Breaking
KR전북 교사 60% 교권 침해 경험… "아동학대 조항 개정·제재 강화해야"CN強颱巴威逼近 台灣北部、東部機率破8成CN國民黨議員秦慧珠批民進黨參選人沈伯洋「不勤跑基層」JPエコノミスト、株高は「円の価値希薄化」の表れと警告KR"임명 번복할 단계 아냐"…정무직 인사엔 "능력·선거 기여도 등 고려"KR충주시, 서충주·탄금공원 일원 자율주행차 시범운행지구 지정AUChina's Submarine Missile Test Signals Growing Military Power in PacificCN台中情侶雙屍命案偵結 男方已死亡不起訴DEElterngeld-Umbau: Familienministerin Prien will Väter mehr einbinden und sparenKRSeoul shares extend losses as investors lock in profits after Samsung earnings estimateKR전북 교사 60% 교권 침해 경험… "아동학대 조항 개정·제재 강화해야"CN強颱巴威逼近 台灣北部、東部機率破8成CN國民黨議員秦慧珠批民進黨參選人沈伯洋「不勤跑基層」JPエコノミスト、株高は「円の価値希薄化」の表れと警告KR"임명 번복할 단계 아냐"…정무직 인사엔 "능력·선거 기여도 등 고려"KR충주시, 서충주·탄금공원 일원 자율주행차 시범운행지구 지정AUChina's Submarine Missile Test Signals Growing Military Power in PacificCN台中情侶雙屍命案偵結 男方已死亡不起訴DEElterngeld-Umbau: Familienministerin Prien will Väter mehr einbinden und sparenKRSeoul shares extend losses as investors lock in profits after Samsung earnings estimate
Newsgather
BackUK Grid Operator to Pay Millions to Avoid Summer Power Crunch Amid Heatwave
UK Grid Operator to Pay Millions to Avoid Summer Power Crunch Amid Heatwave
Urgent
Guardian Business6/24/2026Energy2 min readUnited Kingdom

UK Grid Operator to Pay Millions to Avoid Summer Power Crunch Amid Heatwave

Quick Look

  • Britain's grid operator, Neso, is expected to pay millions to secure extra electricity on Wednesday evening due to extreme heat straining the energy system.
  • High demand from air conditioning and low wind generation prompted the payment to avoid a rare summer power supply crunch.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Extreme heat across Great Britain and the continent is straining energy systems, leading to high demand for cooling and reduced renewable generation.

Font size

Great Britain’s grid operator is expected to pay millions to fire up gas power plants to avoid a rare summer power supply crunch on Wednesday evening as extreme heat puts pressure on the energy system.

The National Energy System Operator (Neso) is expected to pay about £10m on Wednesday to secure enough electricity to meet demand as households turn on air conditioners and electric fans, according to industry data.

The system operator will pay more than four times the usual daily average to secure enough supplies to balance the power system after it issued a notice late on Tuesday asking generators to provide any extra electricity to help meet rising demand due to the impact of the heatwave.

The warning was cancelled on Wednesday afternoon after the operator agreed to pay about £1,400 a megawatt-hour, nearly 20 times the average electricity market price in June last year, to secure about 1.7 gigawatts of imported electricity from the continent.

A Neso spokesperson said: “This is due to the impact of extremely high temperatures affecting Great Britain and the continent, and low wind.”

The government-owned body added that the electricity supply was not at risk and that the decision to issue a margin notice did not mean a blackout was imminent.

Neso – which manages the energy systems in England, Scotland and Wales – had warned on Tuesday evening it would need an extra 1,900MW of power to avoid falling short of the electricity required to power homes and businesses within its normal safety margins on Wednesday evening.

The notice in effect called on Britain’s electricity generators to provide any extra power they could from their plants.

It is more common for Neso to issue such notices during particularly cold spells in winter, when there is more demand for heating. But demand for electricity is expected to climb between 7pm and 10pm on Wednesday as people turn on electric fans and air conditioning units to try to keep cool.

Electricity prices have risen sharply across European markets in recent days as the heatwave has gripped much of the continent, pushing demand higher and causing a string of power plant outages.

On Tuesday evening, a handful of Great Britain’s gas power plants were paid almost £4m to generate electricity for just a few hours as millions of sweltering viewers turned to air conditioning, fans and icy drinks during England’s second World Cup game.

An area of high pressure has trapped heat across the region and slowed wind speeds, which has knocked renewable energy generation. There has also been lower output at some nuclear plants in France, where high river water temperatures are making it more difficult to cool the reactors.

The combination of rising electricity demand and falling generation across Europe has pushed market prices to multiyear highs.

The UK broke its all-time temperature record for June on Wednesday, with 35.8C recorded in West Sussex, England

The sweltering heat is expected to strain the UK’s infrastructure. Train operators have urged passengers to travel only if necessary on Wednesday and Thursday, schools have been closed across southern England and Wales and hospital appointments have been cancelled.

Several trade unions, including the Trades Union Congress, the Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union and the Fire Brigades Union, have called for workers to take part in a strike on the hottest day.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Further payments to generators may be required if heatwave persists.

    Possible · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • Will similar payments be needed throughout the summer?
  • What are the long-term implications for energy infrastructure resilience?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian Business.

Related Stories

More on this topicheatwave