Kitty
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
It will be priority but they often take days to restore power, especially to remote areas, & that's under normal circumstances. Also if it got very bad would there be enough staff to man power stations etc? - that last be may be a remarkably dumb question, but I am ignorant of the power system tbh.
The effect of a power cut is often large – and can be extremely large, as we saw last year after the lightning strike – but the cause is usually damage to a comparatively small area of infrastructure. This means the number of people required to repair it isn't so enormous that we're likely to run out of workers. The weather is notoriously difficult to forecast long-term, so I guess the best anyone can say is that it's one of the less likely outcomes!
What I cannot do with the kit I have is heat things, or not for long anyway, heating things needs a lot of power, or 30,000 tealights.
Three or four inside a plant-pot stove will boil a pan or kettle. Several plant-pot heaters containing tea lights or candles will warm a room up a bit; thick-walled terracotta pots trap and retain heat for quite a while. My granddad's large workshop was heated by one small paraffin heater surrounded by an open-topped lattice of housebricks, which worked on the same principle. The amount of convected heat was really surprising.