The Anonymous Widower

We’re Taking Money Out Of Government, Says Starmer As Cuts Loom

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article in The Times.

This is the sub-heading.

Rachel Reeves faces a showdown with unions over plans to slash government running costs, which may mean the loss of five times more Whitehall jobs than previously planned

Welcome to the Summer of Discontent.

March 24, 2025 Posted by | Finance, World | , , , , , | 1 Comment

Thousands Of Jobs To Be Axed In Great Rail Shake-Up

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article in The Times.

This is the sub-heading.

Most of the cuts are expected to be in back-office roles where staff are not members of the most active transport trade unions

Welcome to the Summer of Discontent.

March 24, 2025 Posted by | Business, Finance, Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 1 Comment

Sunset Studios Pivots From Plan To Develop Major Soundstage Complex Outside US

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on the Hollywood Reporter.

This is the sub-heading.

Operator Hudson Pacific and investment giant Blackstone had envisioned a 91-acre site in North London to have 21 soundstages totaling 470,000 square feet.

These two paragraphs give more details.

Plans have been formally put on hold for a 91-acre film and TV soundstage complex outside of London that had been billed as a major foray for the Sunset Studios brand outside the United States.

Sunset Studios, owned by operator Hudson Pacific along with significant investor Blackstone, had announced the project in 2021 during what may have been the height of the streaming content spending boom on film and TV projects.

This Google Map shows the site today.

Note.

  1. The North-South road is the A10.
  2. The roundabout , is where Winston Churchill Way meets the A10.
  3. The dual-carriageway going West from the roundabout is Lieutenant Ellis Way.
  4. Construction of a data centre for Google seems to have started to the North-West of the roundabout.
  5. Lieutenant Ellis Way would have separated the data centre from the studios.

In Google Starts Building £790m Site In Hertfordshire, I say more about building the data centre.

This Google Map shows the area South of the roundabout, where Winston Churchill Way meets the A10.

Note.

  1. The North-South road is the A10.
  2. The green patch of land to the South-East of the roundabout where Winston Churchill Way meets the A10 appears to be ripe for development.
  3. Looking at the green patch with a higher resolution, the land is little more than high class scrub beloved of newts.
  4. The London Overground line to Cheshunt runs down the East side of the site.
  5. To the North, the London Overground crosses Winston Churchill Way to get to Theobalds Grove station.
  6. To the South, the London Overground crosses the M25 to get to Turkey Street station.
  7. The M25 runs across the bottom of the map, through junction 25.
  8. The site to the West of the A10 between the two roundabouts, was the site reserved for  Sunset Studios.
  9. The site appears to have been concreted.

What is going to happen to the Sunset Studios site now?

 

 

March 21, 2025 Posted by | Computing, Finance, World | , , , , , | 3 Comments

Zenobē Lands Financing For 400MW Eccles Project

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Solar Power Portal.

This is the sub-heading.

Battery energy storage system (BESS) developer/operator Zenobē has announced that it has successfully financed its Eccles BESS project in Scotland, in one of the biggest finance rounds in European history.

These two paragraphs add more details.

The total debt raised for the 400MW/800MWh project was £220 million, which the company says is one of the largest finance raises for a standalone BESS project ever made in Europe. The funding was provided by a group of lenders organised by National Westminster Bank and KKR Capital Markets Partners LLP. Additionally, Zenobē has announced that construction on the Eccles BESS—the company’s largest battery project to date—has begun.

The Eccles BESS is the final part of the firm’s £750 million investment in Scotland. Zenobē’s Blackhillock BESS, a 200MW/400MWh project located near Inverness, recently began commercial operations, and is set to expand to 300MW/600MWh later this year.

Zenobe seem to be able to finance these projects, without too much difficulty.

Construction seems to have started. But then, I suspect there are wind turbines in the vScottish Borders already lined up to use the batteries.

This Google Map shows an Eccles substation.

Note.

  1. The Eccles substation is marked by the red arrow.
  2. The town at the East edge of the map is Coldstream.
  3. The England-Scotland border is clearly marked.

This second Google Map shows a closer view of the Eccles substation.

Note.

  1. t looks to be a substantial substation.
  2. There would appear to be plenty of space for a large battery.
  3. It is close to the A 597 road for the delivery of heavy equipment.

I suspect this substation could be the location of the battery.

It’s also right in the heart of Scottish onshore wind territory.

It is also according to the Solar Power Portal a £220 million project.

A project of this size will deliver substantial benefits in terms of work to the local community.

It will likely have a community benefit fund or something similar.

So you would expect the project would be welcomed into the local area.

But you would be wrong, if this article on the BBC, which is entitled Village ‘Heart Ripped Out’ By Battery Site Plans, is typical of the feeling about the batteries.

This is the sub-heading.

A rural community in the Borders is warning that Scotland’s renewable energy revolution is coming at a cost.

These three paragraphs add more detail.

Residents of Leitholm – a village between Coldstream and Greenlaw – claim the heart is being ripped out of their community with the arrival of battery storage facilities.

If all six proposed facilities are approved, more than 200 acres of farmland will be turned over to concreted compounds within a three-kilometre radius of their village.

Retired nursery owner Seonaid Blackie said: “This is not the place it used to be – people are worried sick.”

The residents view is balanced by industry expert Professor John Irvine, from St Andrew’s University, believes energy storage has a vital role to play in reaching net-zero targets.

My view is what is needed is an energy storage system, that can be built substantially underground.

If you look at large Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS), they are best described as container parks.

We need energy storage systems, that fit in a single tennis court, rather than thirty football pitches.

Gravitricity is one possibility, who are also Scottish, who store energy using weights in disused mine shafts.

The French system; DELPHY is also a vertical system for storing hydrogen in a custom-built hole.

Practically, I believe the solution adopted will be to spread the batteries out and spend money on surrounding them with trees and other camouflage.

 

March 20, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage, Environment, Finance | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

UK Government Sets 8-Hour Minimum For LDES Cap-And-Floor Scheme

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Energy Storage News.

This is the sub-heading.

The UK government has published a Technical Decision Document confirming crucial aspects of its long duration electricity storage (LDES) cap-and-floor scheme, which includes increasing the minimum duration required from six hours to eight.

These three paragraphs give more details.

The document, released by regulator Ofgem on 11 March, details the final overarching rules and requirements for the scheme as well as how it will be implemented, though significant detail still remains to be worked out.

The scheme will provide a cap-and-floor revenue protection for 20-25 years that will allow all capital costs to be recoverable, and is effectively a subsidy for LDES projects that may not be commercially viable without it. Most energy storage projects being deployed in the UK today are lithium-ion battery energy storage systems (BESS) of somewhere between 1-hour and 3-hour in duration (very occasionally higher).

One of the most significant new details of the scheme is that, following industry feedback, the minimum duration for projects to qualify has been increased from six hours to eight hours of continuous rated power.

As a control engineer, I believe this is all good stuff and is a good improvement on the previous regime.

The whole article is a must read and I believe that more investors, will invest heavily in energy storage.

But then the UK, with its massive potential for offshore wind, has the resources to create and fill many GW of energy storage.

Boris once said, that we would become the Saudi Arabia of wind!

 

March 18, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage, Finance | , , , , | Leave a comment

Drax To Get £24m In Green Subsidies For Pumped Hydro

The title of this post is the same as that of this article in The Times.

These three paragraphs give details of the subsidy.

Drax will bank £24 million in green subsidies from energy bill-payers for its pumped hydro assets, ahead of a revival in the energy storage technology in Britain.

The FTSE 250 constituent, which also operates Britain’s largest power station in North Yorkshire, has secured contracts to provide 434 megawatts of capacity from its pumped storage and hydro assets, the largest of which is the Cruachan power station near Oban in Scotland.

The contracts cover energy to be delivered between October 2028 to September 2029, at a price of £60 a kilowatt a year.

This will arouse the anti-Drax lobby, but it should be born in mind, that according to Wikipedia, Cruachan can provide a black start capability to the UK’s electrical grid.

This is Wikipedia’s definition of a black start.

 

A black start is the process of restoring an electric power station, a part of an electric grid or an industrial plant, to operation without relying on the external electric power transmission network to recover from a total or partial shutdown.

After the Great Storm of 1987, we were without power in my part of Suffolk for two weeks and I suspect there were several black starts in the South of England.

I suspect that power from interconnectors could now be used.

Drax is expanding Cruachan from 440 MW to 1 GW, which will be a large investment and surely increase its black start capability.

So in this case the future subsidy could be considered something like an insurance policy to make sure black start capability is available.

March 12, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage, Finance | , , , , , , | 4 Comments

A Busy Saturday Lunchtime At Victoria Coach Station

I went to Victoria Coach station at lunchtime today and took these pictures.

These are my thoughts.

Where Are The British Coaches?

The nearest I saw were the smart coaches of the Oxford Tube, which were built by Plaxtons on a Volvo chassis.

The National Express coaches were made by Caetano in Spain.

I can certainly understand, why Wrightbus’s first product of a new era of British coach-building is an affordable Chinese-built coach, that is fitted with a Cummins engine, that possibly can be converted to hydrogen, as is the case, with some Cummins diesel engines.

As the coach will have a delivery time of six months, I think we’ll see them on the road fairly soon.

There Were Several Three Axle Coaches

In fact, I didn’t know they were very common.

  • I suspect that three axles is better for the weight.
  • But then you don’t see too many coaches in Central London unless you go to Victoria.

Wrightbus are saying that their hydrogen coach will have three axles.

 

The Wrightbus Effect

This article on Route One, says of the new Wrightbus Contour coach.

  • It will be released this year.
  • It will be an affordable product and Chinese-built.
  • It will be a 55-seat diesel coach.
  • It will have a Cummins engine.

In Wrightbus StreetDeck Ultroliner Next-Gen To Get Cummins Power, I describe how Wrightbus’s new Cummins-powered double-deck bus will be able to be converted to hydrogen-power. I suspect the same option will be available with the Contour diesel coaches.

The article on Route One, says this about the availability of the new coaches.

The Contour’s “competitive price” and lead time of six months promises an edge over some current industry norms, the business says.

That fits with what my finance company found forty years ago, when it was leasing coaches. If there were more coaches, you could lease more.

It looks to me, that the Cummins-powered, Chinese-built Wrightbus Contour coach will be affordable, available and convertible to zero-carbon hydrogen power.

If the quality and reliability of the coaches are high, then these coaches should sell and more coach operators will be wanting to run services from Victoria coach station, with their new affordable Wrightbus Contour coaches.

After what I saw on Saturday, will Victoria coach station have the space to accommodate them?

Coaches To Attractions

I saw coaches to Harry Potter, Legoland and other attractions.

Will this be an area that develops, if there were to be a greater availability of coaches, which Wrightbus, appears to be offering?

FLiXBUS

This is the first paragraph of the Wikipedia entry for FLiXBUS.

FlixBus (styled FLiXBUS) is a German brand that offers low-cost intercity coach services in Europe, North America, South America, and Asia. It is owned by Flix SE , which also operates FlixTrain, FlixCar, Kâmil Koç, and Greyhound Lines. FlixBus operates buses or, in many cases, just handles marketing, pricing, and customer service for a commission, on behalf of bus operators. In 2023, FlixBus had revenues of €2 billion and carried 81 million passengers of which 55 million were in Europe, 14 million were in Turkey, and 12 million were in North America.

They certainly seem to be an ambitious low-cost company, who serve a lot of places in the UK.

As they are a German company and Wrightbus have sold scores of zero-carbon buses to Germany could Wrightbus and FLiXBUS have been talking about affordable, quality coaches?

 

 

March 8, 2025 Posted by | Finance, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Wrightbus Goes Back To The Future As It Relaunches The Contour Coach

The title of this post, is the same as that of this press release from Wrightbus.

This is the detail of the press release.

Wrightbus is entering the coach market for the first time in more than 30 years with the launch of two new vehicles in the next 18 months.

The first vehicle to hit the market is the Contour, a low-emission 55-seater coach that was launched at a customer showcase event today (March 5).

It’s a case of back to the future for Wrightbus, which last produced a Contour coach in 1987 before retiring the vehicle.

The second vehicle, a zero-emission hydrogen coach – which is under development in Ballymena, Northern Ireland – will be added to the Wrightbus coach range within the next 18 months to help drive decarbonisation of the sector.

The low emission Contour has a lead time of just six months from order, which is considerably faster than the current one-to-two-year average wait customers have come to expect from the sector. Featuring a Cummins Euro 6 400BHP X11 engine and a ZF automatic gearbox, the modern-day Contour has been built with comfort in mind, with up to 55 reclining seats – each with its own USB port – alongside other modern safety features. Competitively priced and available with or without PSVAR compliance, there is also the option of the vehicle being ‘pre-prepared’, protecting the vehicle’s ‘second life’ and flexibility.

The coach has a range of bespoke options for customers to choose from and is designed to maximise luggage space and functionality.

It will be supported by a full Wrightbus warranty, alongside an unparalleled service and maintenance package from AllServiceOne, the Wrightbus repair and maintenance arm.

With the largest fleet of mobile technicians throughout the UK and Northern Ireland, AllServiceOne is the ultimate one-stop-shop for fleet support and service.

Wrightbus CEO, Jean-Marc Gales, said bringing the Contour to market was a pivotal move.

“The coach market has changed over the last few years and it’s the right time for a new player to come to the market.

We have long spoken about broadening our portfolio to offer customers an even greater range of Wrightbus vehicles.

Our first entry into the coach sector after an absence of more than three decades is another significant step in our expansion plans,” said Mr Gales.

“We know there are gaps in the market and the demand for coaches is growing.

This partnership allows us to bring high-quality low-emission vehicles to market almost immediately.

Throughout the process of readying the vehicle for our UK market, we have worked alongside our partner closely to ensure the Contour meets the exacting Wrightbus high quality standards that customers have come to expect.

Our AllServiceOne technicians have embarked on an extensive training programme and have a full working knowledge of the coach to ensure excellent fleet support. “At the same time as the launch of the Contour, our world-leading engineers are continuing to develop our own zero-emission hydrogen coach from our factory in Northern Ireland. We expect the hydrogen coach to be ready for launch in the next 18 months, which is a hugely exciting prospect.” The hydrogen coach concept was first revealed in 2024 as a prototype vehicle.

When launched, it will be a tri-axle hydrogen fuel cell electric coach capable of a 1,000km range, putting it on a par with traditional diesel-fuelled coaches.

These are my thoughts.

The Coach Has A Cummins Engine

Cummins will probably build the engines in their UK factory in Darlington.

Thirty years ago, I did a small data analysis consultancy for Cummins in Darlington and I was impressed by the operation and the company’s attitude.

One of their policies was that if the customer wants a special engine, then the company, is prepared to give the customer what they need.

So you can be sure, that the Cummins X11 engine to be supplied for the Contour coach, will be exactly what Wrightbus want.

The Cummins X15 Engine Is Convertible To A X15 Hydrogen Engine

Some of Cummins diesel engines are convertible to hydrogenfuel, by changing the cylinder head and the fuel system.

This can be done with a Cummins X15 engine and I wouldn’t be surprised if the X11 engine fitted to the Contour coach can be converted to hydrogen.

So an operator can buy a diesel coach and if they need, they could convert it to hydrogen.

USB Ports

This is stated in the press release.

Contour has been built with comfort in mind, with up to 55 reclining seats – each with its own USB port.

When I rode recently in a Irizar coach, there were no USB ports.

There Is A Promised Delivery Time Of Six Months

In the 1990s, I used to part-own a finance company, that leased vehicles.

One of the vehicles we used to loan money for was upmarket coaches like the Wrightbus Contour.

  • They were a relatively large loan of about £50,000.
  • The borrower was often very reputable with a good credit history.
  • The repossession rate was very low.

The press release says, that a two-year delivery time is normal for coaches and, I can remember that we could have financed more coaches, if they had been available.

So it would appear to me, that if Wrightbus can deliver a new coach in six months, they will sell a lot of coaches and I believe from past experience, that finance will be available from trusted sources.

The Hydrogen Coach Will Be A Hydrogen Fuel Cell Electric Tri-Axle Coach

This is stated in the press release.

When launched, it will be a tri-axle hydrogen fuel cell electric coach capable of a 1,000km range, putting it on a par with traditional diesel-fuelled coaches.

I suspect to get the 1,000 km range of the diesel coach and to protect the hydrogen tank, means some extra weight and an extra axle.

But I wouldn’t be surprised to see a reduced range hydrogen coach without the third axle.

Wrightbus Are The Company Who Launched Ballard Hydrogen Fuel Cells In London

I wrote London’s Hydrogen Buses in July 2013 and all Wrightbus buses hydrogen buses have used hydrogen full cells from Ballard Power Systems in Canada.

But there could be a complication in that Cummins make fuel cells in Germany and we are approaching Trumpian Tariff War Territory.

On the other hand in Australian Volgren Rolls Out First Hydrogen Bus Based On Wrightbus Chassis Technology, it shows how Wrightbus are prepared to licence their technology to reputable companies.

So any country, like Australia, Brazil, Canada, India, Mexico, Singapore or the United States, who can build coaches, can licence Wrightbus’s designs and fit the appropriate components to make a complete coach.

Note.

  1. Wrightbus is owned by the Bamford family, who own JCB.
  2. Wrightbus have licenced designs to Australia, Hong Kong and Singapore in the past.
  3. JCB have large manufacturing facilities in India.

I’m certain that the Bamfords and their advisors can work it out!

 

 

March 6, 2025 Posted by | Design, Finance, Hydrogen, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Norway Drops Fixed-Bottom Offshore Wind Plans, Shifts Focus To Floating Wind

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

The Norwegian government has cancelled plans for another fixed-bottom offshore wind tender in the North Sea due to cost concerns, shifting its focus toward developing floating offshore wind projects.

As cost concerns are mentioned in the sub-heading, I suspect that quite a few people are surprised that floating wind is cheaper with all its complications.

But we do know the following.

  • Floating wind farms seem to generate  electricity with a higher capacity factor.
  • Floating wind farms may be cheaper to assemble and service, as this can be carried out in a port with a crane, which may be less susceptible to random disturbance caused by weather.
  • Floating wind farms can be placed in deeper waters, which may be better areas for electricity generation.
  • Floating wind farms can be placed further out to sea, so Nimbys don’t object to them as much, causing extra costs.

Accountants and financiers will always prefer lower-cost options.

February 11, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Finance | , , | Leave a comment

Ørsted’s Earnings from Operational Offshore Wind Farms Up 20 Pct

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on offshoreWIND.biz.

This is the sub-heading.

Ørsted has reported 2024 earnings from its operational offshore wind farms of DKK 23.8 billion (approximately EUR 3.2 billion), up by 20 per cent compared to 2023.

And this is the introductory paragraph.

The global offshore wind developer said on 6 February the increase was mainly due to the ramp-up of generation at Greater Changhua 1 and 2a offshore wind project in Taiwan, South Fork in the US, and Gode Wind 3 in Germany, as well as higher wind speeds, higher pricing of the inflation-indexed CfDs and green certificates. The increase in 2024 was dampened by lower availability, according to the company.

I don’t think Trummkopf would get those sort of returns, if he invested any of his own money in his plan for the “Riviera of the Middle East”.

Although my American friend ; Jack and his family enjoyed themselves in the Lebanon in the 1960s, when he lectured at the American University of Beirut.

On the other hand this article in The Times is entitled Trump’s Gaza Plan Watered Down Amid Backlash From Allies.

February 6, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Finance | , , , , | Leave a comment