San Francisco Chronicle

Nuclear plants seen as key to energy independen­ce

- By Danica Kirka Danica Kirka is an Associated Press writer.

LONDON — Prime Minister Boris Johnson has announced plans to build more nuclear power plants, boost renewable energy production and further tap domestic oil and gas reserves to help the U.K. reduce its dependence on Russian energy following the invasion of Ukraine.

Critics quickly panned Johnson’s energy security strategy for focusing almost entirely on boosting supplies while doing little to increase energy efficiency and cut demand. As a result, they said, the plan offers no relief to consumers pummeled by soaring utility bills and risks underminin­g Britain’s commitment to cut carbon emissions in response to global warming.

Johnson’s announceme­nt Thursday came three weeks after he said Western countries had made a “terrible mistake” in failing to wean themselves off Russian energy following President Vladimir Putin’s annexation of the Ukrainian region of Crimea eight years ago. That emboldened Putin to invade Ukraine in February and left Europe vulnerable to “blackmail” amid Russian threats to cut off energy supplies, he said at the time.

Oil and natural gas prices have soared in recent months, first as demand for energy increased following the COVID-19 pandemic and more recently amid concern that the war could curtail supplies from Russia. High energy prices are fueling a cost-ofliving crisis in Britain, where household gas and electricit­y prices jumped 54% this month.

The government responded to these issues with what it called a strategy to boost “long-term energy independen­ce, security and prosperity.”

“This is about tackling the mistakes of the past and making sure that we are set well for the future,” Johnson said at Hinkley Point C, a nuclear power plant under constructi­on in southweste­rn England. “And we are never again subject to the vagaries of the global oil and gas prices, and we can’t be subject to blackmail, as it were, from people such as Vladimir Putin.”

That includes plans to build eight new nuclear reactors by 2050, tripling U.K. production of nuclear energy to 24 gigawatts, or a quarter of projected electricit­y demand. A key challenge in meeting this goal is the developmen­t of as yet unproven technology for small modular reactors that are less than a third the size of existing reactors, the government said.

The strategy also targets a 10-fold increase in production of electricit­y from offshore wind farms and an unspecifie­d boost from onshore wind farms in a “limited number of supportive communitie­s.”

The government also announced a new round of licensing for oil and gas projects in the North Sea, saying these fuels would be key to U.K. energy security and as a transition to low-carbon renewable energy. The government also argued that domestical­ly produced oil and gas would have a lower carbon footprint than overseas energy that has to be transporte­d to the U.K.

 ?? Finnbarr Webster / Associated Press ?? British Prime Minister Boris Johnson meets apprentice­s during a visit to the Hinkley Point C nuclear station constructi­on site in Somerset on Thursday.
Finnbarr Webster / Associated Press British Prime Minister Boris Johnson meets apprentice­s during a visit to the Hinkley Point C nuclear station constructi­on site in Somerset on Thursday.

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