Rolls-Royce among six firms shortlisted for British small nuclear plants

Reuters

Published Oct 02, 2023 06:08

Updated Oct 02, 2023 08:07

LONDON (Reuters) -Rolls-Royce and five other firms have passed the first stage of Britain's competition to select developers of small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs), the government said on Monday.

Britain is seeking increase its nuclear power capacity to 24 gigawatts (GW) by 2050 as part of efforts to meet climate targets and boost energy security, representing about a quarter of projected electricity demand versus about 14% today.

Large new nuclear projects with high upfront costs have struggled to attract financing and the government hopes some older plants could be replaced by a fleet of SMRs that can be made in factories with lower costs and faster construction.

The government in July opened a competition to help develop the technology with the aim of deploying projects in the 2030s.

EDF (EPA:EDF), GE-Hitachi Nuclear Energy International, Holtec Britain, NuScale Power, and Westinghouse Electric Company UK were the other companies chosen for the next stage of the process.

Rolls-Royce (LON:RR), whose main business is making engines for large passenger jets, is the only company whose SMR technology is under review by European regulators.

"Securing a domestic contract is vitally important to unlock the enormous global export potential of our clean energy technology," Rolls-Royce Group President and SMR division CEO Chris Cholerton said in a statement.