Bangor Mail

HART TELLS MPs THERE IS ‘REAL ENTHUSIASM’ FOR NUCLEAR PLANT

- Gareth Williams

THERE is “real enthusiasm” for a new nuclear plant on Anglesey, according to the Secretary of State for Wales.

Simon Hart claimed that Wylfa Newydd would “tick all the boxes” in terms of economic recovery in North Wales.

Hoped to be completed by the middle of the 2020s, the £12bn project was shelved in January 2019 after the Japanese tech giant failed to reach a funding deal with the UK government under Theresa May.

But with the local authority having consistent­ly championed the economic benefits of such a developmen­t, which was cited to provide around 6% of the UK’s electricit­y and create 8,500 jobs during constructi­on and another 850 over its 60-year operationa­l lifespan, hopes remain it could be revived if a new funding arrangemen­t is struck.

During a meeting of the Welsh Affairs Committee last week, the Secretary of State appeared to bolster such hopes by describing Wylfa Newydd as “being intended to have a happy ending,” while also conceding that a project of its size was bound to be fraught with difficulty.

Responding to a question from island MP Virginia Crosbie, who asked what steps he was taking to champion the developmen­t and citing its environmen­tal benefits in terms of de-carbonisat­ion, Mr Hart acknowledg­ed that they had discussed the issue on several occasions.

“There is real enthusiasm for this project and projects like it,” he said.

“It ticks all of the boxes, whether it be local growth and jobs or the wider UK energy production ambitions.

“We held a meeting recently with Horizon, and colleagues in BEIS (Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy), and this process is proceeding with the intention of it having a happy ending.

“That’s as far as I can go for now but there are very few people that think its a fundamenta­lly bad idea, but that doesn’t mean that getting to the finish line isn’t fraught with difficulty with a project of this magnitude.”

Described as a kickstarte­r to resuming the project, in September the UK Government is expected to make a decision on vital planning permission, known as a Developmen­t Consent Order, to construct the power station.

But having already been delayed for a year, opponents of the project claim that the pushing back of a decision demonstrat­es that ministers “have not been satisfied by answers provided,” reiteratin­g their calls for the Wylfa Newydd plans to be “totally rejected.”

“The national policy statement for nuclear power adopted several years ago is completely outdated and rather than approving this obviously defective applicatio­n, the Westminste­r government should start from scratch with a thorough review of their energy policy and to recognise that renewable technologi­es like wind, solar and marine have totally undermined any reason for investing billions of pounds in nuclear power,” says People Against Wylfa B (PAWB).

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