CHAPTER 2
SUPPLY AUTHORITY ORGANISATION (ENGLAND, WALES AND SCOTLAND)
2.1 BRIEF HISTORY
Before the 1926
Electricity (Supply) Act the country was served by no less than 623 private
electricity undertakings operating 479 separate generating stations, each
providing a local supply at whatever voltage they chose. Some supplies were d.c.; others were a.c.,
and the frequencies varied between 25Hz and 100Hz.
Clearly this could not
continue if the industry was to prosper on a national level. The 1926 Act created the ‘Central Electricity
Board’ (CEB). This body controlled the
siting and construction of power stations but did not actually own or operate
them; it also established the National Grid.
It did however operate and control the grid system, buying power from
the power stations and selling it to the distributing authorities, which
continued as private companies or municipal authorities.
2.2 GENERATION
In 1947 the Central
Electricity Generating Board (CEGB) was set up.
It took over all generation and thereafter owned and operated all power
stations in addition to operating the national grid system. The change of name
reflected this new responsibility. The
1947 Act also set up a number of Area Electricity Boards to take over all
distribution in England and Wales and also to take over all tariff charges from
the existing private companies.
England and Wales were
divided by the CEGB, for administrative purposes, into five regions, each with
one or more Regional Control Centres - see Figure 2.1. There is also a National Control Centre in
London which co-ordinates the regions.
2.3 DISTRIBUTION
The CEGB does not in general supply individual consumers direct (except
by special arrangement) but under the 1947 Act sells its power in bulk to
twelve Area Electricity Boards, whose names indicate the areas served and whose
boundaries are shown in Figure 2.2. They are:
·
London Electricity Board
·
South Eastern Electricity Board
·
Southern Electricity Board
·
South Western Electricity Board
·
South Wales Electricity Board
·
Merseyside and North Wales Electricity Board
·
Midlands Electricity Board
·
North Western Electricity Board
·
North Eastern Electricity Board
·
Yorkshire Electricity Board
·
East Midlands Electricity Board
·
Eastern Electricity Board
FIGURE
2.1
CENTRAL ELECTRICITY GENERATING
BOARD AND SCOTTISH BOARD REGIONS
The Area Boards buy
their energy in bulk, usually at very high voltage, from the CEGB under a bulk
supply tariff. This bulk power, on
receipt by the Area Boards, is transformed and distributed to substations at
lower voltages and thence to consumers in their areas. The transporting of energy from the CEGB
power stations to the grid transformers at the ‘bulk supply points’ which
supply each Area Board is known as ‘transmission’, and from that point on it is
referred to as ‘distribution’. Discussion of the transmission and distribution
voltages will be found in Chapter 3.
In Scotland the
arrangement is different. There are two
authorities: the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board (NOSHEB) and the South
of Scotland Electricity Board (SSEB); both are shown in Figure 2.1. These two authorities are each responsible
for distribution as well as for generation and transmission in their
areas. They have direct contact with
their consumers, whom they charge direct
All onshore
establishments buy their energy from the appropriate Area Electricity Board or,
in the case of their Scottish installations, direct from the NOSHEB or SSEB.
FIGURE
2.2
AREA ELECTRICITY BOARD TERRITORIES
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