Mr Tobias Ellwood (Bournemouth East) (Ind) Thank you very much, Mr
Deputy Speaker, for chairing this timely debate on modular nuclear
reactors in the United Kingdom. Until recently, we took our
dependence on electricity generation for granted. Policy has
rightly been influenced by our ambitions to reduce our carbon
footprint, arguably faster than many other developing and developed
nations, but we may have been a little complacent over the past few
years in regard to the...Request free
trial
(Bournemouth East) (Ind)
Thank you very much, Mr Deputy Speaker, for chairing this timely
debate on modular nuclear reactors in the United Kingdom. Until
recently, we took our dependence on electricity generation for
granted. Policy has rightly been influenced by our ambitions to
reduce our carbon footprint, arguably faster than many other
developing and developed nations, but we may have been a little
complacent over the past few years in regard to the security of
energy supply.
Our world is getting more dangerous, not less. The war in Ukraine
has been a massive reality check, exposing how reliant we are
on—and therefore how vulnerable we are to—access to international
energy markets to keep our lights on. We require imports of gas,
oil and coal to fuel our power stations. All too regularly, we
have to import electricity from the continent through the
interconnectors when we cannot generate enough power
ourselves.
The security situation in eastern Europe is clearly complicating
matters. Putin is weaponising Russia’s distribution of oil and
gas, causing large-scale economic harm across Europe. The cost of
living crisis here has many components, but arguably a major
contributor is the spike in global energy prices and the
volatility in the energy markets. All this requires a sense of
urgency in finding short and long-term solutions. We expect that
tomorrow the Government will spell out their support to get us
through the crisis. There is much speculation that energy bills
may be frozen, helping us to get through a very difficult winter,
but we also require a longer-term strategy to become far more
energy self-sufficient as we enter a decade in which global
security is on the decline.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I congratulate the right hon. Member on securing the debate. Does
he agree that the use of small modular reactors, in conjunction
with nuclear energy, gives more solid certainty about sustained
energy, particularly in relation to my constituency of Strangford
in Northern Ireland? Northern Ireland has no nuclear production,
so it is essential for the type of energy to which he refers to
be UK-wide. It is needed across the whole United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland.
Mr Ellwood
I agree. I welcome the Government’s action to bolster our energy
resilience: finally increasing UK gas storage capacity, investing
in better insulation for our homes, growing the contribution of
wind and solar to our energy mix, and of course investing in new
nuclear. As the Government’s energy and security strategy sets
out, Britain will accelerate new nuclear, including modular
reactors, which will form a key part of the energy mix.
(Caithness, Sutherland and
Easter Ross) (LD)
Will the right hon. Member give way?
Mr Ellwood
I will make some progress, if I may.
We have Hinkley Point and Sizewell C coming online, adding 3,000
MW to the grid, but it will be a full decade before they start to
add their power. We do not have the luxury of waiting that long.
Energy consumption here and across the world will only increase
as we move towards a cleaner fossil-free environment, especially
across Africa, as economies and industries grow, placing ever
greater demands on the ability to generate power.
(Dwyfor Meirionnydd)
(PC)
Will the right hon. Member give way?
Mr Ellwood
I will make a little more progress and then give way. I know that
this is an important debate.
That last point brings me to the subject that we are discussing
today: Britain’s development of modular nuclear reactors. The
concept is not new; Rolls-Royce has been
building small reactors to power our Royal Navy submarines for
decades, so one would think the UK well placed to be the first
nation to have one up and running.
The benefits are very clear, and I am sure that the list will be
added to in this debate. Each single reactor from Rolls-Royce generates
approximately 470 MW of energy, enough to power 1 million homes.
They cost only £2.2 billion each, versus the £20 billion that
their bigger brothers cost. Once the first five reactors are
built, the concept can be proven and we can start looking at
exports. The export market for Rolls-Royce is
worth £54 billion to the UK. This will not only help the UK, but
help other nations to address their crippling energy prices and
meet their COP26 targets.
Trawsfynydd, in Meirionnydd, is entirely publicly owned, and is a
nuclear-licensed site. As such, it offers an unparalleled
opportunity for the fastest deployment of SMR technology at any
UK site. The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority and the Welsh
development company Cwmni Egino are working together on proposals
for siting, and hopes are high that construction will begin in
2027. That is where the timing is so critical. I am sure that the
right hon. Gentleman will agree that Cwmni Egino’s development
model provides a blueprint, which could be used not just in Wales
but beyond, for the alacrity of development that we are all
seeking.
Mr Ellwood
I am grateful for that intervention, which confirms that there is
a desire to see these reactors built here in the UK. Initially
they will all be built in a single factory, which, once it is up
and running, will be able to build the components in months
rather than decades. Just about all the moving parts are in place
to make this happen: the design, the support from the Department
for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy—represented by the
Minister who will respond to this debate—the initial development
costs, the private sector investment and interest, and the
factory in Derby that has been earmarked, along with potential
sites across the country. We would be creating 40,000 jobs and
£50 billion of investment, and offering a revolution in clean
energy supply.
So what is the problem? If we have a workable design, a genuine
solution to help resolve this energy challenge, a Government
Department saying all the right things and offering support, and
backing from the private sector, why did I need to bring this
issue to the Floor of the House? The answer is very simple.
The Rolls-Royce design is
now stuck between the development and delivery phases, and that
delay means that the built-in advantage that Rolls-Royce has—its
experience of procuring nuclear reactors for the Royal Navy—is
being lost because of unnecessary delays and bureaucracy.
Obviously all nuclear reactors are complex and there should be no
short cuts to their procurement, but this is not about design
approval; it is about the political will. The Government need to
formally agree to commission those first five reactors here in
the UK. That would allow Rolls-Royce to secure
the funds to build the factory, and thus allow more reactor
orders to be honoured.
Dounreay, in my constituency, was the site of the very first
nuclear reactor built in the United Kingdom. The site is
licensed, it has a very skilled workforce today, and it has huge
local support. Does the right hon. Member agree that it should be
considered as a site for one of these new reactors?
Mr Ellwood
I would love to be the one who gifts these locations, and I would
be grateful—I am sure the Minister is hearing this—if those five
locations then received potential building permissions, but we
need first to cut through the red tape that is stuck in the
Government. I stress that the problem is not the Department
represented here today; it is, I am afraid, the Treasury.
(Ynys Môn) (Con)
As chair of the all-party parliamentary group on small modular
reactors, I thank my right hon. Friend for allowing me to
intervene in this important debate.
Rolls-Royce SMR has secured funding of £210 million from UK
Research and Innovation, and a further £280 million from private
investors. We now need to move to the next stage, which is all
about deployment. We need to agree with the UK Government on
plans for siting and funding. Manufacturing plants have been
earmarked for Rolls-Royce SMR across
the UK, including Deeside, which will benefit north Wales and my
constituents in particular. Does my right hon. Friend agree that
the next stage is important because it will unlock more private
sector investment and result in new factories and more high-skill
jobs in the UK during this Parliament?
Mr Ellwood
I am grateful to my hon. Friend for her intervention, and I
commend her work in chairing the all-party parliamentary group. I
hope that her comments will fall on the welcome ears of the
Minister, who is soon to get to his feet.
My plea to the Minister is simple. I ask him please to recognise
that the scale of the energy crisis we face necessitates a
leaning into this project to secure the greater political
alignment that would allow funding models to be completed during
this Parliament. That is entirely possible.
Europe is once again at war, and it is time for us to move to a
warlike footing if we are to reduce our dependence on overseas
power sources which are exposed to volatile international prices
and, indeed, adversarial interference which we cannot control. We
can enjoy greater energy self-sufficiency with cheaper bills by
generating cheap, clean, reliable power within our borders. We
have the know-how, we have the desire, we have the industrial
advantage; I simply ask the Minister for the political will to
make it happen.
Mr Deputy Speaker ( )
I welcome the Minister to his new role.
7.14pm
The Minister for Climate ()
Thank you, Mr Deputy Speaker.
I want to begin by congratulating my right hon. Friend the Member
for Bournemouth East (Mr Ellwood) on securing this important
debate and speaking so passionately about the benefits that can
come from this fascinating development of a UK capability in
nuclear power. Tonight’s debate gives us the opportunity to build
on the discussion on small modular reactors and energy security
in the UK convened by my hon. Friend the Member for Ynys Môn
() in January this
year.
As Climate Minister I am proud to support not only the Government
funding but the private investment that we are sometimes seeing
facilitated by that Government funding in the nuclear sector. As
my right hon. Friend the Member for Bournemouth East has said,
the global energy crisis created by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
underlines our resolve to develop new nuclear capacity in order
to boost our energy security. I am sure that all of us who take
an interest in this will have been gladdened by the fact that
there is such strong support for that across the House this
evening.
As we make strides towards delivering net zero, the demands on
our electricity system will increase. Electricity will be
increasingly important, potentially providing around half of
final energy demand as its use for heat and transport increases.
That would require a fourfold increase in clean electricity
generation, with the decarbonisation of electricity underpinning
the delivery of that overall net zero target. Our analysis shows
that all low-cost, low-emission solutions that will take us to
this net zero-compliant electricity system are likely to require
a combination of new nuclear, combined cycle gas turbines and
carbon capture, utilisation and storage, in addition to growing
levels of renewables. It is a complex piece, but we need all the
bits to come together to meet the challenges that my right hon.
Friend has set out.
Nuclear power is important for the UK’s energy security. As the
world has emerged from covid-19, global demand for energy has
risen significantly, and this has been exacerbated by Putin’s
malign invasion of Ukraine. But secure, clean and affordable
energy for the long term depends on the transformation of our
energy system, and that means more home-grown energy from
increasingly diverse sources in order to reduce our dependency on
imported fossil fuels and our exposure to the high and volatile
prices in international markets that we can see today.
Hon. Members will be aware that in April 2022 we announced the
British energy security strategy. This set out our ambition to
deploy up to 24 GW of civil nuclear power by 2050, which will
meet around 25% of our projected 2050 electricity demand. New
nuclear generating capacity is an important part of our plans to
ensure greater energy resilience as well as having a crucial role
to play in net zero. I am delighted that the British energy
security strategy set out the Government’s intention to take a
large-scale new project to final investment decision during this
Parliament, and that two projects will reach that point in the
next Parliament, subject to the necessary approvals.
I remind Members that SMRs will play an important part, as well
as those larger nuclear installations, and will be a critical
part of delivering new nuclear for the UK. They offer the
opportunity for flexible deployment options—we have already heard
various bids to host them—and could bring regional and
socioeconomic benefits, including the creation of high-value
manufacturing and engineering jobs on site and on the site of
manufacture.
In November last year, as my right hon. Friend has said, we
announced £210 million in match funding for Rolls-Royce SMR Ltd to
develop the design for one of the world’s first small modular
reactors. Funding for this project was predicated
on Rolls-Royce matching
the Government’s contribution with private investment, which has
been found, giving the design the capability of being deployed in
the UK by the early 2030s, if not before. The Government funding
for Rolls-Royce is part of
the advanced nuclear fund, which is a significant Government
commitment of up to £385 million, both to develop domestic SMR
design and to demonstrate the viability of innovative advanced
modular reactors by the early 2030s.
In addition to investment in SMRs, the Government plan to invest
in the AMR research, development and demonstration programme,
which, as I say, should get something going by the early ’30s. It
is focused on high-temperature gas reactors for low-carbon
electricity generation and would allow the production of very
high-temperature heat that could be used, for instance, for the
increasingly efficient production of low-carbon hydrogen, to help
to decarbonise industrial process heat, or even for synthetic
fuel production.
I am pleased to remind Members that we launched the future
nuclear enabling fund, or FNEF—I have realised, on my first day,
that BEIS is full of acronyms galore—on 2 September 2022. The
FNEF—they are never terribly well crafted—is a £120 million fund
announced in the Government’s “Net Zero Strategy: Build Back
Greener” in 2021. It aims to help mature potential nuclear
projects ahead of any Government process to select future
projects. We expect to make awards from the fund at the end of
this year or at the start of 2023.
Alongside the launch of the FNEF, we are setting up Great British
Nuclear, a body to enable nuclear projects and get us on a
pathway to meeting our ambitions for new nuclear, with the aim of
ensuring the kind of rapidity that my right hon. Friend is right
to press for from Ministers such as me. We intend to initiate a
selection process in 2023, with the intention that we will enter
into negotiations with the most credible projects to enable a
potential Government award of support as soon as possible.
I was pleased that Parliament backed the Nuclear Energy
(Financing) Act 2022, which was granted Royal Assent in March and
established a new regulated asset base—or RAB—funding model for
all new nuclear projects.
Mr Ellwood
I hope my hon. Friend will forgive me for not having
congratulated him on securing his new position. He is a round peg
in a round hole; I know how passionate he is about the
environment. Will he join me in paying tribute to my right hon.
Friend the Member for Spelthorne (), who was previously in
charge at BEIS? He is now in the Treasury and therefore perfectly
placed to advance this idea. During the war there was an effort
to create munitions, and we leant into that project because there
was a necessity, and during covid there was a necessity to create
personal protective equipment. Does my hon. Friend agree that
there is now a necessity for us to lean into this idea and
expedite it—within the safety parameters—to make sure that we can
become more energy resilient?
I thank my right hon. Friend, and I am happy to do that. He will
forgive me, perhaps on this one day only, for not leaning in to
chastise any other Department or the Government in general on day
one, self-confident though I always try to be. If we look at what
we have done, we see that we have reduced our emissions by more
than any other major industrialised nation, and offshore wind has
been a triumph.
I am looking forward to learning more about the detail of these
programmes, but I have no doubt that with the right will and the
proper prompting by colleagues from across the House we can
ensure that we move with the speed necessary. We need to, because
as he rightly says, we are not alone in pursuing and seeing this
opportunity, and there have been instances in the past when this
country has been in a position to lead and has not moved quickly
enough, and multibillion-dollar opportunities—let us call them
that—have ended up going elsewhere.
I am determined that we shall not only deliver on our green
obligations in this country, but build our industrial capability
so that even the most sceptical person comes on board as we say,
“Look, we are not just dealing with climate and not just cleaning
up our domestic situation. We are developing major industrial
capability so that we can sell that to the rest of the world,
help it with the net zero challenge, and also produce jobs and
prosperity here.” It is not a hairshirt that we want; we want to
get the policy right so that we are part of a global solution,
and to do so in a way that boosts jobs and prosperity and carries
the support of everyone, regardless of their views on
climate-related matters.
We believe that the RAB could cut the costs of financing these
projects, enabling companies to finance new ones and ending our
reliance on overseas developers for finance, resulting in savings
for consumers. On day one, I can reassure my right hon. Friend
that a lot of work is going into making sure not only that we can
move at pace, but that we do so with the most solid base
possible.
We fully support the development of small modular reactors and
the exciting opportunities that they can offer the UK in energy
security and reaching net zero. We have demonstrated our intent
to build new nuclear capacity in the UK over the past year, and
we have made the decisions that we believe will provide the
confidence needed for investors and businesses to get behind it.
From the energy White Paper to our landmark British energy
security strategy to funding for small modular reactors and the
future nuclear enabling fund, I hope we have shown our dedication
to energy security, net zero and nuclear. I thank my right hon.
Friend and other colleagues once again.
Question put and agreed to.
|