nuclear-news

The News That Matters about the Nuclear Industry Fukushima Chernobyl Mayak Three Mile Island Atomic Testing Radiation Isotope

The past week in nuclear news

Some bits of good news. The Revival of Germany’s Carbon-Sequestering PeatlandsAustralia’s renewable energy growth doubles in six months.  Three good things: projects clearing up junk that’s hidden from view.

TOP STORIESNetanyahu’s Quest to Attack Iran’s nuclear facilities with the ‘Mother of all Bombs’.

Anatomy of an AI Coup

The Pentagon Is Recruiting Elon Musk To Help Them Win a Nuclear War. 

High-Explosive Drone Pierces Shell Of Chernobyl Nuclear Plant At Very Moment Trump Pushes Ukraine Toward Peace.

Climate.  World’s sea-ice falls to record low. Two-thirds of Americans still believe climate change is impacting the Earth, despite what Trump contends.

Noel’s notes.  Small Nuclear Reactors: Big safety problems, and who pays the piper?  “Jobs Jobs Jobs!” screams the nuclear lobby.

AUSTRALIA.  Dutton’s nuclear disaster: Cheap lies and a $20 billion deficit.    Why are young people like this 18-year-old fronting the pro-nuclear push in Australia?   American or Trump’s values, or are they the same?   Nuclear advocates: Splitting atoms and spinning agendas. Australia’s technocratic drive to nuclear ignorance. more Australian nuclear news headlines at https://antinuclear.net/2025/02/13/australian-nuclear-news-10-17-february/

NUCLEAR ITEMS

ART and CULTURE. 
 Why Welsh speakers oppose Wylfa nuclear plant.

ECONOMICS.

EMPLOYMENT. US government tries to rehire nuclear staff it fired days ago.There really ARE necessary nuclear industry jobs – IN DEMOLISHING NUCLEAR REACTORS!
ENERGY Prioritizing nuclear power and natural gas over renewable energy is a risky move for Ontario’s energy future. Green power– not for us?
ENVIRONMENT
‘Nothing prepared us for Sizewell C devastation‘. Nuclear Free Local Authorities back petition to save fish at Hinkley C. Nuclear waste plan ‘would scar Lincolnshire Wolds‘.

EVENTS.

HEALTH. Doctors fear health fallout from nuclear energy plans
MEDIA.  Media must unshackle itself.
OPPOSITION TO NUCLEAR
Opposition mounts to planned nuclear plant as Starmer confirms new policy of ‘Build, baby, build’. Sizewell C campaigners slammed “clueless” Government.
POLITICSGermany has no realistic way back to nuclear power ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/02/16/2-b1-germany-has-no-realistic-way-back-to-nuclear-power/

Starmer’s latest con job Great British Nuclear competition winners announcement still ‘around Spending Review’ -ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2025/02/17/1-a-starmers-latest-con-job/ Labour’s growth policy is fantasy fiction. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwT5LLmZYAc  Nuclear waste site plans in Midlands face major setback as council withdraws.
POLITICS INTERNATIONAL and DIPLOMACY.Trump open to Iran talks only if it abandons nuclear program, says US official.
Start a Lasting Peace in Ukraine Now.
Trump: Military Spending Could Be Cut in Half and There’s No Reason To Build New Nuclear WeaponsTrump proposes nuclear deal with Russia and China to halve defense budgets.
The resurgence of nuclear power: a conversation with M. V. Ramana.
Nuclear Future is Not Inevitable.
Nuclear missing from Europe’s draft Clean Industrial Deal subsidy rules
SAFETY.Oops! Trump accidentally fired hundreds of federal workers who maintain our nuclear weapons.
Warning sent about need for strategic policing reform to address security of SMRs.
Safety Issues and Impact on Marine Environment of Extension of British Nuclear Plant Lifespan Queried by NGO.
Would a fallout shelter really protect you in a nuclear blast?‘
Deeply Concerned’ Dems Want to Know If DOGE Can Access Nuclear Weapons Data.
Incident. A drone pierced the outer shell of Ukraine’s Chernobyl nuclear plant. Radiation levels are normal.
SECRETS and LIES. Engineer who worked on Hinkley Point C nuclear project quizzed on suspicion of being a Russian spy, 
The Coventry experiment: why were Indian women in Britain given radioactive food without their consent?
Secret terror blueprints for US NSC to ‘help Ukraine resist’ exposed.
WAR and CONFLICTNFLAs endorse international appeal for justice over French nuclear tests.
WEAPONS and WEAPONS SALES .A New Military-Industrial Complex Arises.
Trump wants Russia, China to stop making nuclear weapons, so all can cut defence spending by half. Trump Promises Billions in Defense Cuts.
Will U.S. resume nuclear testing? America’s nuclear gamble: The dangerous push to resume atmospheric testing.
Trident nuclear submarine project rated “unachievable” third year running. 
UK Government urged to scrap nuclear weapons ‘once and for all’.

February 17, 2025 Posted by | Weekly Newsletter | Leave a comment

There really ARE necessary nuclear industry jobs – IN DEMOLISHING NUCLEAR REACTORS!

Dounreay to take on 23 new apprentices

One of Britain’s most complex environmental restoration projects is taking on 23 new apprentices.

Nuclear Restoration Services and Nuclear Decommissioning Authority 13 February 2025,
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/dounreay-to-take-on-23-new-apprentices

The decommissioning of the former centre of fast reactor research and development at Dounreay is continuing to create long-term opportunities for young people.

Applications are open for the next intake of apprentices, with 23 places in total available.

The apprenticeships are in engineering trades, engineering design, construction scaffolding, construction painting, business administration and project management, and vary in length from two years to four years.

The closing date for applications is 14 to 21 February, with start dates in August.

Dounreay’s operator, Nuclear Restoration Services, is also in the process of recruiting 9 health physics surveyor trainees.

Their 2-year training programme equips them with an NVQ Level 2 Diploma in Radiological Protection.

Dounreay also has 15 places this year for graduate recruitment. Applications for these posts closed on 6 January.

More information about the opportunities at Dounreay can be found at the site’s careers website at www.dounreaycareers.com.

Dounreay has a long and proud history of high-quality training for young people across a wide range of disciplines and I’m delighted we are able to continue this during the decommissioning phase of the site,

said Dave Wilson, managing director of NRS Dounreay.

The site is complex, its decommissioning is challenging and we can offer superb training and development opportunities at the cutting edge of science and engineering.

February 17, 2025 Posted by | decommission reactor, UK | Leave a comment

A drone pierced the outer shell of Ukraine’s Chernobyl nuclear plant. Radiation levels are normal


AP News 14th Feb 2025

CHERNOBYL NUCLEAR POWER STATION, Ukraine (AP) — A drone armed with a warhead hit the protective outer shell of Ukraine’s Chernobyl nuclear plant early Friday, punching a hole in the structure and briefly starting a fire, in an attack Kyiv blamed on Russia. The Kremlin denied it was responsible.

Radiation levels at the shuttered plant in the Kyiv region — site of the world’s worst nuclear accident — have not increased, according to the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency, which said the strike did not breach the plant’s inner containment shell.

The IAEA did not attribute blame, saying only that its team stationed at the site heard an explosion and was informed that a drone had struck the shell.

Fighting around nuclear power plants has repeatedly raised fears of a nuclear catastrophe during three years of war, particularly in a country where many vividly remember the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, which killed at least 30 people and spewed radioactive fallout over much of the Northern Hemisphere.

The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, which is Europe’s biggest, has occasionally been hit by drones during the war without causing significant damage……………………………………………………………………

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied Russia was responsible. “There is no talk about strikes on nuclear infrastructure, nuclear energy facilities. Any such claim isn’t true. Our military doesn’t do that,” Peskov said in a conference call with reporters.

It was not possible to independently confirm who was behind the strike. Both sides frequently trade blame when nuclear sites come under attack. https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-war-chernobyl-zelenskyy-71d781dbd66754d0a548edd388f3447a

February 17, 2025 Posted by | incidents, Ukraine | Leave a comment

World’s sea-ice falls to record low

The world’s frozen oceans, which help to keep the planet cool, currently
have less ice than ever previously recorded, satellite data shows. Sea-ice
around the north and south poles acts like a giant mirror by reflecting
much of the Sun’s energy back into space. But as rising temperatures cause
this bright layer to shrink, the dark ocean below can absorb more heat,
warming the planet further. This latest sea-ice low appears to have been
driven by a combination of warm air, warm seas and winds breaking apart the
ice. Over the 5 days to 13 February, the combined extent of Arctic and
Antarctic sea-ice was 15.76 million sq km (6.08 million sq miles),
according to BBC analysis of data from the US National Snow and Ice Data
Center (NSIDC). This breaks the previous 5-day record low of 15.93 million
sq km (6.15 million sq miles) from January-February 2023.

 BBC 15th Feb 2025,
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgeydkz08go

February 17, 2025 Posted by | climate change | Leave a comment

Radioactive Roulette: Uranium Mining Threatens Vital Southern African Aquifer

Andrew Maramwidze , 16 Jan 25,  https://namibianminingnews.com/radioactive-roulette-uranium-mining-threatens-vital-southern-african-aquifer/?fbclid=IwY2xjawIeBAdleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHSb3NRHlM9u5GURoopgphOqCBJptJNaq2Brc8FAAJr2DXIXC9rPY_nk-uA_aem_TR9RB_c4htmreaRa1XUdXA

The idyllic image of the Stampriet Transboundary Aquifer System, a vast freshwater reserve stretching across Namibia, South Africa, and Botswana, is under threat. The Namibian government has issued a flurry of uranium exploration permits, igniting fears that this precious resource could be irrevocably contaminated by the very industry it is meant to sustain.

This aquifer, roughly the size of Austria, provides a lifeline for over 50,000 people across the region. However, the allure of uranium, a key component in nuclear power generation, has enticed mining companies to stake their claims. While the Namibian government insists on safeguarding the aquifer, the potential for contamination looms large.

Uranium mining, by its very nature, carries significant environmental risks. The process often involves injecting sulfuric acid into the ground to dissolve uranium-rich rock, a method that can leach radioactive fluids into the surrounding environment. The long-term consequences of such contamination are dire, potentially leading to severe health issues for local populations, including cancer, kidney damage, and respiratory problems.

The experience of other mining regions, such as the boreal zone in Canada, provides a sobering cautionary tale. Acid mine drainage and mine effluents have contaminated numerous water sources, highlighting the difficulty of mitigating the environmental impact of large-scale mining operations. Furthermore, the long-term rehabilitation of mine sites often proves challenging, with determining individual mine’s responsibility for environmental damage proving to be a complex and protracted process.

The Namibian government, while acknowledging the potential risks, has awarded 35 uranium exploration permits, covering a vast expanse of territory. This raises serious concerns about the adequacy of environmental impact assessments and the long-term sustainability of the aquifer.

The potential impact on the aquifer extends beyond Namibia’s borders. The Stampriet Transboundary Aquifer System is a shared resource, and its contamination would have far-reaching consequences for South Africa and Botswana.

The need for cooperation between the three nations is paramount. A comprehensive, independent scientific assessment of the potential risks is crucial, along with the development of robust environmental safeguards and a clear plan for long-term monitoring and mitigation.

While the allure of mineral wealth is undeniable, it is imperative to prioritize the long-term health and well-being of the people who depend on this vital water source. The potential consequences of uranium mining in this sensitive region are simply too grave to ignore.

The question remains: Is the short-term economic gain worth the long-term environmental and human cost? The answer, for the sake of future generations, must be a resounding no.

February 17, 2025 Posted by | Namibia, Uranium | Leave a comment

Nuclear missing from Europe’s draft Clean Industrial Deal subsidy rules

And green hydrogen might get more preferable treatment than low-carbon hydrogen

Stefano Porciello Euractiv , Feb 14, 2025, https://www.euractiv.com/section/eet/news/nuclear-missing-from-draft-clean-industrial-deal-subsidy-rules/

Nuclear energy isn’t mentioned once in the European Commission’s draft rules for looser state aid.

The draft, seen by Euractiv, appears to contradict the EU industry chief Stéphane Séjourné, who said that Europe would “finally stop ignoring nuclear power” with its new strategy just two days ago.

Looser state aid rules are a  key component of the Commission’s ‘Clean Industrial Deal’ package, which aims to boost the fortunes of Europe’s decarbonised industry. The main text is expected to land on 26 February.

The draft state aid rules, which could still change before the final draft is published, shows that preferential treatment may be offered to renewable ‘green’ hydrogen over ‘low-carbon’ hydrogen, which can be produced from nuclear or fossil fuels matched with carbon capture.

When industry decarbonisation projects use hydrogen, EU member states should either make sure that these use only green hydrogen.

Alternatively, if low-carbon hydrogen is used, the project should also use a minimum proportion of green hydrogen. This threshold is linked to the amount of renewable power on the country’s electricity grid.

The new rules are expected to replace the Temporary Crisis and Transition Framework, which was adopted in March 2023 to boost Europe’s green transition.

The recently adopted EU Competitiveness Compass indicated that a new state aid framework could be expected in the second quarter of 2025.

A finalised draft of the new state aid rules could be published after the Clean Industrial Deal and may be adopted before summer.











February 17, 2025 Posted by | politics international | Leave a comment

UK Government urged to scrap nuclear weapons ‘once and for all’

While our armed forces wrestle with two decades of cuts, the UK Labour Government is determined to waste more than £100 billion on nuclear weapons over the next decade.

By Lucy Jackson, Multimedia Journalist, The National 15th Feb 2025

THE UK Government has been urged to scrap its nuclear weapons arsenal “once and for all” amid concerns the country’s defence capability is in a “woeful state”.

It comes after a former head of the army urged Keir Starmer to commit to defence spending or “be consigned” to “the bin of history”.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4, ex-chief of the general staff Lord Dannatt said defence spending should rise to a 3.5% share of the economy.

The UK currently spends around 2.3% of gross domestic product on defence, a figure the UK Government wants to increase to 2.5%.

Dannatt said: “Unless Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves can find ways of producing more money, well beyond 2.5%, towards 3% or 3.5% for starters on our defence budget, then this strategic defence review is going to be hollow, it’s going to be a failure and, frankly, it’ll consign Keir Starmer to the bin of history.

“Our military is so run down at the present moment, numerically and as far as capability and equipment is concerned, it would potentially be quite embarrassing.”

The SNP have backed calls for defence spending to be increased to at least 2.5%.

However, the party called for the UK Government to scrap its nuclear weapons defence enterprise “once and for all”.

The UK’s nuclear weapons arsenal is stored in Scotland at HM Naval Base Clyde, west of Glasgow. Submarines are based at Faslane, while nuclear warheads are stored, processed and maintained at the nearby Royal Naval Armaments Depot at Coulport.

The party’s Westminster defence spokesperson, Dave Doogan, said Britain’s defence capability was in a “woeful state”.

Doogan told The National: “As insecurity and conflict foment across the world, including here in Europe, the comments from Lord Dannatt are incredibly concerning and reveal the woeful state of Britain’s defence capability.

“While our armed forces wrestle with two decades of cuts, the UK Labour Government is determined to waste more than £100 billion on nuclear weapons over the next decade.

“With the UK’s nuclear weapon vanity obsession hanging like a millstone around our conventional forces’ budget, the Labour Government should for once do the right thing and scrap the defence nuclear enterprise once and for all.”……………………. https://www.thenational.scot/news/24938558.uk-government-urged-scrap-nuclear-weapons-once-all/

February 17, 2025 Posted by | UK, weapons and war | Leave a comment

Japan to pick final disposal sites for Fukushima soil around 2030

 https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2025/02/12/japan/fukushima-disposal-sites/?fbclid=iwy2xjawieatflehrua2flbqixmqabhsg4y7avwtfefjq31d1xggrkcnxelunlv4sc3intwhnzq4htdltaeaqxvq_aem_es-i9dwwgmqvbhmm2rxeag

The Environment Ministry plans to decide around 2030 or later where to finally dispose of soil removed from the ground during decontamination work after the March 2011 disaster at Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings’ Fukushima No.1 nuclear power plant, it was learned Wednesday.

The plan was included in a draft timetable for the final disposal of such soil outside Fukushima Prefecture by March 2045, presented by the ministry at a meeting of a related expert panel on the day. The ministry will consider a process for selecting final disposal sites from fiscal 2025.

As of the end of December, about 14 million cubic meters of such soil had been transported to an interim storage facility straddling the Fukushima towns of Okuma and Futaba.

Three-quarters of the soil had radiation concentrations of 8,000 becquerels per kilogram or less and will be reused in public works, while the rest will be subject to final disposal.

Final disposal sites are estimated to require up to 50 hectares if the volume of the soil is not reduced, or 2 to 3 hectares if the volume is reduced. Meanwhile, radiation levels would be higher in the reduced soil.

The government is slated to draw up a basic plan as early as this spring for reusing some of the soil and finally disposing of the rest.

February 17, 2025 Posted by | Fukushima continuing, wastes | Leave a comment

Third Meeting of States Parties  to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons 

The Third Meeting of States Parties will take place on 3 to 7 March 2025 at United Nations Headquarters in New York, with H.E. Ambassador Akan Rakhmetullin (Kazakhstan) serving as President. A draft agenda for the meeting is under consideration by States Parties. This page will provide updates about the meeting itself and practical information for civil society organisations that wish to participate. Information is also available on the UN website.

Key dates:

  • 20 December 2024 – Deadline for organisational accreditation
  • 3 January 2025 – Deadline for NGO side event applications to ICAN 
  • 3 January 2025 – Deadline for government side event & exhibition applications by Member States
  • 4 January 2025 – UNODA will confirm whether your organisation has been approved or denied
  • 17 February 2025 – Deadline for the submission of Working Papers to ICAN
  • 24 February 2025 – Final date to submit your full delegation list to ODA and to register on Indico
  • 2 March 2025 – ICAN Campaigner Forum
  • 3-7 March 2025 – third Meeting of States Parties

more………………………………………………………… https://www.icanw.org/tpnw_third_meeting_of_states_parties?fbclid=IwY2xjawIeAAlleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHTXXryuB-SuwWTYOJO87uOU8J9YHwXtEnzijT4ZaFqZ3ccR7_4Kit5RHtg_aem_VpSB80BKJCpThsbOqIulaA

February 17, 2025 Posted by | Events | Leave a comment

Trump: Military Spending Could Be Cut in Half and There’s No Reason To Build New Nuclear Weapons

The president said he wants to have a global conference with Russia and China to discuss cutting military spending

by Dave DeCamp February 13, 2025 ,  https://news.antiwar.com/2025/02/13/trump-says-military-spending-could-be-cut-in-half-and-that-theres-no-reason-to-build-new-nukes/

President Trump told reporters on Thursday that he believes US military spending could eventually be cut in half and that he wants to pursue the idea as part of an agreement with Russia and China. He also said there was no reason to build new nuclear weapons.

“At some point, when things settle down, I’m going to meet with China and I’m going to meet with Russia, in particular those two, and I’m going to say there’s no reason for us to be spending almost $1 trillion on the military … and I’m going to say we can spend this on other things,” Trump said.

“When we straighten it all out, then one of the first meetings I want to have is with President Xi of China and President Putin of Russia, and I want to say let’s cut our military budget in half. And we can do that, and I think we’ll be able to do that,” he added.

The US spends significantly more on its military than Russia and China combined. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), in 2023, the US accounted for 37% of global military spending. China came in second but was still far behind, accounting for 12% of military spending, and Russia was in third at 4.5%.

Discussing nuclear weapons, Trump said, “There’s no reason for us to be building brand new nuclear weapons. We already have so many you could destroy the world 50 times over or 100 times over. And here we are building new nuclear weapons, and [Russia] is building new nuclear weapons, and China is building new nuclear weapons.”

The US has been working to modernize its nuclear triad, a project that’s expected to cost $1.5 trillion. Trump also repeated his call to seek “denuclearization” with Russia and said Russian President Vladimir Putin had agreed to do so “in a very big way.”

Trump has previously claimed that he was pursuing denuclearization with Russia and China in his first term in office, but the US also withdrew from key arms control treaties during that time.

Russia recently said the outlook was not good for the state of US arms control as the last nuclear arms control treaty between the two powers is due to expire in February 2026, and there’s currently no replacement. But Trump’s talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on the Ukraine war could lead to arms control negotiations.

On the other hand, Trump also recently signed an executive order to build a major new missile defense system to cover the US and its military bases abroad, which could lead to a new arms race and will come with a huge price tag. Republicans in Congress are also looking to increase military spending by at least $100 billion.

February 17, 2025 Posted by | politics international, USA | Leave a comment

Two-thirds of Americans still believe climate change is impacting the Earth, despite what Trump contends

As the Trump administration works to dismantle and erase any mention of
climate change on a federal level, a new report has found that the majority
of Americans believe the Earth’s warming is affecting weather across the
country. Two-thirds of those recently surveyed by the Yale Program on
Climate Change Communication and the George Mason University Center for
Climate Change Communication said they think global warming is impacting
U.S. weather. Those who believe global warming is happening outnumber those
who believe it is not by a ratio of more than five to one, the survey also
found.

Independent 14th Feb 2025 https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/trump-climate-change-americans-poll-b2698628.html

February 17, 2025 Posted by | climate change, USA | Leave a comment

TEPCO takes on challenge of making space for Fukushima nuclear debris

FILE PHOTO: Storage tanks for radioactive water are seen at Tokyo Electric Power Co’s (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Okuma town, Fukushima prefecture, Japan February 18, 2019. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File Photo

Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (Japan) (AFP) – Workers at Japan’s crippled Fukushima nuclear plant have started dismantling water storage tanks to free up space for tonnes of nuclear debris, 14 years after the facility was hit by a devastating tsunami.…………………….

France24 15th Feb 2025, https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20250215-tepco-takes-on-challenge-of-making-space-for-fukushima-nuclear-debris

February 17, 2025 Posted by | Fukushima continuing, wastes | Leave a comment

Green power- not for us?


 Renew Extra 15th Feb 2025

The Social Market Foundation, a cross-party think-tank, says that 48% of UK survey respondents felt the ‘green transition’ was ‘happening to them, not with them’.  And 63% thought it wouldn’t work anyway. Certainly there has been some opposition to some green polices, and there have been claims that Starmer’s plan to remove ‘infrastructure blockers’, for example local objectors to green energy projects like wind and solar farms, and the extra grid links needed for them, could backfire.  Although Labours plans for ‘pushing past nimbyism’ and putting many new small nuclear plants around the country could also attract fierce local opposition. In this case, small isn’t green- indeed, as well as potentially costing more, SMRs may actually increase security, safety and waste management problem. Lots of issues there too then…………………………………………………………………………

……………………………………………………  for the present, wind, on and offshore, and solar, large and small, are by far the main contenders for UK power supply, with wind, now at 30% of UK power, already overtaking natural gas.  That’s good news, but, as David Toke has noted, with heat supply still not seriously being addressed, if we really do want to get to net zero soon, then the pressure will be on to get all the existing renewable options expanding even more rapidly- along with storage. And, I would add, also getting inputs from new sources like tidal turbines as fast as possible.  As well as paying proper attention to energy saving and energy efficiency- the cash and carbon saving option that few oppose, but sadly too few actually adopt.       https://renewextraweekly.blogspot.com/2025/02/green-power-not-for-us.html

February 17, 2025 Posted by | ENERGY, UK | Leave a comment

Starmer’s latest con job

The government’s nuclear power expansion plan is a hollow betrayal of working people that panders to wealthy corporations and will rip off consumers, writes LINDA PENTZ GUNTER

No nuclear reactor, small or otherwise, will ever be built in time, affordably or in enough quantities to address the climate crisis that is already upon us.

February 15, 2025,
https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/starmer%E2%80%99s-latest-con-job


IS KEIR STARMER really so desperate to bask in the orange glow of omnipotence radiating from the monomaniacal US president that he feels compelled to parrot Donald Trump’s catchphrases?

Apparently yes. Starmer really did say “build, baby build.”

The context for this abhorrent utterance was his announcement that mini-nuclear power plants — known as small modular reactors — would proliferate across Britain until they are “commonplace.”

According to Starmer, they would be smaller and cheaper than current nuclear power plants. Those living near nuclear construction sites could be compensated for this inconvenience with lowered electricity rates. New reactors would be in place by 2032.

All of this is completely unsubstantiated by any shred of empirical evidence, but more on that in a moment.

Starmer’s “fast forward on nuclear” would, he claims, deliver a supply of good jobs as well as “homegrown power.” (If you are searching a UK map for the “homegrown” uranium mines that would supply the fuel for these reactors, keep looking.)

The restriction on building new reactors on existing nuclear sites is to be lifted so they could be built anywhere and everywhere and people who “hadn’t thought there’s going to be anything nuclear near me” will simply “get used to the idea of it,” Starmer said.

Oddly, the first new site doesn’t appear to be adjacent to Number 10 Downing Street.

The whole thing is of course a massive con that would, if such a plan ever materialised, dramatically raise electricity rates, further fleece taxpayers, impede real progress on climate by diverting money away from already available renewable energy solutions, and put countless communities in danger.

And of course, what will become of the radioactive waste these “small” reactors would still produce? A recent Stanford study found that small modular reactors will actually generate more radioactive waste than conventional nuclear power plants.

Unions should not be fooled. Promising jobs that will likely never materialise and would be better created immediately in industries such as renewable energy that are here now and have a long-term future, isn’t a boon to working people, it’s yet another betrayal.

Further, nuclear power, as the industry has itself demonstrated over and over, is the slowest and most expensive energy choice among the so-called low-carbon options.

No nuclear reactor, small or otherwise, will ever be built in time, affordably or in enough quantities to address the climate crisis that is already upon us.

Study after study shows that greater carbon emissions can be achieved far faster by investing the same amount in renewable energy instead of nuclear power.

The Starmer government is deliberately ignoring that to pander to big corporations rather than invest in the public good.

Nuclear power is in any case not low-carbon, and certainly not carbon-zero as the industry often brags.


The Hinkley Point C two-reactor site on the Somerset coast will have used between 200,000 to one million tons of steel by the time the two reactors are complete, according to various estimates, and will consume the equivalent electrical power of a small country.

Further, nuclear power, unlike the renewable energy industry, has demonstrated negative learning by actually becoming slower to build and more expensive over time.


In October 2021, Lazard, one of the world’s leading financial advisory and asset management firms, calculated that the average construction cost of a utility-scale photovoltaic plant in the US was £695 per kilowatt of generation capacity. A nuclear plant, it said, would cost around £8,185 per kilowatt — almost 12 times as much.

A Sussex University study looking at 180 nuclear construction projects around the world found that 175 of them took, on average, 64 per cent more time than anticipated with final costs 177 per cent higher than originally predicted.

Small modular reactor projects will be more expensive than conventional nuclear plants because, being so small, they have poor economies of scale, requiring massive upfront orders to make a factory producing them financially viable.

Small reactors also require an equally massive deployment in order to generate the equivalent amount of energy currently produced by large-sized reactors. It’s why the industry has rejected small modular reactors for decades.


Wealthy corporations such as Rolls-Royce, one of the companies eager to build small modular reactors in Britain, are not willing to shoulder any of this risk. But, under Starmer’s scheme, the high costs of new reactor development and construction will be passed on to consumers and taxpayers.

In fact, this is already in place. A new Regulated Asset Base (RAB) funding model came into force in the UK in May 2022. RAB incentivises private investment in new nuclear projects by charging consumers through their electricity bills — with no guarantee that the nuclear plant will ever be completed.

This is precisely the fate that befell ratepayers in South Carolina in the US, where a similar law is in place and where two planned reactors were abandoned in 2017, by which time ratepayers had paid £1,6 billion for reactors that would never deliver a watt of electricity.

The extent to which the nuclear choice is a bad deal for Britain was made plain back in 2020, when the UK Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy estimated that a large-scale solar project targeted to become operational in the UK in 2025 would produce electricity with a levelised cost of £44 per megawatt hour. Its estimate for nuclear power was £102 per megawatt hour. (Levelising takes into account all variable costs from licensing, construction, operation and eventual decommissioning and waste management.)

No nuclear corporations — not even multibillionaire Bill Gates’s nuclear reactor company Terrapower — will build new nuclear plants without charging both consumers and taxpayers to do it. Gates has asked the US government — ie US taxpayers — to foot half of his project’s likely underestimated £3.2 billion cost.

As physicist MV Ramana points out in his new book Nuclear Is Not The Solution, corporations only embark on new nuclear projects “when the public can be made to bear a large fraction of the high costs of building nuclear plants and operating them, either in the form of higher power bills or in the form of taxes.”

Starmer’s aspirations of empire that would make little Britain “one of the world’s leaders on nuclear” are no more than a craven capitulation to Rolls-Royce and other corporations, which have been complaining for years that the process in place is too arduous and slow, with too many regulatory hurdles. (Let’s not forget that Rolls Royce is an integral part of Britain’s nuclear weapons complex. Late last month the company got a new £9bn eight-year deal to support Britain’s nuclear submarine programme, the most lethal destructive force on Earth. This is not a coincidence.)

Cue Starmer’s Nuclear Regulatory Taskforce announced with a brazen headline on the government’s own website: “Government rips up rules to fire-up nuclear power.”

The taskforce mandate is ostensibly to fast-track and streamline approval of new reactor design and development. But despite Starmer’s protestations that there would be “no compromise on safety,” the phrases “fast-track” and “streamline” are code for precisely that; safety shortcuts.

Ripping up the rules is exactly what this is about — the rules concerning safety. They were there for a reason, given nuclear power is the most lethal method yet discovered by which to boil water. And reducing safety oversight is a particularly dangerous drift given that none of the current small modular reactors — still effectively just drawings on paper — have proven safety records.


Indeed, quite the opposite. Whether they are based on miniature versions of the traditional pressurised water reactor, such as those being built at Hinkley Point C, or “fast reactors,” none are new designs and all have significant known safety flaws.

Even the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, a willing industry lapdog, declined the design submitted by Oklo for its 15-50 megawatt Aurora micro reactor because the company could not answer fundamental safety questions.

“Oklo’s application continues to contain significant information gaps in its description of Aurora’s potential accidents as well as its classification of safety systems and components,” the NRC wrote.

That should be a warning for the British public who are not being asked but told by the Starmer government that they must accept a nuclear reactor in their community for the good of the country’s “energy security.”


This threat is perhaps the most sinister part of the entire new nuclear announcement. There will be no dissent. The Starmer government will “push past nimbyism,” “take on the blockers” and “break through” any line of resistance from MPs minded to prevent a mini-Chernobyl happening in their constituents’ backyards.

While his autocratic idol in Washington DC continues to fling out a daily stream of fascistic executive orders like a hippopotamus with diarrhoea, Starmer is seemingly striving to match him at every turn.

Whether it’s stripping pensioners of life-saving winter fuel allowances, keeping children in poverty by refusing to lift the two-child benefit cap, autocratically arresting peaceful protesters on climate or Palestine, or misleading the British public with false promises about nuclear power, Starmer is consistent in at least one regard: making one bad decision after another.

The new nuclear plan is a “great opportunity” for Rolls-Royce, a company so deserving it ranks as “among the best in the world,” crowed Starmer. Maybe he’s just looking for a shiny new car to go with those free designer suits and A-level crash pads?

Linda Pentz Gunter is a writer based in Takoma Park, Maryland, and the founder of Beyond Nuclear, a non-governmental anti-nuclear advocacy group.

February 17, 2025 Posted by | politics, UK | Leave a comment