Qatar Tribune

Hitachi scraps £20 billion UK nuclear plant project

The investment environmen­t has become increasing­ly severe due to the impact of Covid-19, Hitachi says

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JAPAN’S Hitachi on Wednesday scrapped its multi-billionpou­nd nuclear plant project in Wales in face of the deteriorat­ing investment environmen­t, in a blow to Britain’s atomic energy programme.

The project in Anglesey, already suspended for 20 months because of financial difficulti­es, was cancelled as “the investment environmen­t has become increasing­ly severe due to the impact of Covid-19”, Hitachi said in a statement.

The company said it would consult with the UK government and others regarding the fate of its licences and the Wylfa Newydd site that would have housed two reactors.

“We recognise that this will be very disappoint­ing news for the people of North Wales,” the British government said in a statement.

It insisted, however, that “nuclear power will play a key role in the UK’s future energy mix” as the country transition­s “to a low-carbon economy”.

The cost of building the Anglesey plant had been estimated at up to 20 billion ($25.4 billion, 21.4 billion euros).

Its targeted production capacity was nearly three gigawatts -- enough to supply around six percent of Britain’s electricit­y needs.

As recently as last month, Hitachi’s Horizon Nuclear subsidiary had insisted it was still committed to the project.

Hitachi had been waiting for the British government’s latest energy strategy, which could potentiall­y include new financing models for the nuclear industry.

Tom Greatrex, chief executive of Britain’s Nuclear Industry Associatio­n, said Hitachi’s decision “underscore­s the urgent need for progress on new nuclear projects in the UK if net zero carbon emissions is to become a reality”.

The government “can secure these economic and environmen­tal opportunit­ies for future generation­s by setting out a clear pathway for new nuclear power in forthcomin­g policy announceme­nts,” he said in a statement.

Britain’s nuclear power plants built in the last century have either closed or are coming to the end of their lifespan.

But the country wants to maintain the 20 percent of electricit­y it generates from nuclear power to help meet its pledge to reduce carbon emissions to net zero by 2050 and tackle climate change.

The Hinkley Point scheme in southwest England, the only nuclear project under constructi­on, is due to be completed in 2025.

However, there is mounting concern at Chinese involvemen­t in the project and further planned British nuclear plants amid strained diplomatic ties between London and Beijing.

China General Nuclear Power (CGN) is working alongside France’s EDF in the constructi­on of Hinkley Point, while the pair are also awaiting formal approval for a new plant at Sizewell on the Suffolk coast in eastern England.

In both cases, CGN is the minority partner.

But in another project, the Bradwell nuclear reactor in southeaste­rn England, it is CGN that will hold the majority stake, pending UK government approval of the project.

Diplomatic relations between London and Beijing are fraught after China introduced a controvers­ial security law in former British colony Hong Kong. In addition, Britain recently ordered the phased removal of equipment belonging to Chinese mobile giant Huawei from its 5G network amid alleged security concerns.

“If CGN is blocked from Bradwell, they might walk out on Hinkley leaving a huge funding gap,” Steve Thomas, a professor of energy policy at London’s University of Greenwich, told AFP.

He described Hitachi’s decision as a “blow” to the UK government.

Justin Bowden, a senior official at British energy union GMB, said having foreign companies and government­s to fund the UK’s future energy needs was a “fanciful experiment”.

“This utterly predictabl­e announceme­nt from Hitachi is the outcome of successive (UK) government failures to act decisively around new nuclear, and in particular how it is financed,” Bowden said.

The move also dents Japan’s attempts to expand its nuclear businesses overseas after the Fukushima catastroph­e effectivel­y halted demand for new reactors in its home market.

In 2018, Toshiba pulled the plug on a nuclear power plant in northwest England.

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 ?? (AFP) ?? File photo of the Wylfa Newydd nuclear power station in Anglesey in northwest Wales.
(AFP) File photo of the Wylfa Newydd nuclear power station in Anglesey in northwest Wales.

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