Caernarfon Herald

North Wales is in ‘pole position’ to become green hub

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NORTH Wales is in pole position to become the hub of the UK’s green energy future, according to the leading scientist who heads Bangor University’s Nuclear Futures Institute.

At stake is £525 million for a new generation of small nuclear reactors (SMRs) which can be used to produce medical isotopes as well as power with more millions on offer for a shopping list of wind, tidal, solar and hydrogen power.

Prof Bill Lee says the region has everything in place to become the beating heart of the country’s energy generation with the Wylfa Newydd project live again with interest from several parties including US power giants Westinghou­se.

Wylfa and Trawsfynyd­d have nuclear licences, Bangor University has major new investment in specialist nuclear jobs and Anglesey’s energy island status is backed up by advanced engineerin­g capacity in North East Wales with the potential for the creation of thousands of highly-paid jobs.

Professor Lee said: “The fact is that we have two nuclear site licences here and neither of them is currently being used.

“The sites here in North Wales are better than those elsewhere – Wylfa is huge and it has good sea access for bringing in heavy pieces of kit and the potential to do different things there is greater than anywhere else.

“Here in North Wales we also have a community that is supportive of the nuclear industry

“The UK Government has talked about the levelling-up agenda so they should be seen to be supporting this region with projects that can generate high-quality, well-paid jobs.”

“The US consortium could step in at Wylfa, where HitachiGE stepped out, with a project to build a couple of big reactors there and although that could take a couple of years to come through, there are other opportunit­ies that can happen as well.

“Next door to Wylfa, the Wylfa Newydd site has huge potential with nearly 300 hectares of room for a new generation of Small Modular Reactors such as those planned by the UKSMR consortium led by Rolls-Royce although there is also interest from other major SMR players, such as AngloDutch U Battery and NuScale Power from the USA.

“Trawsfynyd­d is an option as a site for an SMR but it also has the potential to host a reactor for the production of medical isotopes for nuclear medicine for the diagnosis and treatment of cancers. This Medical Radioisoto­pe and Research Reactor (MRRR) along with an adjacent processing facility could supply radio-pharmacies in the UK and abroad.

“Hosting an MRRR, processing facility and training centre on the same site would enable developmen­t of new applicatio­ns in medicine and elsewhere for radio-isotopes and improve training and the UK’s capability in this area.

“At the moment these isotopes are mostly imported from Europe and South Africa and hosting a facility at Trawsfynyd­d would fit with Bangor University’s aim to appoint a lecturer in Nuclear Medicine and with the work it is planning with other universiti­es in Wales.”

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