Western Daily Press

Oldbury on shortlist of locations for mini N-reactors

- ANDREW ARTHUR wdp@reachplc.com

ROLLS-ROYCE has identified four potential sites to develop its new generation of mininuclea­r power stations – including one in the West.

The engineerin­g giant is considerin­g land near Oldbury in South Gloucester­shire, the Sellafield nuclear site in Cumbria, and Welsh locations Trawsfynyd­d and Wylfa in Anglesey for its small modular reactors (SMR).

The plants are around a tenth of the size of a convention­al nuclear plant and could each generate enough power for around a million homes.

The plans have already generated hundreds of millions of pounds of investment and are expected to create thousands of jobs.

Rolls-Royce’s SMR subsidiary completed a siting assessment review alongside the UK Nuclear Decommissi­oning Authority. The Trawsfynyd­d and Sellafield sites are currently under NDA control, while the organisati­on leases the Wylfa and Oldbury land to a third party, Horizon Nuclear Power.

Rolls-Royce published a further list of possible locations for more SMRs, including Berkeley in Gloucester­shire, Hartlepool in County Durham, Heysham in Lancashire and Bradwell in Essex, pending further investigat­ion.

Tom Samson, chief executive of Rolls-Royce’s SMR business, said: “Identifyin­g the sites that can host our SMRs is a key step to our efficient deployment – the sooner that work can begin at site, the sooner we can deliver stable, secure supplies of low-carbon nuclear power from SMRs designed and built in the UK.

“We must maintain this positive momentum and work with NDA and government department­s to ensure we capitalise on the range of siting options, focusing on those that maximise benefit to the taxpayer while enabling power to come online as close to 2030 as possible.”

NDA chief executive, David Peatties, said: “This study is a tangible step forward in our mission to safely decommissi­on our sites and free up land for future use, delivering benefit to local communitie­s and so to the wider economy.”

Rolls-Royce’s SMR business previously said it could get the regulatory go-ahead for the project by 2024, with the hope that the SMRs could then go on to produce power for the national grid by 2029.

Oldbury and Berkeley were recently part of a twin-site bid to bring the UK’s first nuclear fusion plant to the South West. The bid, run by the Western Gateway – an economic partnershi­p of local authoritie­s, city regions, local enterprise partnershi­ps and government in Wales and the West of England – eventually lost out to a site in West Burton, north Nottingham­shire.

Western Gateway chair Katherine Bennett said: “Through our fusion bid, we’ve been working to raise the profile of our area, leverage the great skills we have and create opportunit­ies for local people in England and Wales, and it’s testament to the success of that campaign that we are continuing to see new opportunit­ies appear.

“The UK SMR programme is estimated to bring 40,000 jobs to England and Wales and it’s great to see Western Gateway being considered as part of that.

“We are confident that both Oldbury and Berkeley can provide unique access to a highly skilled workforce, a supportive community and a chance to level up areas of England and Wales.”

 ?? Nuclear Decommissi­oning Authority ?? The site in Oldbury, South Gloucester­shire which Rolls-Royce has identified as a potential location to develop small nuclear reactors
Nuclear Decommissi­oning Authority The site in Oldbury, South Gloucester­shire which Rolls-Royce has identified as a potential location to develop small nuclear reactors

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