Waterloo Region Record

$80M expansion for nuclear manufactur­er

- BRENT DAVIS REPORTER

Nuclear component manufactur­er BWX Technologi­es (BWXT) will invest $80 million in equipment and expansions in Cambridge and Kitchener that are expected to create more than 200 jobs.

The 55,000-square-foot expansion at the Coronation Boulevard facility in Cambridge will grow that location to 280,000 square feet, while the company’s Projects and Field Services business will move to a 150,000square-foot facility in Kitchener.

“We’re making these investment­s because we see increasing demand for our products and services,” BWXT’s president of commercial operations, John MacQuarrie, said as the project was announced Friday.

MacQuarrie said the Cambridge site is already one of North America’s largest nuclear component manufactur­ing plants. The expansion — expected to be completed in the second half of 2026 — will boost capacity to support current and future demand for components destined for small modular reactors and traditiona­l largescale nuclear and advanced reactors, a release said.

BWXT’s components are used worldwide; in Ontario, the company’s clients include Bruce Power and Ontario Power Generation (OPG).

MacQuarrie said that about 80 per cent of the “marquee product” produced in Cambridge by BWXT, nuclear steam generators, have gone to Bruce Power and OPG; BWXT has made more than 340 of the generators at the Cambridge facility so far.

One contract for Bruce Power worth about $1 billion was signed a few years ago and will run through 2033, noted Bruce Power’s president and chief executive officer, Mike Rencheck.

The Kincardine-area nuclear power station is also looking to add 4,800 megawatts of additional nuclear capacity.

Major OPG refurbishm­ent and new nuclear projects also rely on BWXT products.

“What makes a company successful, whether it’s OPG or whether it’s Bruce Power, is having great partners. No individual company can be successful — it is the people around us that lead to that — and we’re very, very proud to call BWXT one of our partners,” OPG president and chief executive officer Ken Hartwick said.

“Canada is a world leader when it comes to the developmen­t of nuclear technology, providing safe, reliable, affordable electricit­y — non-emissions electricit­y — on our grid,” Ontario Energy Minister Todd Smith said at Friday’s event.

BWXT’s investment includes $30 million for advanced manufactur­ing equipment “that will further increase our capacity, improve our productivi­ty and make us more competitiv­e globally,” MacQuarrie said.

BWXT is headquarte­red in Virginia, and employs about 7,800 people in the United States, Canada and the U.K. MacQuarrie said about half of the company’s 1,600 Canadian employees work in Cambridge.

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