People are going to be angry about pylons.
Tom Scott
0:00 The technical term for these things is 'transmission towers'.
0:03 But here in Britain, we call them pylons.
0:05 And we've got tens of thousands of them across the country.
0:08 The first National Grid was built in the interwar years,
0:12 and it was the largest peacetime construction project Britain had ever seen.
0:16 A single power network across the country.
0:18 Pylons became part of the landscape of Britain,
0:21 just as they had around the world,
0:23 despite the objections of many landowners, traditionalists, and poets.
0:27 These exist because overhead lines are
0:29 a fraction of the price of underground cables,
0:31 and they're much, much easier and faster to maintain.
0:34 If there's a fault, you don't need
0:35 to bring in heavy equipment and dig anything up.
0:37 Instead, you dispatch a team to climb.
0:40 And that team will have learned the job here,
0:42 at the National Grid Training Centre near Eakring in the East Midlands.
0:46 And today, one of those teams is going to take me up on the wires.
0:50 So here at the Training Centre, we have over 300 graduates and apprentices
0:54 training in overhead lines and substation technologies.
0:58 The team that have trained here will undertake a range of roles.
1:01 They might be overhead line operators,
1:03 so they'll be climbing towers, responding to faults.
1:06 They also conduct visual inspections.
1:08 We have a team of drone and helicopter pilots that keep the network operating.
1:13 And then we have substation teams as well.
1:15 So they would look at cleaning
1:17 and replacing different equipment within our substations.
1:20 I haven't looked at any point out or down to see how high I am.
1:24 I'm just kind of going, there's the next bolt, there's the next bolt.
1:28 And I'm aware that the professionals ...are doing this much faster than me.
1:34 And I'm fine with that.
1:36 We have a team of 2,400 people that monitor and operate,
1:41 maintain the network around the clock, 24/7.
1:44 This might be in response to weather or faults on the network.
1:47 And they keep the energy flowing.
1:49 Presumably, you're up here in all weathers.
1:51 You'll have dealt with rain and snow.
1:53 In an emergency, they definitely work in bad weather.
1:56 Can you just take one more step up?
1:57 Yep.
1:58 We'll attach you onto the actual tower.
2:02 Give you a bit more space.
2:03 Thank you.
2:05 Oh, it's not a bad view either, is it?
2:07 Yeah, it's not bad around here.
2:08 So what, this is first arm.
2:10 Yep, bottom phase, middle phase, top phase.
2:12 Huh, it's different phase of power on each arm?
2:15 Yep.
2:15 Right!
2:16 That makes sense.
2:17 Because otherwise the three would kind of interact with each other on the wires.
2:20 So we have 22,000 pylons.
2:22 Each pylon weighs approximately 30 tons.
2:24 4,500 miles of overhead line, and 900 miles of underground cable.
2:29 Because we're at our training school,
2:32 we've got all different combinations of wires in different formations.
2:36 We've got our new towers there.
2:37 Yeah, the T-pylons.
2:39 T-pylons, yep.
2:39 Which aren't as high.
2:40 No, they're a bit lower.
2:42 I'll keep climbing.
2:45 Oh, it's getting real windy now!
2:47 You're doing good, Tom.
2:48 If you're wondering...
2:50 this is the point where the nerves kicked in.
2:52 I don't know if that's coming across on microphone and camera, but...
2:56 the wind is whistling through the metal and through the wires.
3:02 Okay.
3:02 Well done, Tom.
3:04 (laughs) Thank you.
3:05 There's plenty of people who don't get up here.
3:07 Mind the head.
3:13 Oh, how's that?
3:14 (laughs) We own and operate the network in England and Wales.
3:21 We also operate parts of Scotland.
3:24 This training centre was built in the heart of the country
3:27 because a lot of the power stations were around here,
3:28 in the Midlands and Yorkshire.
3:30 Because a lot of the coal that fuelled
3:32 those power stations was being dug up around here.
3:35 Not all of it– there was plenty in Scotland and Tyneside and South Wales too.
3:39 And a cluster of power stations down on the Thames.
3:42 But if you were going to pick a spot in the centre
3:45 of the power grid to have the best access of every pylon ...you'd pick here.
3:50 But things are changing, and have been changing, for decades.
3:53 The only coal-fired station left in Britain is about
3:57 an hour south on the other side of Nottingham,
3:59 and that'll close down within a year.
4:01 The main replacement right now is gas,
4:03 and those stations tend to be on the coast,
4:06 where enormous tankers of liquid natural gas can dock.
4:10 The nuclear plants are by the coast too, for easy access to cooling water.
4:14 And then there's the wind.
4:16 Britain is a windswept island!
4:18 And we already get a quarter of all our power from the wind,
4:21 with half of that from colossal fields of turbines offshore.
4:25 And there are more, and more, and more of those being built.
4:29 Britain's entire power grid has been steadily turning inside out for years.
4:34 As anyone who lives in a former coal
4:36 mining community like this knows all too well,
4:38 power generation just isn't happening here anymore.
4:41 Electricity isn't being pushed out from the centre.
4:44 Instead, it's being brought in from the coast.
4:49 Alright, next stop...
4:51 Down on the wires.
4:53 I've got to be honest with you, that ladder is swaying a lot more than I'd like.
4:57 Aye, I'm going to go down first, and I'll get it a lot more stable for you.
5:01 (laughs) Thank you!
5:02 National Grid's role is to move energy around the country.
5:05 We don't generate energy.
5:07 We just connect it to our network.
5:09 It's weird to see all this infrastructure and not hear the bu— I mean,
5:11 I guess if you hear the buzzing and you're on here, you're really in trouble.
5:15 In total today, we have 65 gigawatts of generation connected to the network.
5:18 That's a whole range of sources.
5:20 So we have about 90 sources of generation.
5:23 And the government has a target to connect
5:24 an additional 50 gigawatts of offshore wind by 2030.
5:28 Oh!
5:28 Step down.
5:29 Okay.
5:30 Like it's any normal ladder.
5:31 A lot of metres above the ground.
5:33 That's fine.
5:34 The ladder is angled the wrong way.
5:37 My arms are further back than my legs.
5:39 In order to connect the 50 gigawatts
5:41 of offshore wind that we're seeing out at sea,
5:43 we need to create a series of subsea cables,
5:46 new overhead lines, in order to move that energy across the network.
5:51 As it stands, we know that we need to construct five times as much
5:55 infrastructure in the next seven years as we have in the last 30.
5:59 So if you just stop there for two seconds...
6:01 Yep.
6:02 You can stand on this.
6:04 And it's pretty secure.
6:05 That was fun, okay.
6:07 (clattering) (groans) Okay, one foot on each wire.
6:13 Wherever you feel comfortable, you're perfectly fine.
6:15 Alright.
6:19 Wow!
6:20 It's all pretty sturdy stuff.
6:22 You didn't have to prove that by bouncing though!
6:24 (both laughing) It's impossible to disentangle politics from the power grid.
6:30 When the National Grid was first built,
6:32 the government had to ignore so many complaints to push it through.
6:35 But the benefits were obvious.
6:37 And even the folks who rallied against pylons would have to admit
6:40 that the result was probably worth it compared to no electricity.
6:44 But now, and over the next few years,
6:47 there are going to be political fights and protests, large and small.
6:50 Because for the first time in nearly a century,
6:53 there are some big and tough decisions to be made about pylons.
6:59 [Caption+ by JS* caption.plus| @caption_plus]