Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Bid to be submitted for West nuclear fusion plant

- ANDREW ARTHUR andrew.arthur@reachplc.com

THE West of England could become the home of the world’s first nuclear fusion power plant, with the potential to create thousands of jobs in efforts to meet the UK’s net-zero carbon emissions targets.

A bid under the banner of the Western Gateway is being readied to bring the Government’s Spherical Tokamak for Energy Production project to two, near-adjacent, former nuclear power station sites at Oldbury and Berkeley in Gloucester­shire.

A partnershi­p of local authoritie­s, developmen­t bodies, landowners and the training and education sector across England and Wales has confirmed the bid, which will be submitted for considerat­ion by the UK Atomic Energy Authority by March 31.

Some £220 million of Government money is going into finding an appropriat­e site for the prototype fusion plant, which potentiall­y could be operationa­l by 2040.

The Western Gateway, which was launched by ministers in November 2019, is a proposed economic partnershi­p between the West of England and South Wales.

The cross-border initiative aims to boost local economies by encouragin­g collaborat­ion between authoritie­s on either side of the Bristol Channel.

Two sites in Nottingham­shire are among the other locations across the country being considered for the fusion plant.

The Western Gateway bid has the backing of South Gloucester­shire Council, Gloucester­shire County Council, Stroud District Council, Nuclear South West, Business West, West of England Combined Authority, West of England LEP, GFirst LEP, South Gloucester­shire and Stroud College and Bristol University’s South West Nuclear Hub.

Andy Bates, who is co-ordinating the project for Bristol-based chamber of commerce Business West, said: “This will be a multibilli­onpound investment creating thousands of jobs both in the plant and related services and industries.

“It is exactly the sort of project we need to help tackle challenges and inequaliti­es across the region that have broadened and deepened as a result of the tough economic climate.

“We have abundant land already identified in national and local policy as suitable for power generation developmen­t.

“This is surrounded by a hotbed of expertise in high technology digital, materials and manufactur­ing industries and close to the Culham Centre for Fusion Energy in Oxfordshir­e.

“The region has always been at the forefront of innovation in power generation, and we have modern constructi­on know-how, a skilled workforce and first-class education and training institutes. There is also a groundswel­l of political and community support. It is a perfect fit.”

If the Gloucester­shire sites are successful­ly nominated there could be a further two years of assessment­s before the UKAEA will make a recommenda­tion to the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy.

The successful site will be announced around the end of 2022.

Within 12 months of selecting a site, UKAEA will establish a liaison office within the community, including a stakeholde­r and community forum, to meet at least quarterly.

UKAEA considers fusion energy to have a number of benefits:

It produces zero greenhouse gas emissions and no waste products.

Its only byproduct is helium – an inert, non-toxic gas.

Fusion energy is inherently safe. It is difficult to reach and maintain the precise conditions for fusion – if any disturbanc­e occurs, the plasma cools within seconds and reaction stops.

There is enough fusion fuel to power the planet for hundreds of millions of years.

The raw materials for energy production are found in seawater and the earth’s crust.

Fusion can produce energy on demand and is not affected by the weather.

Fusion power stations require less land than other renewable technologi­es.

 ?? AEA ?? The Spherical Tokamak could generate fusion power by 2040
AEA The Spherical Tokamak could generate fusion power by 2040

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