What happens when the wind doesn't blow? Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

In the realm of science, few politicians are more powerful than Baroness Brown. As the chair of the House of Lords Science and Technology Committee, her remit is to consider the boundaries of Britainās future: from AI to medicine, from biotechnology to climate change.
Of all these subjects, it is the latter that appears to interest Brown most. Indeed, not only does her work concern crafting Britainās new energy strategy ā she also stands to benefit from it.
There is no suggestion that Brown, a cross-bench peer known as Julia King before she was ennobled in 2015, has done anything unlawful, and in an email to UnHerdĀ she stressed that her āintegrity is criticalā. Nevertheless, some of the entities now paying her may well come to benefit from the policies she has championed ā including a decision by the new Labour government to invest at least Ā£500 million in an unproven technology designed to store electricity.
In the middle of March, Brownās committee published a report onĀ ālong-duration energy storageā. It took as read what some energy experts consider to be a controversial claim: that power generated by renewables such as wind farms and solar panels is cheaper than that from natural gas. The reportās main focus, however, was a large, unavoidable problem: what happens when thereās high demand for electricity, but the sun doesnāt shine and the wind doesnāt blow?
The solution it offered was certainly a novel one: a process known as āgreen hydrogenā. This would use electricity to separate water into oxygen and hydrogen, which would then be stored underground in salt caverns or disused natural gas reservoirs; when demand increased, it could then be burnt in adapted power plants to generate more electricity.
Such a proposal may sound like futuristic genius, but it wasnāt without its critics. In his evidence to the committee, Michael Liebreich, one of Britainās foremost experts on green energy finance and technology, pointed out that green hydrogen is much more expensive to handle than that made by other means, such as āblue hydrogenā, which uses natural gas. In fact, turning āoverhypedā green hydrogen into electricity effectively triples the original energyās cost, because the process of doing so needs so much power. Undaunted, the committee said the government must āengage and communicateā with the public to cure āmisperceptionsā, in order to āensure support for vital hydrogen and electricity infrastructureā.
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