Electricity Supply Board
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The Electricity Supply Board (ESB) (Bord Soláthair an Leictreachais in Irish), sometimes called ESB Ireland to differentiate it from US utilities, is responsible for generating and transmitting most of the electricity in the Republic of Ireland.
There are three interconnectors with Northern Ireland Electricity and it is proposed that a new north-south interconnector will be constructed over the next few years. The Irish Government has recently approved the construction of a subsea East West Interconnector between Ireland and Wales, this is being developed by a third party Imera Power.
The ESB has come under increased competition in recent year because of competition and deregulation policy. In recent years there have been independent power stations constructed at Edenderry, County Offaly; Huntstown and Ringsend, Dublin; Tynagh, County Galway and Aughinish, County Limerick.
History
The ESB was established by the fledgling Irish Free State government under the [Electricity (Supply) Act, 1927] to manage Ireland's electricity supply after the successful Shannon Scheme at Ardnacrusha. The scheme was Ireland's first large scale electricity plant - and at the time, it was believed that it would meet the total energy demands of Ireland. To give an idea of the growth in demand, the output of Ardnacrusha is now approximately two per cent of national peak demand for power.By 1937, plans were being finalised for the construction of several more hydro-electric plants. The plans called for stations at Poulaphouca, Golden Falls, Leixlip (all in Leinster), Clady, Cliff and Cathleen's Fall (between Belleek and Ballyshannon in County Donegal), Carrigadrohid and Inniscarra (in County Cork). All these new plants were completed by 1949, and together harnessed approximately 75% of Ireland's inland water power potential. Many of these plants are still in operation — however their combined capacity falls far short of Ireland's modern needs.
With Ireland's towns and cities benefiting from electricity, the new government pushed the idea of Rural Electrification. Between 1946 and 1979, the ESB connected in excess of 420,000 customers in rural Ireland. The Rural Electrification Scheme has been described as "the Quiet Revolution" because of the major socio-economic change it brought about. The process was greatly helped in 1955 by the [Electricity Supply Amendment Act, 1955].
In 1947, the ESB, needing ever more generation capacity, built the North Wall station on a 7.5 acre (30,000 m²) site in Dublin's industrial Port area on the North side of the River Liffey on the site of an old oil refinery. The original station consisted of one 12.5 MW steam turbine that was originally purchased for a power station at Portarlington but instead used at North Wall. Other power stations built around this time included the peat fired stations at Portarlington, County Laois, and Allenwood in County Kildare.
Because of the risks of becoming dependent on imported fuel sources and the potential for harvesting and utilising indigenous peat, the ESB - in partnership with Bord na Móna - established those stations and ESB also built Lanesboro power station in 1958. Located in County Longford, the plant burns peat, cut by Bord na Móna in the bogs of the Irish midlands. In 1965 the Shannonbridge station was commissioned. It is located in County Offaly. The two stations have been replaced by new peat-fired stations near the same locations, and peat is also used to power the independent Edenderry Power plant, in County Offaly.
As in most countries, energy consumption is low at night and high during the day. Aware of the substantial waste of night-time capacity, the ESB commissioned the Turlough Hill pumped storage hydro-electric station in 1968. This station, located in County Wicklow, pumps water uphill at night with the excess energy created by other stations, and releases it downhill during the day to turn turbines. The plant can generate up to 292 MW of power - but output in limited in terms of hours because of the storage capacity of the reservoir.
The 1970s brought about a continued increase in Ireland's industrialisation and with it, a greater demand for energy. This new demand was to be met by the construction of the country's two largest power stations — Poolbeg in 1971 and Moneypoint in 1979. The latter, in County Clare, remains Ireland's only coal-burning plant and can produce 915 MW - just shy of the 1015 MW capacity of Poolbeg. In 2002 and 2003, new independent stations were constructed - Huntstown Power (north Dublin) and Dublin Bay Power (Ringsend, Dublin).
In 1991, the ESB established the ESB Archive to store historical documents relating to the company and its impact on Irish life.
On 8 September 2003, two of the last remaining places in Ireland unconnected to the national grid - Inishturbot and Inishturk islands (off the coast of Galway)- were finally connected to the mains supply. Some islands are still powered by small diesel-run power stations.
The ESB had a monopoly in the Irish electricity market for the best part of a century. Under European Union legislation, the Irish electricity market was opened to full competition for domestic users in 2005. Business users had already been able to choose their electricity supplier for some years.
50 wind farms are currently connected to the power system (Jan 2006) and have the capacity to generate 500MW of power, depending on wind conditions.
On 16 March 2005, the ESB announced that it is to sell its ShopElectric (ESB Retail) chain of shops, with the exception of the Dublin Fleet Street and Cork city centre outlets, to Bank of Scotland (Ireland), who will convert them into high street banks. Existing staff are to be offered positions as bank tellers.
Companies
Today the ESB consists of several distinct divisions. The division of the company most members of the public deal with is ESB Customer Supply, which supplies energy to homes and businesses. Another major division is ESB Networks, which owns the Irish electricity network, and connects homes and businesses to the network, irrespective of which company supplies their energy. The Commission for Energy Regulation has insisted on strict separation between these two divisions.Other divisions include ESB Power Generation, which is responsible for electricity generation and has 19 power stations and a wind power subsidiary; ESB International (ESBI) manages projects abroad in the electricity supply, generation and distribution markets;]The functions of a business unit of ESB which previously operated the national power grid have now been taken over by an independent company, EirGrid plc; ESBI Computing manages large government and international information technology projects.
ESB Retail traditionally operated a chain of high street electrical shops under the ShopElectric brand. These have been sold to Bank of Scotland (Ireland), and in September 2005 began to close down in preparation for their conversion to retail banks.
ESB has also been involved in telecommunications, as part owner of Ocean, a telecommunications company which was a joint venture with BT Group plc. This was later merged with Esat Telecom (now BT Ireland), although the brand partially remains as an ISP service, oceanfree.net.
Facilities
Although Ireland has no nuclear power plants, an Act of the Oireachtas in 1971 created the Nuclear Energy Board. Later there was a proposal to build a nuclear power plant at Carnsore Point, and preparatory work was carried out, but this never resulted in an operational plant, owing to widespread public opposition. Most of the ESB's generation capacity relies on peat, coal, oil, and wind generation. Moneypoint and Poolbeg are the two most significant fossil fuel power stations — their combined capacity accounts for over a third of total capacity. Much of the peat is supplied by Bord na Móna while Bord Gáis supplies gas via its network.
The Ardnacrusha hydro-electric scheme and Turlough Hill pumped storage scheme are the most significant renewable energy plants. There are additional hydro-electric schemes on the rivers Clady, Erne, Lee and Liffey. The company also operates a few small wind farms throughout the country through its subsidiary [Hibernian Wind Energy].
Capacity of Major ESB Plants
| Generation Capacity [link] | Plant | Location | Fuel | Year First Unit Commissioned |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,020 MW | Poolbeg | County Dublin | Oil and Gas | 1971 |
| 915 MW | Moneypoint | County Clare | Coal | 1985 |
| 620 MW | Tarbert | County Kerry | Oil | 1969 |
| 525 MW | Aghada | County Cork | Gas | 1981 |
| 292 MW | Turlough Hill | County Wicklow | Pumped Storage | 1968 |
| 266 MW | North Wall | County Dublin | Oil and Gas | 1947 |
| 240 MW | Great Island | County Wexford | Oil | 1967 |
| 150 MW | West Offaly Power | County Offaly | Peat | 2005 |
| 115 MW | Marina | County Cork | Gas | 1953 |
| 100 MW | Lough Ree Power | County Longford | Peat | 2004 |
| 86 MW | Ardnacrusha | County Clare | Hydro | 1927 |
Standards
The Shannon Scheme was the start of the ESB's reliance on German electro-technology, especially for plant, in particular Siemens and the associated 220 volt (now 230 volt) supply. Domestic equipment mostly followed the UK British Standards for the most part with very few exceptions, perhaps the only significant anomaly being that Irish bathrooms generally do not have pull cord-operated lights but rather a traditional wall mounted light switch outside. A small number of old installations used the German "side-earth" type sockets but the majority of buildings use British style plugs and sockets. German/Swiss style fuseboxes were almost universally used in preference to UK-style consumer units containing rewirable or cartridge "wylex" fuses although these are now being superseeded by circuit breakers in newer buildings. The main fuse in Irish domestic supplies is usually only 63 or even 35 amperes compared to the 80 or 100 amp standard in the UK which sometimes causes difficulties for households using multiple electric showers.Workers
The ESB is one of the largest companies in Ireland and employs over 8,500 people, it is 5% owned by its workers - this ownership is known as ESB ESOP (Employee Stock Ownership Plan) Trustee Limited. The company is heavily unionised with the Technical, Engineering and Electrical Union (TEEU) being one of the largest unions in the company. The last major strike was in 1991, though strike action has been threatened as recently as February 2005 and often at times of industrial dispute. National surveys show, in line with other similar semi-state sector workers, that wages are above the national average - one recent survey [link] showed that the average salary costs are twice the national average. It should however be remembered that workers of the company may be "on call" after hours, weekends and at holidays because of the unpredictability of emergencies.See also
- Economy of the Republic of Ireland
- History of Ireland
- List of Irish companies
- Community Games
- State-owned enterprise
- Public ownership
- rolling blackout The "Zone rota" system used during labour strikes
References
- R. O'Connor, J.A. Crutchfield, B.J. Whelan. Socio-Economic Impact of the Construction of the Esb Power-Station at Moneypoint, Co. Clare (Economic and Social Research Institute, 1981) ISBN 0707000416
- Tim Hastings. Semi-States in Crisis: The Challenge for Industrial Relations in the ESB and Other Major Semi-State Companies (Oak Tree Press, 1994) ISBN 187285379X
Online
- [Official website - Electricity Supply Board]
- [ESB International]
- [ESB Independent Energy]
- [Eirgrid]
- [History of Ardnacrusha]
| Electricity generation in Ireland |
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Companies / organisations Airtricity | Dublin Bay Power | Electricity Supply Board | Huntstown Power | Imera Power | Northern Ireland Electricity | Nuclear Energy Board | Premier Power (NI) | |
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Electricity generating stations Aghada | Ardnacrusha | Ballylumford (NI) | Carnsore Point | Lanesboro | Moneypoint | Poulaphouca | Ringsend | Shannonbridge | Tarbert | Turlough Hill | |
| (NI) indicates Northern Ireland |
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