Emergency power generators arrive in Sark ahead of switch-off

Emergency power generators arrive in Sark ahead of switch-off

A large generator which will be used to power a ‘central hub’ and ‘command centre’ arrived in the island on Tuesday – ten days ahead of the planned power-outage deadline.

Smaller devices – to be used to generate electricity in communal cooking centres – are due to be shipped to Sark in the next few
days.

Sark Electricity Ltd, meanwhile, has issued a strongly-worded statement on its website accusing the island’s government of using ‘islanders as pawns in their power game’.

The dispute started earlier this year when Sark’s price controller ordered the energy firm to cut its price per kWh from 66p to 52p from August.

SEL claims it has since lost £20,000 per month and can no longer afford to operate. It plans to cut its general supply on 30 November, and in a statement last week warned that residents would have no option but to leave the island.

Sark’s government, called Chief Pleas, has since rolled out contingency plans in an attempt to maintain power for the 500 residents.

Issuing an update, politician William Raymond, who last week said islanders had been forced to adopt a ‘war-time mentality’, told the JEP: ‘The big generator has already arrived and this will be used to power the central hub, which will include the Island Hall, the medical centre and a large shed where there will be freezers. It will also power the command
centre.

‘Subsidiary generators will also be arriving and these will power other outlets where people can congregate and cook meals. In addition to this, people are also bringing in their own small generators for their homes.’

Asked if people still feared having to leave the island, Mr Raymond replied: ‘Our plan is really well advanced now – people have come together and volunteered to help. We have had to plan for the worst while hoping for the best. If people have to leave it will be out of choice, rather than necessity.’

He added: ‘I have been derided in the press for saying it is a war-time mentality but these people really don’t understand.’

In a statement posted on the firm’s website, SEL’s managing director, David Gordon-Brown, said that Chief Pleas had ‘tried hard to put us in a position where we can no longer supply electricity’.

‘I believe Chief Pleas has now discovered it is unlikely to be given emergency powers [to ensure the power station continues to operate] and is talking about “wartime spirit” and is preparing to use the livelihoods of the islanders as pawns in their power game,’ he claimed.

Mr Gordon-Brown said he still hoped to mount a legal challenge to the price control order, but, with limited finances, may have
to represent himself in court.

‘They say “the man who is his own lawyer has a fool for a client”. But even a fool should be able to prove that a price is unfair when it causes us to lose £20,000 a month,’ he said.

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