Latest News | 4 October 2023

Rolls-Royce shortlisted to deliver UK’s mini nuclear power stations

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Rolls-Royce has been shortlisted in the first stage of a competition run by the UK Government to deliver the next generation of nuclear reactors.

Rolls-Royce SMR (Small Modular Reactor) is one of six shortlisted in the Great British Nuclear (GBN) Small Modular Reactor technology selection process, marking another significant step towards the first plants being built in the UK.

The competition is part of the Government’s plan to revive nuclear power and for the UK to lead the global race to develop cutting-edge technologies to rapidly deliver cleaner, cheaper energy and greater energy security.

Chris Cholerton, chief executive of Rolls-Royce SMR, said: “The Rolls-Royce SMR is a British solution to the global energy security and decarbonisation challenge.

“We welcome our shortlisting and are eager to build on this progress, moving quickly to the next stage where we can work to agree a contract for deployment and help the Government reach its ambition to deliver up to 24GW of nuclear power by 2050.”

The Government’s ambition is for up to a quarter of all UK electricity to come from nuclear power by 2050.

Unlike conventional nuclear reactors that are built on site, SMRs are smaller, can be made in factories, and could transform how power stations are built by making construction faster and less expensive.

The shortlisted designs are considered by the Government and Great British Nuclear – the government-backed body driving forward nuclear projects across the country – the most able to deliver operational SMRs by the mid-2030s.

Rolls-Royce SMR claims its nuclear power plant design can provide enough affordable clean electricity to power a million homes for more than 60 years, helping achieve net zero targets.

Mr Cholerton added: “We have the only SMR technology in a European regulatory approval process, putting us almost two years ahead of any of our competitors.

“Securing a domestic contract is vitally important to unlock the enormous global export potential of our clean energy technology.”


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