
GLEG UK Energy Market Update 20-04-26…
April 20, 2026
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April 23, 2026The UK’s rapid expansion of renewable energy is creating a new reality: at certain times, generation now exceeds demand. While this is a major milestone in the energy transition, it also brings a practical challenge – how to make best use of surplus clean power rather than wasting it.
Matching demand with renewable supply
The focus is shifting from simply increasing renewable generation to using energy more flexibly. Households, and increasingly businesses, are being encouraged to shift high-energy activity, such as EV charging and appliance use, into periods of strong wind and solar output.
Energy suppliers are supporting this with lower, and in some cases free, electricity during times of excess generation. This builds on existing off-peak pricing schemes but represents a more active approach to balancing the system in real time.
The scale of change is already clear. The UK has recently recorded new highs for both wind and solar output, while gas-fired generation has fallen to multi-year lows. Stronger interconnection with Europe is also helping to improve flexibility across the system.
Grid limits and the need for flexibility
Despite progress, grid constraints remain a key challenge. When supply exceeds demand, renewable generation can be scaled back, reducing efficiency and increasing system costs. Solving this will require continued investment in grid infrastructure, storage, and demand-side flexibility.
At the same time, rising energy costs are driving behavioural change. Investment in solar, EVs and heat pumps continues to grow as businesses and households look to reduce exposure to volatile global energy markets, particularly ahead of expected price increases this summer.
As the UK continues to scale renewable generation, the challenge is no longer just production, it is optimisation. How effectively the system uses available energy will define the next phase of the transition.
At GLEG, we see this as a structural shift in how energy markets operate. Businesses that adapt early will be best placed to reduce costs, improve resilience, and take advantage of a more dynamic energy system.
For more information or to discuss how this may impact your business, you can contact GLEG at hello@gleg.co.uk.

