DRAX29 Oct 2013 11:56
The government may have given the go-ahead to the UK's first nuclear power station in a generation but it will be 10 years before Hinkley is helping power the country.
So for the next decade there are serious questions about how our energy needs will be met and more crucially for consumers, how the price of that energy can be kept to a minimum.
Coal has been keeping the lights on.
Although it may seem like it has had its hey-day, today it is still producing the biggest percentage of the electricity that we use, about 40%.
It is cheaper than gas and more flexible than renewables but with a number of our aging coal fired power stations shutting or reaching the end of their lives, supply is reaching a crunch point.
So could and should the government be giving serious consideration to extending the life of some of these plants in order to deal with the spectre of blackouts?
Ian Fells, emeritus professor of energy conversion at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, said: "This government and previous governments have all been told that we were going to run into this sort of situation by 2014/2015 as various power stations, old power stations, 40-year-old stations closed down for various reasons.
"But they're not being replaced and the governments have sat on their hands and have not done anything about it and now surprise, surprise they're worried about it all."
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We're not saying the UK doesn't have to decarbonise eventually but we are saying for goodness sake take it seriously while it's here”
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Kevin McCullough
CEO of UK Coal Production
He added: "Frankly, I think we will just have to keep coal fired power stations going and if we do that and we are breaking European rules we can be heavily fined for doing it."
Certainly the UK would not be alone in continuing to burn coal for power.
Across Europe countries like Germany and the Netherlands have built several new coal fired plants and in Germany hundreds of jobs have been created in the mining industry.
So could we see a similar resurgence in the UK's industry?
It has suffered yet more hardship this year with two more deep mines being forced to close.
Now there are only three left in the country, including Kellingley in North Yorkshire.
The pit produces 900 tonnes of coal every hour and its owner UK Coal Production has said it can continue to serve nearby power stations for decades and perhaps more importantly it believes if conditions were right they could look at re-opening some mothballed mines.
Drax has plans to build a a new coal fired plant using carbon capture and storage technology
Kevin McCullough, CEO of UK Coal Production, said: "For some of the mines that have closed, clearly they've got to the end of their economic life, however, we have within UK Coal for example Haworth Colliery which is capable of opening up.
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