The Anonymous Widower

AI Forecast To Fuel Doubling In Data Centre Electricity Demand By 2030

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

This is the sub-heading.

International Energy Agency predicts that artificial intelligence could help reduce total greenhouse gas emissions

These are the first two paragraphs.

Data centres will use more than twice as much electricity by 2030 than they do today as artificial intelligence drives demand, the International Energy Agency predicts.

The agency forecast that all data centres globally will use about 945 terawatt-hours of electricity each year by 2030, roughly three times as much as the UK’s total annual demand of 317 terawatt-hours in 2023.

I am very much an optimist, that here in the UK, we will be able to satisfy demand for the generation and distribution of electricity.

  • Our seas can accommodate enough wind turbines to provide the baseload of electricity we will need.
  • Roofs and fields will be covered in solar panels.
  • SSE seem to be getting their act together with pumped storage hydro in Scotland.
  • I am confident, that new energy storage technologies like Highview Power with the packing of companies like Centrica, Goldman Sachs, Rio Tinto and others will come good, in providing power, when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine.
  • Hopefully, Hinckley Point C and Sizewell C will be online and soon to be joined by the first of the new small modular nuclear reactors.
  • Hopefully, Mersey Tidal Power will be operating.
  • There will be innovative ideas like heata from Centrica’s research. The economical water heater even made BBC’s One Show last week.

The only problem will be the Nimbies.

April 11, 2025 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Computing, Energy | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Backing Up The Wind With The Keadby Power Stations

I went to Cleethorpes from Doncaster by train yesterday. You pass the Keadby site, where there are two large gas–fired power stations of 734 MW and 710 MW. A third one ; Keadby 3 of 910 MW complete with carbon capture and storage should join them by 2027.

So that will be nearly 2.5 GW of reliable electricity.

I find it interesting that one of our first gas-fired power stations with carbon capture will be in Lincolnshire, which is famous for growing plants of all shapes, types and sizes. So will we be seeing lots of greenhouses on the flat lands I saw yesterday, growing plants in an atmosphere they like, so that we can generate our carbon dioxide and eat it.

 

The next power station at Keadby is called the Keadby Next Generation power station, which is intended to be complete by 2030. It is a bit of a puzzle in that it will run on up to 1800 MW of hydrogen and only produce up to 910 MW of electricity.

Note.

  1. The hydrogen will come from SSE’s hydrogen store at Aldbrough and Centrica’s store at Rough.
  2. Surely, the amount of hydrogen and electricity should balance.

When I worked in ICI’s hydrogen plant in the 1960s, ICI had no use for the hydrogen, so they sent it to their power station, blended it with coal gas and used it to make steam for other processes.

Could Keadby Next Generation power station be providing zero-carbon steam for the chemical and other processes on Humberside?

Adding the 910 MW of electricity to Keadby’s gas-fired total of 2.5 GW gives 3.4 GW of electricity from Keadby to back up the wind farms.

3.4 GW at Keadby is what I call backup!

It also should be noted, that one of the reasons for building the Mersey Tidal Barrage is to provide backup for all the wind farms in Liverpool Bay.

Conclusion

I believe that SSE could be supplying zero-carbon steam in addition to electricity from the Keadby Hydrogen power station.

 

 

March 26, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage, Food, Hydrogen | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Landsec Buys Liverpool One Shopping Centre For £490m

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

This is the sub-heading.

Commercial property group adds to its portfolio with another bet on ‘destination’ bricks and mortar

I know Liverpool well and I think this is a smart purchase.

The Mersey Tidal Barrage

If all goes well in a few years time, Liverpool One will be just a short walk from one of England’s most spectacular tourist attractions – The Mersey Tidal Barrage, which will allow you to walk or cycle across the Mersey.

The Pierhead, Waterfront And Merseyrail

Note.

  1. The Mersey Ferry Terminal is to the left,
  2. The Liver Building is in the centre.
  3. The Leeds and Liverpool Canal runs between the two, to give access for narrow boats to the Albert Dock.
  4. There is a Merseyrail station to the right.

The famous waterfront is already a major calling port for cruise ships and is connected to the rest of Merseyside, by one of the world’s best urban railways.

The Improved Rail Service From London

In the new year, Liverpool will get a second hourly rail service from London with new faster Hitachi trains and as Lime Street station is only a couple of stops on Merseyrail or a downhill walk for the average urban walker to Liverpool One, many will go and do their day’s shopping with a meal and some entertainment in the City.

The New Everton Stadium

From next year, that entertainment could be watching football at Everton’s new stadium, which is on the waterfront.

Battery High Speed Trains Across The Pennines

The trains across the Pennines will be improved soon, when new battery-electric high speed Hitachi trains come into service.

Hotels And Golf

The one thing that Liverpool One and the waterfront needs is some world class hotels. The Liverpool area already has a few golf courses good enough for the Open Championship.

The area has marketed itself in the past, as the Golf Coast.

Future Development

Liverpool One, the Pierhead and the Waterfront, can develop massively over the next ten years.

December 17, 2024 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Could Liverpool Develop A Massive Zero-Carbon Data Centre?

There is an article in The Sunday Times today, which is entitled Google Signs Nuclear Deal To Power AI Data Centres.

These are the first three paragraphs of the article.

Google has struck a deal with a nuclear power start-up to provide low-carbon energy for its data centres and AI operations, marking a world-first in the tech industry.

The California-based company said the agreement to buy energy from multiple small modular reactors developed by Kairos Power could help spur a nuclear revival in America.

The first reactor is scheduled to come online in America by 2030, followed by additional deployments through 2035.

I am not against nuclear-powered data centres, but could Liverpool build a massive zero-carbon data centre?

This Google Map shows Liverpool Bay, which is a vast expanse of water that stretches along the North Wales coast to Anglesey and all the way to the Isle of Man.

Note.

  1. The Isle of Man in the North-West corner.
  2. Liverpool, Birkenhead and the River Mersey in the South-East corner.
  3. Anglesey in the South-West corner.
  4. Blackpool with Morecambe Bay to its North in the North-East corner.

Liverpool Bay could be one of Europe’s zero-carbon energy powerhouses.

Wind Farms In Liverpool Bay

At the present time, these wind farms are producing electricity or planned in Liverpool Bay.

  • Barrow – 90 MW – Commissioned in 2006
  • Burbo Bank – 90 MW – Commissioned in 2007
  • Burbo Bank Extension – 258 MW – Commissioned in 2017
  • Gwynt y Môr – 576 MW – Commissioned in 2015
  • North Hoyle – 60 MW – Commissioned in 2003
  • Ormonde – 150 MW – Commissioned in 2012
  • Rhyl Flats – 90 MW – Commissioned in 2009
  • Walney – 367 MW – Commissioned in 2010
  • Walney Extension – 659 MW – Commissioned in 2018
  • West if Duddon Sands – 389 MW – Commissioned in 2014
  • Awel y Môr – 500 MW – Planned
  • Morecambe – 480 MW – Planned
  • Mona – 1500 MW – Planned
  • Morgan – 1500 MW – Planned

Note.

  1. 2509 MW has been commissioned.
  2. 3980 MW is being planned.
  3. That is a total of 6489 MW

I suspect more space in Liverpool Bay could be developed with wind farms.

Mersey Tidal Power

The Mersey Tidal Power project has a web site.

If it is built, it will probably be built by the South Korean company; K-Water and use some of the design principles of the Sihwa Lake Tidal Power Station.

It will likely have an output of around 1 GW and take ten years to build.

In the 1970s, I did some project management consultancy for Frederick Snow and Partners, and they showed me their plans for a Severn Barrage.

Their futuristic vision for the Severn Estuary was never built, as the Prime Minister of the time; Harold Wilson, felt coal was the future. See Last Of The Many!

I suspect that the Mersey Tidal Power project will be another variation on a proven theme.

Morecambe Bay Bridge And Tidal Barrage Proposal

In the Wikipedia entry for Morecambe Bay, there is a proposal for a bridge and tidal barrage across the bay, where this is said.

In 2004, a proposal was made to build a bridge across the bay flanked by wind turbines and using tidal power. Proposals from Northern Tidal Power Gateways in 2019 outlined a tidal barrage with a road running along on top.

If the Mersey Tidal Power project is a success, then why wouldn’t one across Morecambe Bay, be one too?

500 MW of zero-carbon tidal power would do nicely!

Nuclear Sites At Calder Hall, Heysham And Wylfa

These three nuclear stations have supplied electricity to the North-West of England.

  • Calder Hall was the original Magnox site, which the Wikipedia entry says had a nameplate capacity of 240 MW and was decommissioned in 2003, after running for 47 years.
  • Heysham is a powerful site which the Wikipedia entry says has a nameplate capacity of 2452 MW and will be decommissioned in 2028.
  • Wylfa is an older, smaller Magnox site which the Wikipedia entry says had a nameplate capacity of 1190MW and was decommissioned in 2015.

As the sites are cleared, I am sure that we’ll see more nuclear power stations built on the sites.

How Much Electricity Does A Data Centre Use?

I found this paragraph in an NESO document.

Regardless of this, if we were to use existing market data and modelling projections, this could point to annual data centre electricity consumptions of between 3.6 TWh in 2020 to as much as 35 TWh by 2050.

Dividing by the hours in a year, indicates that an individual data centre could use between 0.4 and 4 GW of electricity.

Using my rough figures here from wind, tidal and nuclear, I suspect that the power on the Mersey will generate enough power for at least one data centre.

Liverpool Is On The Right Side Of The Country For Cables To North America

Cables will go straight out of Liverpool Bay, pass to the North of Ireland and across the Atlantic to somewhere like Puget Sound.

Liverpool has a superb location for a Transatlantic data centre, that connects to networks on both sides of the pond.

Could Underwater Data Centres Be Developed In Liverpool Bay?

This page on the Microsoft web site is entitled Microsoft Finds Underwater Datacenters Are Reliable, Practical And Use Energy Sustainably

These three paragraphs detail the research.

Earlier this summer, marine specialists reeled up a shipping-container-size datacenter coated in algae, barnacles and sea anemones from the seafloor off Scotland’s Orkney Islands.

The retrieval launched the final phase of a years-long effort that proved the concept of underwater datacenters is feasible, as well as logistically, environmentally and economically practical.

Microsoft’s Project Natick team deployed the Northern Isles datacenter 117 feet deep to the seafloor in spring 2018. For the next two years, team members tested and monitored the performance and reliability of the datacenter’s servers.

I would assume that Microsoft have continued the research, as with something like this you can’t be too careful.

But it would appear, that data centres and their servers could be submerged under the waters of Liverpool Bay.

London And Liverpool Will Be Under Two Hours By Train Within A Year

New Class 807 trains, which will be delivered within a year, will improve the train service between the two cities.

  • Train times will be brought to around or even below two hours.
  • , The extra trains will allow a second hourly service to be added.
  • The extra service will additionally stop at Liverpool South Parkway station, for the airport.
  • High Speed Two is claiming one hour and fifty minutes, between London and Liverpool.

Liverpool already has one of the best rail terminals in the North of England, as these pictures show.

With these service improvements, it will have a service to London and the South, that will be second to no other Northern station.

Liverpool Has A Refurbished Partly-Underground Suburban Railway With New Trains

Liverpool’s Metro is one of the best in Europe for a medium-sized city.

The Metro is also expanding with new routes and stations.

These pictures show the new Headbolt Lane station, which is swerved by the UK’s first battery-electric trains.

Liverpool Has Easy Access To Two International Airports

There are two international airports close by; Liverpool John Lennon and Manchester International.

  • For Liverpool Airport, it’s a bus from Liverpool South Parkway station or an express bus from Liverpool city centre.
  • For Manchester Airport, it’s a train from Lime Street station.

I am fairly sure, that a hydrofoil could connect Liverpool’s Waterfront and the Tidal Barrier to the airport.

North-West England Has A Rich University Tradition

Liverpool, Manchester and the surrounding area has several world-class universities and research establishments.

Some like The Pandemic Institute would be able to find uses for all the computing power and artificial intelligence on offer at a powerful data centre.

Liverpool Is A World City

Liverpool is a World City, where there is plenty of sport, entertainment and things to do.

Conclusion

Liverpool is installing the power infrastructure for a very large data centre, that will be able to handle the world’s largest and most difficult problems.

 

October 21, 2024 Posted by | Artificial Intelligence, Computing, Energy | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Eurovision Boost For Record Rail Profits

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

This is the sub-heading.

A train operator has posted record profits thanks in part to the Eurovision Song Contest and other major events.

These four paragraphs sum up the story.

Merseyrail, which operates services across Merseyside and into Cheshire and Lancashire, is one of the most intensively used rail networks in the UK.

According to its directors’ strategic report for the year ending in January 2024, some 78,000 journeys were taken on Merseyrail services on average every day.

There were 28 million passenger journeys, which the company said was a post-Covid peak. It added a profit of just under £44m was the largest in its history.

The report said Merseyrail had benefitted from the Eurovision Song Contest being held in Liverpool, as well as the Open golf tournament at Hoylake on the Wirral and a successful Grand National festival at Aintree.

Note.

  1. Merseyrail’s trains seem to have taken the spectators to the big events all over the city.
  2. The trains are also virtually brand new and very bicycle and buggy-friendly, so do they introduce new passengers to Merseyrail?
  3. Spectators from places around the city like Birkenhead, Chester, Crewe, Manchester, Preston, Southport, Warrington and Wigan all have good rail connections to Liverpool Lime Street, which has its own Merseyrail below-ground station.

For big events like Eurovision, the Grand National or The Open, if you have tickets for the event,  a train, on the day from Birmingham, Derby, Leeds, London, Nottingham or Sheffield is very feasible.

  • In addition, now that Lime Street station and the area around it has been refurbished, it is a cultural area to visit in its own right.
  • I believe that Liverpool will grow as a destination to visit.
  • A doubling of the Avanti train service to London will add more capacity.
  • The TransPennine Express service across the country and to Scotland will be improved.
  • Blackpool will be eighty minutes away.
  • The Eden Project North at Morecambe will be only an hour away.
  • In a few years time, the Mersey Tidal Barrage will be attracting visitors.
  • Liverpool has public transport connections to both Liverpool and Manchester airports.

Liverpool will be a place to stay for the weekend and for those, who don’t have a car or prefer not to drive, they will be able to use the extensive rail network to get to other places like.

  • Blackpool and Manchester with their trams.
  • Liverpool’s local attractions on Merseyrail.

Liverpool will become a very successful short-stay resort city.

October 18, 2024 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

3rd October 2024 – A Day In Liverpool

A Three-Leg Journey North

This is the second time, I’ve bought one of there journeys North and they are a pain, unless you want to guarantee seats.

I suppose, I should buy my tickets earlier, but if I can buy my rickets on the day on other train companies, I would prefer to do it on Avanti West Coast.

Avanti West Coast’s problem is that they haven’t got their new Class 807 trains into service yet, which will double the services to Liverpool.

T arrived at Warrington Bank Quay on time and the transfer to Newton-le-Willows went smoothly, but then, I waited thirty minutes for my train to Liverpool Lime Street.

This OpenRailwayMap shows the route I took.

Note.

  1. Liverpool Lime Street station is at the Western side of the map.
  2. Newton-le-Willows station is marked by the blue arrow in the top right corner of the map.
  3. Warrington Bank Quay station is in the bottom right corner of the map.

It does seem a round about route, But I got there. Although, I was late.

Hopefully, in a couple of years, you’ll be able to take a local train between Liverpool Lime Street and Newton-le-Willows stations to link up with FirstGroup’s low-cost Lumo Open Access service between Euston and Rochdale.

A Single Journey Home

I was booked home on the 18:43 train from Lime Street, but as you can often do, I asked and was allowed to board the 17:43.

A Crowded And Crazy Euston

I arrived back at Euston at 20:00, but it was crowded, as the station is very much a building site for High Speed Two.

I felt I would treat myself to a taxi, but I couldn’t find any.

So I took a 205 bus along Euston Road to King’s Cross, where I jumped on the the Circle Line for Moorgate.

From there I took my usual 141 bus home.

A friendly station guy at Moorgate, indicated, there might not be any taxis at Euston.

I’d also found earlier, that there were no escalators to the Underground.

Perhaps more than ever, care should be taken at Euston, when getting to and from the station.

It Looks To Me That High Speed Two Has Got Their Planning Wrong At Euston

The big problem at Euston is getting to and from the National Rail station from East or West,

Compare Euston in this respect with Liverpool Street, King’s Cross, St. Pancras or Paddington.

In The New Step-Free Entrance At Euston Square Station, I show the plans for step-free access to the  sub-surface lines.

This new entrance to Euston station, should be built first.

All the dithering about High Speed Two seems to have delayed it!

October 4, 2024 Posted by | Transport/Travel, World | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Biggest Engineering Event In The UK For Decades

In the 1970s, I was doing a small project management consultancy job at Frederick Snow and Partners.

They had developed a plan to barrage the River Severn and use the tides to generate about ten percent of the UK’s required electricity.

Harold Wilson’s government turned the idea down, as they felt large coal-fired power stations like Drax and Fiddlers Ferry were the future.

I was shown the plan for the River Severn and thought it had merit and still believe that one day it will be built.

Starting at the beginning of October, Liverpool will be showing their plan for the world’s largest tidal barrier.

These are the dates.

  • Museum of Liverpool, Mann Island, Liverpool L3 1DG – Thursday 3 October – 3pm to 7pm
  • Delamere Community Centre, Delamere Avenue, Eastham, Wirral CH62 9ED – Friday 11 October – 2pm to 7pm
  • The Gateway, 85-101 Sankey Street, Warrington WA1 1SR – Saturday 12 October – 10am to 4pm
  • The Lake House, Cambridge Road, Waterloo, Liverpool L22 1RR – Monday 14 October – 2pm to 7pm
  • Floral Pavilion Theatre, Marine Promenade, New Brighton, Wirral CH45 2JS – Thursday 17 October – 2pm to 7pm
  • The Florrie, 377 Mill Street, Dingle, Liverpool L8 4RF – Saturday 19 October – 10am to 4pm
  • Shakespeare North Playhouse, Prospero Place, Prescot L34 3AB – Saturday 26 October – 10am to 4pm
  • Ellesmere Port Civic Hall, Civic Way, Ellesmere Port CH65 0AZ – Monday 4 November – 2pm to 7pm
  • Totally Wicked Stadium, McManus Drive, St Helens WA9 3AL – Tuesday 5 November – 2pm to 7pm
  • Runcorn Masonic Hall, York Street, Runcorn WA7 5BB – 10am to 4pm

I shall post on this page, when I will be in the city to look at the event.

September 23, 2024 Posted by | Design, Energy, World | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Public Views Sought Over Mersey Tidal Barrier Plan

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

This is the sub-heading.

More details have been revealed about plans to build the world’s largest tidal barrier in the River Mersey.

These two paragraphs outline the project.

A dam-like structure would be constructed between Wirral and Liverpool, with the possibility of cyclists and pedestrians being able to walk across it.

Liverpool City Region Combined Authority believes the project could generate enough clean, predictable energy to power hundreds of thousands of homes for 120 years.

Note.

  1. A six-week public consultation on the scheme will begin on 1 October, offering local people and organisations the chance to comment on the plans.
  2. Steve Rotherham, who is the Mayor, has said it will be within ten years.

As Rotherham has called in the Korean experts, he could likely be right.

This is a flythrough of the barrage.

 

September 22, 2024 Posted by | Energy | , , | 1 Comment

Hyundai Heavy Sets Sights On Scottish Floating Offshore Wind

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

This is the sub-heading.

Major South Korean shipbuilder, HD Hyundai Heavy Industries, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with two Scottish enterprise agencies which is expected to unlock expertise in the design and manufacture of floating offshore wind substructures.

These are the first three paragraphs.

Scottish Enterprise (SE) and Highlands & Islands Enterprise (HIE) signed the MoU with Hyundai Heavy in Edinburgh, described as a “vote of confidence” in Scotland, committing each other to pursue opportunities for floating offshore wind projects in Scotland.

This is the South Korean company’s first agreement in Europe on floating offshore wind manufacturing.

HD Hyundai Heavy Industries is the world’s largest shipbuilding company and a major manufacturer of equipment such as the floating substructures that form a critical part of the multi-billion offshore wind supply chain.

To say this is a big deal, could be a massive understatement, as my history with large Korean companies could say otherwise.

Around 1980, one of the first prestigious overseas projects, that was managed by Artemis was in Saudi Arabia.

  • This may have been something like the King Khaled City, but I can’t be sure.
  • Most of the hard work on the project was done by labour imported by Hyundai from South Korea.

After a few years, the Korean running Hyundai’s part of the project returned to Korea and he indicated that he would help us break into the Korean market.

Our salesman; Paul, with responsibility for Korea, who sadly passed away last year, told me this tale of doing business in the country.

Our Korean friend had bought a system for Hyundai in Korea and he organised a meeting for important Korean companies, so that Paul could present the system.

Everything went well, with our friend doing the necessary pieces of translation.

When he had finished, Paul asked if there were any questions.

The most common one was “Can we see the contract?”

Contracts were given out and after a cursory read, the leaders of Korean industry, all started signing the contracts.

So Paul asked our Korean friend, what was going on.

After a brief discussion, Paul was told. “If it’s good enough for Hyundai, it’s good enough for my company!”

And that was how we broke the Korean market.

Conclusion

In UK And South Korea Help Secure Millions For World’s Largest Monopile Factory, I talked about Korean company; SeAH Wind’s new monopile factory on Teesside.

In South Korea, UK Strengthen Offshore Wind Ties, I talk about a developing partnership.

In Mersey Tidal Project And Where It Is Up To Now, I talk about Korean involvement in the Mersey Tidal Project.

The Koreans are coming and Hyundai’s endorsement will help.

April 18, 2024 Posted by | Energy | , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Mersey Tidal Power Flythrough

Liverpool City Region Combined Authority have released a flythrough of the proposed tidal barrage across the Mersey.

 

March 20, 2024 Posted by | Energy | , , , | 2 Comments