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New peak for electricity demand due to cold weather yesterday evening

Ireland recorded a new peak for electricity demand yesterday evening at 5.28pm due to the cold weather which hit the country
Ireland recorded a new peak for electricity demand yesterday evening at 5.28pm due to the cold weather which hit the country

New figures from EirGrid show that Ireland recorded a new peak of 5639 MW for electricity demand yesterday evening at 5.28pm due to the cold weather.

This all-time record peak breached the previous peak in electricity demand of 5577 MW recorded on January 18 2024.

EirGrid is responsible for operating, developing and enhancing the electricity grid and market in Ireland.

It carries out the task of matching electricity supply to customer demand in real time from the National Control Centre in Dublin.

EirGrid said that electricity demand in the winter is heavily influenced by weather conditions.

Its analysis of peak demand over winter indicates that a 1°C decrease in outside temperature results in a 40 MW increase in peak demand - or 50 MW when wind-chill is taken into account.

Diarmaid Gillespie, Director of System Operations at EirGrid, said that ensuring there is sufficient generation to meet electricity demand is a challenging task, particularly during the colder winter months.

"Despite wind generation being low yesterday evening, we had good generation availability and strong interconnection imports from Great Britain, which ensured a sufficient buffer between electricity supply available and demand," he said.

EirGrid's Winter Outlook, published last month, showed there is a significantly lower risk for System Alerts this winter, compared to what was anticipated last year, mainly due to new generation capacity now being available on the system.