Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nuke plant’s cost expected to rocket

- SYLVIA HUI

LONDON — A major nuclear plant that Britain’s government hopes will generate affordable, low-carbon energy could cost up to $59 billion and the completion date could be delayed to after 2029, the firm developing it said recently.

The U.K. government says nuclear projects like the Hinkley Point C plant are a key part of its plans to ensure greater energy independen­ce and achieve its “net zero” by 2050 strategy.

But a re-evaluation showed that the final bill for the plant, being built in Somerset in southwest England, could soar to up to $43.2 billion in 2015 prices — or $45.6 billion in current value, French energy giant EDF said.

Officials had previously said that the Hinkley plant would start producing electricit­y in 2027, but the completion date has now been pushed to 2029 at the earliest.

“Like other infrastruc­ture projects, we have found civil constructi­on slower than we hoped and faced inflation, labor and material shortages — on top of covid and Brexit disruption,” said Stuart Crooks, managing director of Hinkley Point C.

EDF and the U.K. government have said the plant will become a major source of decarboniz­ed electricit­y supply for the U.K., generating enough to power 6 million homes and providing some 7% of the country’s electricit­y.

The Conservati­ve government is investing heavily in nuclear power, with ambitions to generate up to a quarter of the country’s projected electricit­y demand by 2050.

The move has divided opinion and drawn criticism from green groups.

Some experts say nuclear energy will be needed to help nations wean off fossil fuels, but there are concerns about the substantia­l cost and timescale of building large nuclear reactors as well as worries over safety and nuclear waste.

Other clean energy, such as wind farms, can be built and come online much faster.

Critics, including the U.K. government’s own climate advisers, say the U.K.’s support for new domestic oil and gas production and its slow pace in transition­ing to green energy were underminin­g its “net zero” pledges.

Authoritie­s have promised to reduce emissions by 68% by 2030, eventually reaching net-zero — or releasing only as much greenhouse gas as can be absorbed again through natural or technologi­cal means — by 2050.

 ?? (AP/Kin Cheung) ?? Employees look up at the constructi­on site of Hinkley Point C nuclear power station in Somerset, England, in October 2022.
(AP/Kin Cheung) Employees look up at the constructi­on site of Hinkley Point C nuclear power station in Somerset, England, in October 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States