This is a long  and detailed posting,  and I suggest you  only  read it all if you are  interested in why the National  grid and generators will not  have take on the whole equivalent load when cars and gas boilers are switched to electricity. 
It's sensible to wonder how the national grid will work when all the low carbon initiatives  move away  from fossil fuels to electricity. WIll we end up having  more outages  or is the National Grid resilient enough to cope or does it  need to change?
Even without the carbon zero initiatives,  our national consumption of electricity has always increased over time. It's hardly surprising because amongst  other factors our population is increasing,  and we are all using  more electrical products,  so the grid has always needed to expand its capacity. At least five years ago the management team of the grid made the statement that the grid will cope with the extra demand caused by EV take up. and so far it has proven to be correct.
Like most new technologies, the take up of EV's was not instantaneous,  so there has been time for the grid to adjust and expand its infrastructure to meet the demand,  and the same will be true for heat pump take up which  was mentioned in #52.
The change over to heat pumps won't be instantaneous ether,  it  will be a gradual transition,  so the grid will not find it has to power millions of new heat pumps suddenly overnight,  there will be time for the grid (and the generators) to be adapted to cover the additional demand.
Unless you have already looked into the subject,  you may not  appreciate the scale of the challenge. You  may think the grid needs to add as much extra capacity as the fuel energy previously used by  ICE and gas boilers, but that is not the case:- It has been definitively proven that  EV's and heat pumps are significantly more energy  efficient than their predecessor technologies.
To  show the difference it's helpful to use a common unit such as the kWh. Diesel has between 9.9 and 10.7 kWh, Petrol has between 9.5 and 9.7kWh per litre,  so it's reasonable to
, Its convenient that commercial grades of petrol and diesel both have approximately  10kWh of energy in each litre,  and most  domestic boilers are also rated in kW's and of course we buy  our electricity by the kW hour.
For example:-
It is easier to compare the difference inefficiency of a vehicle if  the distance and fuel consumed is presented in the same units for this reason I will use miles per kiloWatt hours (kWh.) As the distance is already expressed in  Miles,  we only  need to look at  how to  convert  litres of fuel to its equivalent in kWh
There is plenty of good evidence that  shows the available power from a litre of petrol or diesel has a direct  equivalence in kiloWatt hours (kWh). Diesel has between 9.9 and 10.7 kWh, Petrol has between 9.5 and 9.7kWh so for a quick and simplified review of relative efficiencies I will assume both  petrol and diesel produce 10kWh of power per litre,  and that  is actually being slightly kind to the power density of petrol!
Thus the fuel efficiency in terms of miles per kWh is calculated miles travelled divided by the litres of fuel used and then  all  divided by 10
m/kWh = (miles/litres) / 10
Here is a table of some comparisons
25mpg = 0.55m/kWh
30mpg = 0.66m/kWh
35mpg = 0.77m/kWh
40mpg = 0.88m/kWh
45mpg = 0.99m/kWh
You  have to be doing  better than 45mpg to get to at least 1mile per kWh! This is all due to the inherent inevitable inefficiency of ICE engines.
By comparison,  most EV's are proven to do 2 or more miles to the kWh,  with many now achieving between 3.5 and 5 miles /kWh which  is a huge improvement.  Even if we take a median value  of say  just 3kWh . what  it  means is the grid will only  need to supply 1/3 of the energy to recharge the vehicle compared to the  amount  of fossil fuel the driver would have needed for their ICE vehicle.
The comparison is even greater when we look at home heating and hot  water .
Even using  modern condensing  gas boilers,  In  simple terms the process is to factor the area of the radiators on the heating  circuit  and add the peak instantaneous hot  water  production to estimate the size of boiler needed. The instant hot water is the biggest factor which is why typical domestic boilers are usually between 25 and 50kW heat input.  This is because  in  a combi the water is heated on demand and it  needs a high heat input  rate to produce a decent  flow of hot  water for both the taps and the radiators. However if you actually  record how much gas is consumed over a day, it's actually far less than  the burner's full bore capacity. Depending  on the  model of boiler you  have the burner will either  be turned off or fully  on (Equivalent  to power reduction  by pulse width  modulation) or the size of the flame will be modulated to match the heat  input to the demand the property want's.
Ultimately the gas consumed over a day is generally  a small faction compared to the boiler running  at full power over the same period.  I  make this point  becasue when switching  to  Heat  Pump,  not  only  is the heat source very  different  but also the way the system can releases the heat into the property.
Where as a condensing  boiler may  produce hot  water at  70C, a heat  pump  system may only  reach 60C,  so to  match the heat in put into a property it  will need to run for longer than a condensing  boiler.  It  may  also take longer to raise the temperature of the property and in  some cases radiators may  need to  be changed to  increase their surface area so lower temperature water  can transfer enough  heat into the property.  Some heat  pump users have changed the way they  use their heating  system,  and now keep it  turned on at the same room  temperature 24/7.
But the key difference between a heat pump  and a combustion  boiler is the heat  pump does not use energy  to make heat, it uses energy to  move heat, usually from outside to inside for heating and some can work in reverse and actually reduce the internal temperature when needed in hot  weather.  A properly specified and installed unit can appear to produce more heat inside a property than the energy  it  consumes. In  fact to  show this "apparent" heat  gain,  Heat  pump's are usually given a Coefficient  of Performance figure (CoP) and for normal  UK domestic installations they should be a minimum of 3 for heating  but  can drop to  just  2 when hot  water  is also produced.  But  in ideal  situations the CoP of a well installed system  might  reach 5!  This means for every  Watt of energy  used to run the heat  pump it might  actually  move 5W of heat into or out  of a property
In the  context  of the additional load on the Grid,  in practice a heat  pump should need less electricity than 1/3rd of the heating  fuel needed by a gas boiler to do the same amount  of heating.  There is a problem and that  I have mentioned above it  may  need a change to the way you schedule your heating to  achieve heat  parity
To summarise  compared to the fossil fuel energy needed for cars and domestic heating,  the switch to electric will add some demand to the  national  grid,  but  due to the inherent  efficiencies of EV's and Heat  pumps the grid will not  have to  shoulder the same energy demand the previous technologies needed.
The grid is and will continue to  change to  accommodate these extra loads, but the changes are not  as drastic as simply matching  previous energy uses.