Nearly two years since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the geopolitical shockwaves continue to rattle Britain’s energy infrastructure. While the immediate crisis of winter gas shortages has been averted, a deeper structural vulnerability now threatens the nation’s long-term energy security. The aftershocks of the conflict have exposed the brittleness of a system built on globalised supply chains and just-in-time delivery.
The starkest illustration comes from a report released this morning by the National Grid’s Electricity System Operator (ESO). It reveals that Britain’s capacity margin, the buffer between peak demand and available generation, has fallen to a record low of 3.2% for this coming winter. To put that in scientific terms: a margin below 4% is akin to a spacecraft re-entering the atmosphere with a heat shield that has a 4% safety margin. It is technically survivable, but any anomaly becomes catastrophic.
The cause is a perfect storm of post-conflict disruptions. Liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments, once a reliable stopgap, now face fierce competition from Asian markets. The UK’s gas storage capacity, decimated by years of market liberalisation, stands at just 1% of annual demand. For context, Germany stores 25%. When you have such minimal buffering, a cold snap in March or a sudden shutdown of Norwegian pipelines could trigger rolling blackouts. The physics of energy is unforgiving: you cannot create electricity from nothing.
Compounding this, a number of ageing nuclear and coal plants, which were kept online as emergency reserves, are being permanently decommissioned. Ratcliffe-on-Soar, the last coal-fired power station, will close next month. This is a necessary step for decarbonisation, but the timing is precarious. The replacement capacity from offshore wind and solar is intermittent; when the wind does not blow, the grid relies on gas, the price of which remains highly volatile due to the conflict.
Data from the Office for National Statistics shows that wholesale electricity prices are still 45% higher than pre-invasion levels. This feeds directly into household bills, which are projected to remain at least 30% above historical averages through 2025. The government’s efforts to shield consumers through price caps have cost the Treasury over 40 billion pounds, a fiscal strain that reduces capacity for investment in resilience.
On the technology front, there is hope but no quick fixes. Small modular reactors (SMRs) are touted as a solution, but the first will not connect to the grid before 2035. Battery storage deployment is accelerating, reaching 2.8 GW of capacity, yet to replace a single gas plant you would need a facility the size of a small town. The math simply does not work at present deployment rates.
The real urgency lies in demand-side response. The ESO has begun paying industrial users to switch off at peak times, a technique known as ‘demand flexibility’. It is effective but limited: it can shave off perhaps 1 GW of peak load, whereas the buffer deficit is closer to 5 GW. Further measures, such as smart meter-driven dynamic tariffs, could reduce household consumption by 10% but require behavioural change that has been slow to materialise.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin continues to weaponise energy. Though direct gas flows from Russia to the UK ceased in 2022, the UK is still exposed via the European spot market. Russia’s throttling of supplies to Europe through Nord Stream 1, now destroyed, and the rerouting of flows through TurkStream have created a game of musical chairs. When Europe freezes, it draws LNG away from British terminals.
A shift in energy policy is long overdue. The current strategy relies on an assumption that renewables plus interconnectors from France and Norway will compensate. But those interconnectors have failed during extreme weather events in the past. A cable from Norway to Britain tripped offline during a storm in 2021, plunging millions into darkness. We are trusting a system with multiple single points of failure.
To stabilise the grid, we need three things: massive investment in long-duration energy storage (such as pumped hydro or liquid air), a return to strategic gas storage equivalent to at least 20% of annual demand, and a rapid buildout of dispatchable low-carbon capacity like geothermal or biomass with carbon capture. None of this is glamorous. It is about reinforcing the structure before the next shock hits.
The irony is stark. The UK, which leads the world in offshore wind, now faces a crisis of intermittency. We traded one vulnerability (fossil fuel imports) for another (weather dependence). The solution is not to abandon renewables but to complement them with resilience. The planet is warming, and so is the geopolitical temperature. Britain must adapt or face a winter of darkness.








