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Secret plan to revive UK nuclear power industry![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Secret plan to revive UK nuclear power industry 19:00 03 July 02 Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition Deep within the British government, officials are laying secret plans to push through a major programme of new nuclear power stations. According to internal policy briefings leaked to New Scientist, the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) wants to speed up safety checks of new reactors and is discussing ways to soften up public opposition to nuclear power.
The revelation that the DTI is preparing to do something similar comes just months after the British government's Performance and Innovation Unit (PIU) published a comprehensive review of energy policy. This recommended that nuclear power should be retained only if expanding renewable energy sources and improving energy efficiency don't work. But it's now clear from the leaked documents that the DTI has always been determined to pave the way for nuclear development. It is working hard behind the scenes to make sure that a White Paper on energy policy due out next year will reflect its ambitions. Outside experts regard the DTI's stance as predictable but flawed. Gordon MacKerron, a leading economist involved in preparing the PIU energy report, points out that in Britain a nuclear power station that could compete economically with other forms of energy has never been built. "Competitive nuclear power is still at best an untested proposition," he says.
The DTI has several plans to change that. The suggestion likely to provoke most alarm is for the regulations on reactor safety to be overhauled so that new designs can be licensed more quickly and cheaply. There are at least three types of reactor under consideration, in all of which the state-owned company British Nuclear Fuels (BNFL) has a stake. Two - the AP1000 and its smaller cousin, the AP600 - are large advanced light water reactors being developed by Westinghouse, which is now owned by BNFL. Others include a much smaller high temperature reactor, known as the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor, which is under development in South Africa, and a Canadian heavy water reactor called Candu 6. The energy policy briefing to British ministers argues that power companies will not invest in building any of these reactors if it takes years to win safety approval. "In a competitive electricity market this adds significantly to both capital risk and economic cost," it says.
The briefing urges the Nuclear Installations Inspectorate, which regulates the nuclear industry, to learn from the US by changing its "style" and improving its "responsiveness and targeting" in order to meet the needs of power companies. Although the briefing is dated June 2001, insiders say it still represents the view of the DTI. As well as fast-tracking safety regulation, the DTI is also proposing ways that nuclear plants could win planning permission more easily. "Simplification of the planning system could also be an issue, together with ways of compensating local communities for the perceived disbenefits of new nuclear build. Potential sensitivities could be eased to some extent by utilising space on existing nuclear sites." The leaked briefing lists eight such sites in England and Wales where new stations could be built.
"No development," says another internal document, "is likely in the UK without a signal from government that they would be willing to consider new nuclear power stations." The only remaining problem is public opinion. But the DTI believes it can win people round by stressing that without new nuclear stations there could be power blackouts like those in California two years ago. "Public acceptance may not be the intractable problem it is perceived as being, particularly if the alternatives are considered less palatable," the briefing observes.
The DTI denies it has a hidden agenda on nuclear power. "We've got an open mind on this," insists a spokesman. "We are working towards a diverse and sustainable energy mix." But Stewart Boyle, a commentator for Platt's Energy Newsletters, is convinced the department is hoping for a nuclear comeback. "The public won't like it and it could prove to be a colossal political mistake," he says. The final decision, of course, rests with the Cabinet, in which ministers are split on nuclear power. But as one of the most influential departments in Whitehall, the DTI is quietly doing everything it can to make sure it gets its way.
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