has laid out? it is very welcome because they has laid out? it is very welcome because they are has laid out? it is very welcome because they are pushing - has laid out? it is very welcome i because they are pushing forward has laid out? it is very welcome - because they are pushing forward and raising ambitions, including hydrogen and i think what is missing for me if it is a security strategy is the resilience for people and thatis is the resilience for people and that is all about energy efficiency and insulating homes and if we change to renewable heat pumps and they require ventilation to operate well if people have more energy efficient homes, they will be less exposed to price shocks and bring down the cost of heating their home for an hour or down the cost of heating their home foran hour ora day down the cost of heating their home for an hour or a day but we need to make them more energy efficient, whether they will stay with gas or going to renewable heat pumps. professor
encourage communities to accept having them built near there, and if they do, they will be guaranteed lower energy bills. the turbines are controversial and have an impact on the landscape, so what about onshore offshore wind farms? the government has an ambition that by 2030 those at sea, the offshore wind farms will generate enough electricity to power every uk home. that is the ambition and of course thatis that is the ambition and of course that is not far off, only eight years away also and one of the big criticisms about renewables like wind energy is that they can vary and are hard to predict and don t always meet forecasts. for example, the low wind conditions last summer meant the energy firm ssc saw its renewable energy sources produce one third less electricity than they had forecast so let s talk about all of this and professor karen turner is