The UK government is looking to ‘a new golden age of nuclear’, committing £17 billion to ‘the most ambitious programme of new plants for a generation’. As its new Advanced Nuclear Frameworks plan says, in the 2025 Spending Review, it committed £14.2 billion to Sizewell C and over £2.5 billion to the Great British Energy – Nuclear (GBE N) Small Modular Reactor (SMR) project at Wylfa. And it says ‘together with Hinkley Point C, these projects will add almost 8 GW of capacity in the 2030s’. However, it also wants to do more, with plans for advanced nuclear, some based on US Advanced Modular Reactor (AMR) developments. As it notes, some major commercial deals have been concluded between UK and US companies, including ‘plans for X-Energy and Centrica to build 12 advanced modular reactors in Hartlepool, supporting 2,500 jobs, as well as plans for Holtec, EDF, and Tritax to build small modular reactors at the former coal-fired power station Cottam in Nottinghamshire, providing clean, se...
‘For much of the past decade, renewable-energy costs fell rapidly’, but now ‘the cost of creating new clean power has risen across much of the system’. So says Tone Lagengen, in a new report from the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change. It calls for a new approach to supporting clean energy technology with a focus on allegedly cheaper options. She says that, under the current approach, for renewables like offshore wind, ‘inflation, higher interest rates, constrained supply chains & global competition for key components have pushed up capital costs. This is evident in the upward trajectory of strike prices at offshore-wind auctions in recent years. In 2019’s Allocation Round 3, offshore wind cleared at the lowest prices recorded: about £55 per megawatt hour (MWh) based on 2024 prices’. By contrast, she says ‘Allocation Round 5 in 2023 failed to attract a single offshore-wind bid, as no project could be delivered below the administrative strike price. Allo...