Earlier this month, Great British Nuclear announced four short-listed contenders for government support to develop a fleet of small modular reactors, a technology considered by many the future of nuclear energy. In the same month, the influential report Foundations: Why Britain is stagnating laid bare the lethargy and expense involved in getting anything built in the UK and, sadly, nuclear projects get a special mention.
Not for the first time, I find myself worrying about how the UK is going to streamline its regulatory regime to win the global race for nuclear – and it is a race that needs to be won. There is a dawning realisation that nuclear is the only way to reach net zero in time to avert a total climate disaster and produce the massive amounts of energy needed to drive the power-hungry data centres required for mass deployment of artificial intelligence. Countries that harness this power will thrive. Those that do not will be left behind.
Regulatory justification
If the secretary of state for energy security and net zero or his team are reading this, I make a plea for one simple reform to benefit SMRs – one that will save millions of pounds of private and public sector money and years of time, while in no way compromising nuclear safety standards. It doesn’t even require legislation. The secretary of state just needs to confirm that there is a “regulatory justification” covering all SMRs.
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Michael Callaghan explains the new register of agreements giving third parties control over the use and development of land that looks set to be implemented in 2026