewable energy game. Retrain in sustainable energy. This is important for people in those jobs to understand that they do have transferable skills. Sharing.👍

  • @alfredahye4552
    @alfredahye4552 Před rokem

    Well said, if government was listening the situation in the UK would not be so grim, Robert for the next energy minister of the UK

  • @DrKlausReichert
    @DrKlausReichert Před rokem

    Good to see you talking about your concerns and your (serious) plans. Love the "ad hoc" studio space which feels "real" - not fake. I really like the format with the three people talking. It is a bit weird to hear about UK politics in Germany. But the general undertone is probably the same here. We just had the current chancellor blaming the last government for 16 years to massively stall the development of renewable energy. So there is hope for changes.

  • @sammyb304
    @sammyb304 Před rokem

    Another frustration is the generation limit of 3.68 kWh without a separate approval for more which in Northern Ireland at least is a costly (£680 just to apply with no guarantee of success) and time consuming process to even get approval. There may then be reinforcements or design of zero export relay costs to bear after that. I understand the need for limits on large solar arrays where fluctuations on import/export due to a cloud passing over would be huge and understandably require grid reinforcements. In a domestic setting however where so few people even have solar, it feels like those trying go green are hamstrung. I have 5.6 kWh of potential on my roof and would love to add more panels on my property but I am capped to generating 3.68 kWh. Surely the difference an extra kWh or two is going to mean diddly squat to the national grid? I think the underlying issue is they are scared of losing too much money! It doesn’t suit them for me to store energy in batteries to use at times of reduced solar. Ironically, my tariff promises to provide 100% green energy!

  • @nevillepass
    @nevillepass Před rokem +1

    I put my solar panels on my shed,in my garden ,and also with just two 100watt panels and a good battery you can have a microwave ,hot plate,kettle,lights,just to cook for free for the poorest people is revolutionary or could be

  • @mvteh
    @mvteh Před rokem

    Great discussion and good to stress the need for insulation. Good to hear all the devices like the ones in Robert's home. What I would like to see is the integration of the technologies mentioned. I do know that Factory Zero in Tiel in the Netherlands produces integrated modules with heatpump for central heating, cooling, hot water (including storage) and PV or PVT. These are built on an assembly line in a factory and can be shipped to e.g. council houses where they can replace the existing gas boiler. They come with the same connectors to the water supply and central heating and it's pretty much plug and play for plumbers and technicians who do not need much extra training. I'm sure there are other similar manufacturers in other countries including the UK where you could film in order to stimulate integration, standardizaton and mass-production. On a different note: Robert mentions cycling past a queue of cars and says they had no alternatives. In most countries in Europe and in the UK, many commutes could be done by bike.

  • @g4jnw
    @g4jnw Před rokem

    Very well said. I always follow your channel. If was younger i would be going Solar and buying an electric car. Unfortunately at 70+ with a State pension and a VERY small private pension (just enough to take me out of being able to claim pension credits) I doubt i will ever afford the above, unless i can swap my old 10 year old Corsa for all electric its a no. I hope the younger generations grasp the nettle and see what the future holds in renewables and electric cars. I will remain an avid watcher of your channel - Thanks Guys.

    • @salibaba
      @salibaba Před rokem

      Citroen ami? Twizy? E-Scooter? In seriousness though, unless rural I wouldn’t have a car as a pensioner, it’s just a financial noose.

  • @davefroman4700
    @davefroman4700 Před rokem +2

    The average home owner only needs 4-5 hours worth of energy storage to avoid 80% of their bill. If you have 5 hours of storage that you can run off of during the peak demand period you are going to avoid the worst of all the energy prices. EVEN if you do not have solar or any generation capacity. With a smart inverter you can set if up to charge during the night and for it to take over the household loads during the peak. And 5kw rack mount LFP storage batteries can be had now for less than 1500.

    • @matbowden9156
      @matbowden9156 Před rokem

      Got a link Dave? I've pulled 18 months of data off my smart meter, but can't find anyone free/available to help. BR8 in case ya close by 😁

  • @bellshooter
    @bellshooter Před rokem

    I was a student in Bath when Bobby was there and had an NSU Prinz 600cc car, and used thimbles of petrol! But , yes there were queues at the Texaco on London Road to get fuel.

  • @philtucker1224
    @philtucker1224 Před rokem

    I think the problem (that we all have) is that fossil fuel based energy commodities are sold in an open global market and are sold through a bidding process. As an example and as with all free bidding processes, we’ve all seen a 10 dollar item sell for 60 or 70 dollars, just because at least two stubborn parties wanted to show that they had more buying power than the other! This is the system that needs to be stopped if the world wants to survive this global fossil fuel “bidding war”…