....To date this has been supplied by the traditional power stations sparking-up during tea breaks at half time during the World Cup
Unfortunately, it's just not that simple. A gas fired generating plant cannot be "sparked Up" that quickly. ( if that's what you meant )
At times of peak demand, or when the wind stops blowing in the case of Wind Turbines, there has to be a backup. That backup will be a gas fired powerstation, termed a closed cycle gas turbine (CCGT). Unfortunately, to be able to take over, it needs to be already up and running.
You can’t wait hours for it to be ready. It needs to be instantly available. Therefore it must be running all of the time. This is termed “spinning reserve”, meaning that it is consuming gas but not producing electricity. It is however generating carbon dioxide, that obnoxious gas that causes everything to grow.
The Climate Change act calls for 33GW of renewable energy, mostly wind, and according to the experts, in this instance, The National Grid, requires 26GW of CCGT backup. Consequently we have 59 GW of plant to produce 33GW of electricity. That's 26GW of "spinning reserve" to plug the gaps in wind turbine output. Nuclear stations are far better suited to providing spinning reserve requirements.
I may have misread your posting, we could be singing from the same song sheet.
