Scottish Daily Mail

Will Boris fire up Britain’s new generation of nuclear plants?

- By Maggie Pagano

Soaring gas prices, worldwide energy shortages, fears for energy security and a drive for net zero carbon by 2050 have put nuclear power back on the map after a decade in the cold.

in the space of just a couple of weeks, the threat of rocketing gas bills and a winter of discontent with electricit­y cuts have forced the government to completely rewrite its energy policy.

Ministers and Treasury officials who for years ignored the UK’s longterm energy needs – and shied away from the costs involved – are finally facing up to the reality that the country’s electricit­y sources are running low. Tim Stone, chairman of the nuclear industry associatio­n, told the Daily Mail: ‘The light bulb is on. The Prime Minister gets it and senses the moment. if Boris Johnson is serious, he will now switch the levers to allow a new fleet of nuclear power plants to be built.’

The PM seems to grasp the enormity of the challenge.

in several interviews in recent days, he has claimed that all of Britain’s electricit­y will come from renewable, clean sources by 2035.

But he also admitted that to achieve this: ‘We’ve got to get back into nuclear, we’ve got to increase our clean energy generation.’

He also mentioned nuclear in his conference speech. is this more hot air from the Prime Minister? or is the light bulb switched on?

industry sources suggest Johnson is serious, that he knows his net zero targets cannot be met without bankruptin­g the country unless nuclear is a significan­t part of the energy mix.

The UK’s nuclear fleet, which provides about 17pc of our electricit­y needs, is being retired.

Seven out of the eight existing power stations – all except Sizewell B – are due to be closed between now and 2030.

EDF’s Hinkley Point project is the only new reactor due to come on stream in 2026 with the second in 2027. in its last energy policy, published in 2017, the Scottish government opposed new nuclear power stations.

WE Will know how serious the government is on october 27. The acid test will come when Chancellor rishi Sunak presents his Comprehens­ive Spending review alongside the autumn Budget and whether he includes pre-developmen­t funding to help get two big nuclear plants at Wylfa on anglesey and Sizewell C in Suffolk off the ground.

if Sunak – who is said to be a nuclear convert – confirms the Treasury will fork out £30m of funding to the Bechtel and Westinghou­se consortium hoping to build a plant at Wylfa, then all bets are on.

once agreed, the US companies will move swiftly to the next critical Feed in Design stage, which itself takes another two years of the 12-year project.

While the £30m may sound tiny compared to the £15bn cost of Wylfa, the granting of funds would be symbolic, showing the government’s commitment and trust in the new project. and if it is not granted? Expect Bechtel and Westinghou­se to walk.

Barbara rusinko, president of Bechtel nuclear, Security and Environmen­tal, is optimistic that ministers will give the goahead as the Wylfa site has all the prerequisi­tes for such a massive investment.

The island of anglesey has the right geology, access to cooling water and, crucially, broad community support.

Speaking via Zoom from Washington, rusinko, says: ‘Wylfa is a fantastic site. it is technicall­y shovel-ready. i am hopeful the government will support our project because it will help the UK start rebuilding its nuclear energy baseload.’

She adds the Bechtel-Westinghou­se consortium has other advantages, mainly that the plant can be built quicker than most because approval for the aP1000 reactor has already been cleared by the UK’s regulatory regime, the gDa. Buying the site from Hitachi, which pulled out of its Horizon project because it failed to reach an agreement with the government over funding, should also be easy.

When it comes to technologi­cal know-how, Bechtel and Westinghou­se have a track record in building aP1000 reactors – the ones at Wylfa would be the same modular design as the six units recently completed elsewhere in the world, the last two at Plant Vogtle in georgia in the US.

This knowledge, she added, would be useful as key members of the team who worked on earlier reactors would be able to transfer to Wylfa. ‘Up to 10,000 jobs will be created across the country. We will also be starting an extensive apprentice programme and bring in students from local universiti­es to work on the project,’ she says.

To date, the Welsh government, the isle of anglesey County Council and cross-party MPs have supported Bechtel’s plans, particular­ly as so many jobs have been lost after the Magnox plant closed down.

alongside Bechtel’s big reactor, rolls-royce is also looking

to build SMrs – small modular reactors – on the site, which experts say is big enough to take two to four large-scale reactors as well as multiple SMrs. one of the advantages of nuclear is that it is so ‘energy dense’ – the UK’s entire nuclear fleet takes up only 0.8 of a square mile.

RUSinKo, an engineer who has worked in the nuclear industry for 37 years, hopes to head off any safety concerns held by lobby groups, pointing out that the UK’s regulatory standards are among the toughest in the world and advances in technology mean that nuclear plants have never been safer.

Britain, she says, has the oncein-a-lifetime chance to be a world leader in setting the pace for a cleaner environmen­t with its bold carbon targets.

ivan Baldwin, Bechtel’s UK nuclear business developmen­t director, agrees, adding that if the UK is not at the forefront of nuclear technology, it will always fall short, domestical­ly and globally.

‘This is an opportunit­y for the UK to lead the way in solving the clean energy problem and in levelling-up. The French put their shoulder to the wheel in the 1970s and now have 75pc of energy from nuclear and one of the cleanest grids anywhere in the world,’ he says. ‘Britain – one of the early pioneers of nuclear power – has the chance now to be an exporter of technology.’

if Johnson and Sunak are to lead the way, they must move fast, grant some seed-corn funding and push through legislatio­n for the raB model of funding.

Even if Hinkley proceeds as planned, nuclear capacity will fall by half to 4.4gW by 2030 if no more reactors are built. To put that into context, 1 gW of electricit­y powers about 2m homes. getting Wylfa – and other plants – off the ground would ensure energy security for decades. These reactors last for at least 60 years, longer than other clean energy sources. as Stone says: ‘if the PM approaches this properly he could leave a legacy every bit as great as the creation of the welfare state in 1948.’

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