Over two days in March, wind energy in the UK generated over 5 GW of electricity consistently over a 24 hour period

UK renewables association RenewableUK is celebrating the fact that for the first time, wind energy in the UK generated over 5 GW of electricity consistently over a 24 hour period, with the period starting on Thursday 21 March  at 21.30 and continuing throughout Friday 22nd March.
This means that for this 24 hour period wind was generating enough to power the equivalent of nearly 4 out of every 10 UK homes and consistently over 10% of GB’s overall electricity needs.
In addition a record for one-off generation in a half hour period was created at 1530 when 5.296 GW of wind was present on the grid, alongside another anticipated 2 GW from distributed wind.
 
Maria McCaffery, chief executive of RenewableUK, commented: "What this shows is that wind is a stable and reliable source of power generation on the scale we need, when we need it most. This then counters the idea that wind does not generate power during cold snaps and comes at the same time as reports that the UK has only 36 hours of gas supplies in reserve, and on the day that the wholesale price of gas in the UK reached a seven year high. It also serves as a timely reminder of the vulnerability of supply and the price volatility of imported fossil fuels. This power production coupled with [the power regulator’s] own figures, which showed the real cost of wind to households is less than £0.20 a week".