In its latest energy policy, it looks like the government is looking to encourage more wind farms, both off-shore and now on-shore again. Do we really need them? My understanding is that many days we now get most if not all our electricity from non-carbon sources, so why do we need yet more wind-farms? Aren't we just going to get ever-more wind-farms that are shut down for large periods because we don't need the power? Aren't we in danger of becoming over-reliant on one source of supply, in particular one that cannot be relied on 24/7.
What we surely need now are alternative sources that can supply the power when the wind isn't blowing and the sun isn't shining. In my view, we should not be authorising any new wind farms unless they also include sufficient storage so that they can supply power 24/7 for a sustained period (at least a week of no wind). Currently, they just provide cheap power when the wind is blowing, and leave it up to someone else to do the hard work when the wind isn't blowing. The reason that the price of renewables is cheap, is because they are leaving the expensive part of the job to others.
Likewise for solar farms, we should not be authorising any that do not include sufficient storage built-in. And certainly not yet more built on prime agricultural land. Unfortunately they seem to prefer building them on flat, dry land, which tends to be the best farm land.
There are a number of technologies that could pick up some of the slack, such as tidal. But again, that only provides part-time power. It is good that the government is increasing the size of our hydrogen supply, but in reality double diddly-squat is still diddly-squat. If hydrogen is going to make much of a dent, then most towns are surely going to need a hydrogen plant, just as every town used to have a coal-gas plant. Can't see the nimbies being too happy about that. Likewise if we are going to rely on energy storage, we are going to need it on a massive scale. A few portacabins full of batteries here and there really isn't going to cut it. And batteries use increasingly-expensive, heavily-polluting rare-earth metals, so are hardly a green option.
Although the nimbies are up in arms about nuclear, I really don't see much alternative to it, to ensure that we still have power 24/7 when there is a sustained cold period with no wind. Having left the EU, it is surely very unwise (if not hypocritical) to rely too-heavily on European-generated nuclear power. One of the side-effects of the EU decoupling itself from Russian energy, could well be that it has less available for us.