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Winter

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About Winter


Winter is the coldest season of the year in polar and temperate zones. It occurs after autumn and before spring in each year. Winter is caused by the axis of the Earth in that hemisphere being oriented away from the Sun.

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... " We are human, we want to understand everything around us; whether that was as ancient people looking at the night sky and drawing constellations on our caves, or trying to understand whether the Sun would come back after the Winter - we seek that knowledge and insight, " she told BBC News...

Covid: Over-65s called for jabs as hospital cases rise

Covid: Over-65s called for jabs as hospital cases rise
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... That is still below the level reached last Winter - 11...

Heating on prescription trial suggests fewer NHS visits

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...By Colletta Smith & Elaine DoranBBC NewsA trial which paid the heating bills of some NHS patients last Winter indicated they visited their GP less often...

West Burton A - the past and the future of power?

West Burton A - the past and the future of power?
Mar 31,2023 10:11 pm

... Despite this, the government wanted owners EDF to keep the plant operational for next Winter - a request the company declined due to the demands of staffing and maintenance...

Next says price rises will be less than expected this year

Next says price rises will be less than expected this year
Mar 29,2023 3:10 am

... It said it now expected prices to rise by 7% in the spring and summer of 2023, and 3% in the autumn and Winter - slightly less than the increases it warned of in January...

The high-tech weeding machines cutting herbicide use

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... His comments echo that the annual financial impact of weeds on just one specific crop - Winter wheat in the US and Canada - could total $2...

Cost of living: Ofgem price cap leads to debate over energy bill support

Cost of living: Ofgem price cap leads to debate over energy bill support
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... The government discounted everyone s bills by an additional £400 this Winter - with six monthly discounts on bills of about £67 - but this support comes to an end in April...

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Ukraine war: Hiding from Putin's call up by living off-grid in a freezing forest
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... He still works eight hours a day in the same job, although throughout Winter - with its limited daylight - he doesn t have enough solar power to work full days and so makes up his hours on the weekend...

West Burton A - the past and the future of power?

Jan 15,2023 7:11 pm

By Greig WatsonBBC News

On Friday, one of the country's last coal-fired Power stations - West Burton A - closed for good.

It stands in " Megawatt Valley" near the River Trent , where the cooling towers of 14 Power stations once dominated the landscape.

These stations used to provide up to a quarter of the electricity supply of England and Wales But only one of them - Ratcliffe-on-Soar some 40 miles (65km) to The South - Remains operational as last of its kind in England.

West Burton A was slated to close Last Year But was.

So why is the huge West Burton A facility, Still apparently of use to the UK's energy supply, being Decommissioned - and what will keep the lights on once it is gone?

Prof Aoife Foley, chair in Net Zero at the University of Manchester, said the miners' strike of the mid-1980s marked The Beginning of The End for " King Coal".

She Said : " British coal was seen as too expensive and too unionised - so it was easier and cheaper to import it.

" That - and emerging awareness of emissions and Climate Change - prompted the 90s 'Dash for Gas' which was cheaper, cleaner and more efficient. "

In 1951, 98% of UK electricity was generated by coal.

Even in 1990 the figure was 65% and by 2010 a Still substantial 40%.

By 2021 however, only 2. 9% of UK electricity came from coal.

West Burton A: Powerful legacy

Source: EDF

But The March to cut carbon emissions stumbled with The War in Ukraine and subsequent Energy Crisis , which saw cheap Russian gas supplies turned off, bills soar and talk of widespread Power cuts.

Into The Breach came West Burton A which, along with Ratcliffe-on-Soar and Kilroot in County Antrim , Northern Ireland , had its life extended by six months to act as a stand-by to handle Peak demand if other sources were insufficient.

In The Event , of the three emergency coal Power plants fired up for the Cold Snap , only West Burton A was used and just for a few hours, on 7 March.

Despite this, the government wanted owners EDF to keep The Plant operational for next Winter - a request The Company declined due to the demands of staffing and maintenance.

Until Friday, 117 EDF staff were keeping West Burton going But The Company said That number will be phased down as The Plant is Decommissioned through the rest of 2023.

EDF said a small team of six would remain by January 2024 when The Process of razing the entire site to the ground will begin.

So how is the UK going to cope without coal?

Prof Foley said: " We need three types of Power - baseload, intermediate and Peak - and energy supplies which can meet those.

" Baseload is The Stuff we need All The Time , from hospitals to fridges, intermediate is the main daytime demand, And Then Peak is the cooking, heating and tv in the evening.

" Renewables can provide lots of Power But can't be guaranteed due to the vagaries of weather and Climate Change unknown.

" So it's A Question How To meet those demands, and for the scale of demand in the UK, nuclear guarantees very low carbon generation to ensure energy and grid security. "

Perhaps The Answer a Power Station at West Burton After All - just not The One we have at The Moment .

In October the government announced the would be built on The Site .

Why develop Nuclear Fusion ?

Source: UK Atomic Energy Authority

At The Time of The Announcement , EDF's plant manager for West Burton Andy Powell said: " Moving from fossil to Fusion technology is an exciting prospect That connects directly to The Company 's purpose, to help Britain achieve net zero. This scheme will also secure jobs in The Local area for decades to come.

" Our commitment in securing a just transition for the workforce and communities connected to coal has now been realised and I can't wait to see it All come to life. "

But is Fusion - Still in the experimental Stage - really likely to give us The Power we need without coal? And if so, when?

Prof Martin Freer, director of the Birmingham Energy Institute , described coal as a " miserable, dirty and polluting" form of energy.

But while he welcomed the phasing out of coal-fired Power stations, he warned a predicted surge in demand for electricity poses big challenges.

He Said : " With The Rise in EV use, along with the likely shift to heating homes with heat pumps rather than gas, the demand for electricity is likely to double, But it could be three or four times greater.

" That leaves us in a very bad place As Far as the necessary energy generation goes".

He backs investing in a wide range low carbon Power technologies to see which " lasts the course".

But he also admitted the unpredictable nature of renewables demand " energy Storage Solutions That at The Moment we simply don't have".

So is Fusion The Answer ?

Prof Freer said: " Nature can do this rather simply - it is what happens in stars due to the vast gravitational forces - But it's much harder on a small scale on earth.

" The Problem is How To heat and contain the plasma And Then How To get useful energy out.

" But there has been a lot of progress, the basic principles are now reasonably well understood.

" Fusion has gone from being a science experiment and has transitioned into an engineering challenge. The mentality has changed. "

Prof Freer believes while a target date of 2040 for commercial Fusion is " optimistic" West Burton presents a unique opportunity for the UK as a whole, But also the region in particular.

" West Burton is where is it because it needed the coalfields, " He Said .

" Now those are gone But there is no need to say to people 'That 's it, time to go Somewhere Else '.

" Fusion is taking those jobs and transitioning them into new jobs and there will be a colossal amount of investment here.

" This will be a beacon and it could Change The Face of this part of The Midlands for decades to come, " he says.

Prof Foley shares this belief, saying: " Calder Hall in the UK was The World 's first commercial scale nuclear station in 1956.

" The UK innovates and this Nuclear Fission project at West Burton demonstrates the UK's commitment to energy security, the economy and net zero. "

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Source of news: bbc.com

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