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UK hands over its nuclear safety conditions to Trump’s administration?

It is both ironic and worrying to read that the
government is proposing to blindly accept assessments by US safety
regulators in its panic to build new nuclear reactors (“Deal with US to
fast-track mini nuclear reactors”, news, Sep 15).

The public voted in
2016 to leave the European Union in order to increase sovereignty over
important decisions for this country, and to enable government decisions to
be made more accountably and closer to home. The irony is that less than
ten years later the government has decided to hand over crucial nuclear
safety decisions to the Trump administration.

The worry is that the US
Nuclear Regulatory Commission has conflicting roles as both a regulator and
a sales organisation promoting US nuclear technology. Its approval process
has been described as rubber-stamping, and it has widely been criticised
for the influence that the nuclear industry has in its decisions.

The organisation is facing cuts in its workforce from the Trump government, and the president will be appointing new commissioners to the NRC who share his own views on safety and environmental protections. It is hard to comprehend how this proposal will maintain safety standards or encourage communities that suddenly face having a new nuclear reactor built in their locality to welcome such development. The move is purely a leg-up for the US nuclear industry, and has nothing to do with the interests of the British public.

 The Times 16th Sept 2025. https://www.thetimes.com/comment/letters-to-editor/article/times-letters-public-disapproval-trump-state-visit-7rs33trdn

September 20, 2025 Posted by | safety, USA | Leave a comment

Small Modular nuclear reactors sound great, but won’t be ready any time soon.

The UK government has announced a raft of tiny nuclear power projects, while Russia, China and a host of tech giants are also betting big on small nuclear reactor designs. Does the idea make sense and can they really be built any time soon?

By Matthew Sparkes, New Scientist 15th Sept 2025,

Bruno Merk at the University of Liverpool in the
UK says Rosatom, Russia’s state nuclear energy organisation, recently
finished building a batch of small reactors for a highly specific use in
nuclear-powered icebreaker ships. Crucially, they then continued building
more, showing either that there is demand from somewhere, or that Rosatom
is taking a risk and building them as a commercial demonstration in the
hope of selling more despite a raft of energy sanctions imposed after its
invasion of Ukraine.

China, too, has built a Linglong One small nuclear
reactor, but it is not clear whether it will yet be a commercially viable
product.

And giant technology firms like Amazon, Google and Microsoft are
investing in these sorts of nuclear technologies, too. David Dye at
Imperial College London says tiny reactors make sense for remote military
installations or Arctic sites, but is sceptical about using tiny nuclear
reactors to power these tech giants’ needs. He says it is far easier to
build data centres near a ready supply of energy instead. Michael Bluck at
Imperial College London says there is no engineering or scientific reason
we can’t build tiny nuclear reactors, and build them fast. He points out
the first experimental reactors were small, and many devices of a similar
size operate in universities and military submarines around the world
still. “Size is not the issue. It’s the modularity, it’s the building
it on a production line, it’s the standardisation of components. It’s
really practical. It’s standard engineering,” says Bluck.

But there are certainly plenty of drawbacks to miniaturising nuclear reactors. Merk says for nuclear power, scale brings useful efficiencies in both cost and
energy. Small and large reactors both require the same thickness of
concrete shielding to safely contain their reactions and, because the
volume of a reactor grows faster than its surface area when you make it
larger, bigger reactors are cheaper per megawatt of capacitySmaller reactors also make less energy from the same amount of fuel because of inefficiencies in the chain reaction of neutron fission – smaller amounts
of fuel lose more neutrons at the surface, rather than harnessing them to
continue the reaction. Bluck says there are two different approaches
involved in the new government announcements: X-Energy has designed a
gas-cooled reactor called the Xe-100 which uses a somewhat unusual design
and a type of fuel that could take 10 years to achieve regulatory approval,
while Last Energy’s PWR-20 reactor is a relatively familiar pressurised
water reactor, the same type as Sizewell B nuclear power station in
England, using the same fuel. The former could be the way forward, but the
latter may be able to come to market sooner. But even with standard fuel
and familiar technology, Bluck says Last Energy is likely five years from
having even a prototype reactor built in the UK. “Everyone would like it
tomorrow,” he says. “But I think they’re aware that energy isn’t
like that.” https://www.newscientist.com/article/2496252-modular-nuclear-reactors-sound-great-but-wont-be-ready-any-time-soon/

September 20, 2025 Posted by | Small Modular Nuclear Reactors | Leave a comment

Trump masters the art of “dobbing” on an Australian journalist.

By Vince Hooper | 20 September 2025, https://independentaustralia.net/politics/politics-display/trump-masters-the-art-of-dobbing-on-an-australian-journalist,20177

Trump turned a simple conflict-of-interest question into a schoolyard spat — threatening to “tell on” a journo to Australia’s Prime Minister, writes Vince Hooper.

IT TAKES A CERTAIN theatre of the absurd to transform a routine White House press gaggle into a diplomatic sideshow. Yet that is precisely what happened when an Australian Broadcasting Corporation journalist, researching U.S. President Donald Trump’s family business interests, asked a straightforward question about whether it is appropriate for a sitting president to be engaged in so many business activities.

The question was sober and reasonable: a matter of conflicts of interest, wealth accumulation, and transparency in public office. Trump’s response, however, veered quickly into the surreal. He first insisted that his children were running the business empire, then abruptly shifted the ground.

Instead of grappling with the premise, he went after the journalist’s nationality, declaring:

“The Australians, you’re hurting Australia.”

And then came the kicker — Trump promised to personally inform Prime Minister Anthony Albanese about the journalist’s behaviour, as if geopolitics had suddenly collapsed into a schoolyard spat where the ultimate threat was tattling to the headmaster. The art of dobbing.

At one level, the episode is comic, a reminder of Trump’s instinct for spectacle and grievance. But beneath the absurdity lies something darker: a consistent refusal to treat journalistic inquiry as a legitimate part of democracy. Instead, accountability is reframed as disloyalty. The president of the United States, confronted with a basic question about conflicts of interest, responded not with explanation but with a kind of diplomatic intimidation.

This is part of a longer pattern. From his first term to his second, Trump has cast journalists as enemies rather than interlocutors. The “war on the media” is not rhetorical garnish but central to his political style. In this worldview, truth-seekers are painted as traitors, tough questions are reframed as acts of sabotage, and now even foreign allies are enlisted as props in his domestic culture wars. By claiming that the ABC reporter was “hurting Australia,” Trump implied that the act of pressing a leader for clarity was somehow an attack on his allies themselves.

What is most revealing is how quickly Trump personalised diplomacy. The U.S.–Australia relationship is built on strategic alignment, trade, military cooperation, and shared democratic values. It is not dictated by whether a reporter poses a question he finds confrontational. Yet in his rhetoric, the fate of nations collapsed into the thin skin of one man. This habit of reducing statecraft to personal loyalty tests is not merely undignified; it is dangerous. If bilateral alliances can be bent around one leader’s grievances, they risk becoming unstable, transactional, and unpredictable.

Trump turned a simple conflict-of-interest question into a schoolyard spat — threatening to “tell on” a journo to Australia’s Prime Minister, writes Vince Hooper.

IT TAKES A CERTAIN theatre of the absurd to transform a routine White House press gaggle into a diplomatic sideshow. Yet that is precisely what happened when an Australian Broadcasting Corporation journalist, researching U.S. President Donald Trump’s family business interests, asked a straightforward question about whether it is appropriate for a sitting president to be engaged in so many business activities.

The question was sober and reasonable: a matter of conflicts of interest, wealth accumulation, and transparency in public office. Trump’s response, however, veered quickly into the surreal. He first insisted that his children were running the business empire, then abruptly shifted the ground.

Instead of grappling with the premise, he went after the journalist’s nationality, declaring:

“The Australians, you’re hurting Australia.”

And then came the kicker — Trump promised to personally inform Prime Minister Anthony Albanese about the journalist’s behaviour, as if geopolitics had suddenly collapsed into a schoolyard spat where the ultimate threat was tattling to the headmaster. The art of dobbing.

At one level, the episode is comic, a reminder of Trump’s instinct for spectacle and grievance. But beneath the absurdity lies something darker: a consistent refusal to treat journalistic inquiry as a legitimate part of democracy. Instead, accountability is reframed as disloyalty. The president of the United States, confronted with a basic question about conflicts of interest, responded not with explanation but with a kind of diplomatic intimidation.

This is part of a longer pattern. From his first term to his second, Trump has cast journalists as enemies rather than interlocutors. The “war on the media” is not rhetorical garnish but central to his political style. In this worldview, truth-seekers are painted as traitors, tough questions are reframed as acts of sabotage, and now even foreign allies are enlisted as props in his domestic culture wars. By claiming that the ABC reporter was “hurting Australia,” Trump implied that the act of pressing a leader for clarity was somehow an attack on his allies themselves.

What is most revealing is how quickly Trump personalised diplomacy. The U.S.–Australia relationship is built on strategic alignment, trade, military cooperation, and shared democratic values. It is not dictated by whether a reporter poses a question he finds confrontational. Yet in his rhetoric, the fate of nations collapsed into the thin skin of one man. This habit of reducing statecraft to personal loyalty tests is not merely undignified; it is dangerous. If bilateral alliances can be bent around one leader’s grievances, they risk becoming unstable, transactional, and unpredictable.

Compare this to other democratic leaders. Joe Biden, for all his gaffes, generally responds to press scrutiny with irritation at worst, never with the threat of raising the matter in a diplomatic call. Anthony Albanese himself fields barbed questions from Australian journalists on policy, integrity, and leadership without implying that the act of questioning undermines Australia’s alliances. Even populist figures like Britain’s ex-PM Boris Johnson or India’s Narendra Modi, while often prickly, have not suggested that reporters risk harming national security simply by doing their jobs. Trump stands almost alone in converting a press query into a matter of international loyalty.

In the end, Trump’s outburst says less about Australia than about America. It was not Australia’s reputation on trial, nor the alliance, nor the ABC reporter’s patriotism. It was the president’s tolerance for accountability — and that, once again, proved to be vanishingly thin and fake.

Vince Hooper is a proud Australian/British citizen and professor of finance and discipline head at SP Jain School of Global Management with campuses in London, Dubai, Mumbai, Singapore and Sydney.

September 20, 2025 Posted by | media, USA | Leave a comment

UK Ministry of Defence dismiss MP’ s call for inquiry into trident bases nuclear leaks.

 THE Ministry of Defence (MoD) has dismissed calls from an SNP MSP for a
public inquiry into nuclear leaks at Trident bases, claiming it is
“factually incorrect” to suggest they posed a safety risk.

Earlier this week Bill Kidd, the Glasgow Anniesland MSP, held a debate on reported nuclear safety incidents at Faslane and Coulport, where Britain’s nuclear fleet and arsenal are stored.

Kidd secured the backing of 28 MSPs from the
SNP, Scottish Greens, Scottish Labour, Alba, and one independent. However,
the motion was not voted on as it was debated as member’s business after
decision time.

It comes after The Ferret revealed that nuclear waste leaked
into Loch Long, in Argyll and Bute. The outlet reported that pipe bursts
were recorded in 2010, two in 2019, and two more in 2021. After an FOI
battle that lasted six years, the Scottish Environment Protection Agency
(Sepa) – the environment watchdog – stated the Royal Navy failed to
properly maintain a network of 1500 pipes at the Coulport armaments depot,
on the banks of Loch Long.

 The National 19th Sept 2025, https://www.thenational.scot/news/25481047.mod-dismiss-snp-msp-call-inquiry-trident-bases-nuclear-leaks/

September 20, 2025 Posted by | safety, UK | Leave a comment

Saudi Arabia, nuclear-armed Pakistan sign mutual defence pact

Saudi Arabia and nuclear-armed Pakistan signed a formal mutual defense pact on Wednesday, in a move that significantly strengthens a decades-long
security partnership amid heightened regional tensions. The enhanced
defense ties come as Gulf Arab states grow increasingly wary about the
reliability of the United States as their longstanding security guarantor.
Israel’s attack on Qatar last week heightened those concerns.

Reuters 17th Sept 2025,
https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/saudi-arabia-nuclear-armed-pakistan-sign-mutual-defence-pact-2025-09-17/

September 20, 2025 Posted by | Pakistan, politics international, Saudi Arabia | Leave a comment

U.S. Nuclear Reactors will NOT Build a Strong Canada

Ontario Clean Air Alliance -Angela Bischoff, Director, Sept 17, 2025

Prime Minister Carney’s directive to the Major Projects Office to fast-track Doug Ford’s plan to build U.S. nuclear reactors in Ontario will: raise electricity rates, jeopardize national security and delay action on climate change. 

New U.S. GE-Hitachi nuclear reactors are the highest-cost option to meet Ontario’s electricity needs – costing 2 to 8 times more than new solar and wind power. As a result, these U.S. reactors will make life less affordable for Ontario’s hard-working families; and they will make Ontario’s industries less competitive.  

Building GE-Hitachi reactors will also jeopardize our national security by making Ontario dependent on enriched uranium imports from the U.S. – imports which President Trump could cut off at a moment’s notice.

Finally, building new nuclear reactors is the slowest option to phase-out gas power and protect our climate. Under Doug Ford’s nuclear & gas plan, 25% of our electricity will be produced by burning gas in 2030 – up from only 4% in 2017. To add insult to injury, more than 70% of Ontario’s gas supply is imported from the U.S. 

With wildfires burning around the world, we need to invest in the options that can reduce our climate-damaging emissions ASAP, not decades from now. We simply can’t afford to wait 10 to 20 years for new reactors to be built, when solar and wind can be built within months to three years. Combined with batteries, wind and solar can keep our lights on at a fraction of the cost of new nuclear reactors.

Instead of subsidizing the research and development costs for a U.S. multinational’s first-of-their-kind, experimental new nuclear reactors, we should be investing in options that will build a stronger, more prosperous and more secure Canada.

Here is what Prime Minister Carney should do.

1.         Rescind his request for the Major Project Office (MPO) to fast-track the building of U.S. nuclear reactors in Ontario.


2.         Rescind the Canada Infrastructure Bank’s $970 million loan for the building of GE-Hitachi’s first new nuclear reactor.

3.         Direct the MPO to fast-track roof top and parking lot solar in Ontario.

4.         Direct the MPO to fast-track cutting the red tape that is blocking the development of Great Lakes offshore wind power.

5.         Direct the MPO to fast-track the expansion of the inter-provincial electricity transmission links between Manitoba and Ontario and Ontario and Quebec to increase our ability to import low-cost water, wind and solar power from Manitoba, Quebec and the Maritimes.

September 20, 2025 Posted by | Canada, politics | Leave a comment

Human-made global warming ‘caused two in three heat deaths in Europe this summer’

Human-made global heating caused two in every three heat deaths in Europe
during this year’s scorching summer, an early analysis of mortality in 854
big cities has found. Epidemiologists and climate scientists attributed
16,500 out of 24,400 heat deaths from June to August to the extra hot
weather brought on by greenhouse gases. The rapid analysis, which relies on
established methods but has not yet been submitted for peer review, found
climate breakdown made the cities 2.2C hotter on average, greatly
increasing the death toll from dangerously warm weather.

Guardian 17th Sept 2025, https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/sep/17/human-made-global-warming-caused-two-in-three-heat-deaths-in-europe-this-summer-analysis-finds

September 20, 2025 Posted by | climate change | Leave a comment

U.S. Firms Boost UK Nuclear Sector with Major Deals

“Someday this will all be yours!”

Oil Price By City A.M – Sep 16, 2025

  • The UK and US have agreed to reduce the licensing time for nuclear projects from four years to two and broaden US companies’ access to the UK energy market.
  • Several US companies have struck significant deals with UK partners, including X-Energy to build advanced modular reactors in Hartlepool, Holtec to develop data centers powered by small modular reactors, and Last Energy for a micro modular nuclear plant at London Gateway.
  • The initiative aims to kickstart a “golden age of nuclear” in the UK, providing clean, homegrown energy, creating skilled jobs, and addressing high energy bills, though critics question the effectiveness of potential VAT cuts on energy bills.

…………………………………………………………………………………. Energy bills woes

The announcement comes as the government battles to bring down energy bills, which have almost doubled costs for households over the past eight years. 

Alongside increasing the domestic supply of energy, Chancellor Rachel Reeves is reportedly weighing cutting VAT on energy to help lower consumer prices.

However, critics have questioned whether the move, which could cost the government nearly £2bn, would deliver tangible improvements to household budgets, warning that wealthy families with larger homes would disproportionately benefit from the tax break. https://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Nuclear-Power/US-Firms-Boost-UK-Nuclear-Sector-with-Major-Deals.html

September 20, 2025 Posted by | business and costs, UK | Leave a comment

US and UK companies ink nuclear deals ahead of Trump visit

Transatlantic nuclear energy deals estimated to be worth over $100 billion
have been announced ahead of President Donald Trump’s state visit to the
United Kingdom this week. TerraPower, a Bill Gates-backed developer of
small nuclear reactors, announced Monday that it would work with
engineering firm KBR to study potential sites in the U.K. to deploy its
advanced Natrium reactors. Rockville, Maryland-based X-energy and British
energy company Centrica also announced plans to deploy up to 72 small
reactors for electricity and industrial heat in the U.K.

E&E News 16th Sept 2025, https://www.eenews.net/articles/us-and-uk-companies-ink-nuclear-deals-ahead-of-trump-visit/

September 20, 2025 Posted by | business and costs, UK | Leave a comment

What You Need to Know About the £38 Billion Sizewell C Nuclear Project inthe UK.

 Project Timeline: Development Consent Order (DCO) approved: July
20, 2022; Groundworks commenced: January 15, 2024; Final Investment
Decision (FID) reached: July 22, 2025; Construction duration: Expected to
take between nine and twelve years; Operational date: Expected in the
2030s.

Construction Review 15th Sept 2025, https://constructionreviewonline.com/construction-projects/uk-government-approves-38-billion-sizewell-c-nuclear-project/

September 20, 2025 Posted by | politics, UK | Leave a comment

Australia rooftop solar hits 26.8 GW as home battery uptake surges

Australia is on track to exceed its 2030 rooftop solar targets with a combined 1.1 GW of new capacity installed across 115,584 households and businesses in the first half of 2025.

September 15, 2025 David Carroll, https://www.pv-magazine.com/2025/09/15/australia-rooftop-solar-hits-26-8-gw-as-home-battery-uptake-surges/

A new report from the Clean Energy Council (CEC) shows that at the end of June there was a combined 26.8 GW of rooftop solar capacity deployed across 4.2 million homes and small businesses in Australia.

The CEC’s Rooftop Solar and Storage Report reveals that 115,584 rooftop solar units were installed nationwide in the first six months of the year, down 18% on the same period 12 months prior, while the total installed capacity of 1.1 GW was 15% lower than the 1.3 GW installed over the same period in 2024.

Despite the slowdown, the CEC said Australia is likely to exceed the Australian Energy Market Operator’s (AEMO) 2030 target for rooftop solar.

AEMO’s Integrated System Plan, which underpins the federal government’s 82% by 2030 renewable energy target, expects rooftop solar to contribute 36 GW to the National Electricity Market by the end of the decade.

The CEC said based on current trends, it expects the rollout of rooftop solar in Australia will reach 37.2 GW by June 2030, beating projections by 3.3%.

CEC Distributed Energy General Manager Con Hristodoulidis said the figures highlight the pivotal role of rooftop solar in keeping Australia’s energy transition on track.

“Australian consumers and small businesses are delivering the transition at breathtaking speed, turning suburban roofs into one of the biggest power stations in the country,” he said.

Rooftop solar contributed 12.8%, or 15,463 GWh, of Australia’s total energy generation in the first six months of the year, up from 11.5% in the same period 12 months prior.


The report also shows that Australians are embracing home batteries at record pace, with 85,000 battery units sold in the first half of 2025, representing a 191% increase from the same period last year.

The uptake has surged again since the introduction of the federal government’s Cheaper Home Batteries program with government data revealing more than 43,500 installations installed in July and August alone.

“Just as Australians have long understood the value of solar in lowering household energy bills, we are now seeing a surge in battery adoption, which allows households to store their own clean energy and maximise savings,” Hristodoulidis said.

Queensland added the most rooftop solar in the first half of 2025, with 326 MW of installed capacity, followed by New South Wales (NSW) and Victoria with 321 MW and 230 MW, respectively.

NSW has the highest level of total installed rooftop solar capacity in the nation at 7.5 GW, with Queensland second at 7.2 GW, ahead of Victoria with 5.4 GW. Queensland remains the state with the most installations, with 1.1 million.

September 20, 2025 Posted by | AUSTRALIA, renewable | Leave a comment

Time is now for Iran to act on inspections agreement, IAEA chief says

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief Rafael Grossi on Monday
urged Iran to immediately implement the agreement it signed with the UN
watchdog last week to resume inspections at the country’s bombed nuclear
sites.

 Iran International 15th Sept 2025,
https://www.iranintl.com/en/202509154534

September 20, 2025 Posted by | Iran, politics international | Leave a comment

Iran hardliners reject IAEA deal, but IRGC outlet voices support

 Iranian ultra-hardliners are criticizing Tehran’s recent agreement with
the IAEA in Cairo, despite its blessing by a top decision-making body
linked to the Supreme Leader, but an outlet linked to the Revolutionary
Guards offered support. The scrambled messaging suggests deep disagreement on Iran’s diplomatic path forward as renewed UN sanctions loom by months-end and arch-foe Israel continues to moot military attacks to
chasten Tehran.

 Iran International 16th Sept 2025, https://www.iranintl.com/en/202509158464

September 20, 2025 Posted by | Iran, politics | Leave a comment

Read this book!

 M.V. Ramana’s new book, Nuclear Is Not The Solution, The Folly of Atomic
Power in the Age of Climate Change.

I must confess that I read Ramana’s book some time ago — in other words, immediately upon receipt — because I knew it was going to be a riveting read as well as an essential primer.

Then I got enmeshed in completing my own book — No To Nuclear. Why
Nuclear Power Destroys Lives, Derails Climate Progress and Provokes War (to
be published by Pluto Press next March and for which Ramana provided some
invaluable feedback).

Consequently, this review is inexcusably late. I
could stop here and just say “Read This Book!” But it’s important to
say why it’s essential reading. One of the challenges of our subject area
is its complexity. We struggle to reduce it to a soundbite. We must,
perforce, explain. And in so explaining, we risk losing an audience waiting
for a simple answer to the question: “Why not nuclear power?” Now, that
challenge has been made doubly difficult by having to further explain,
“why not small modular reactors?”

M.V. Ramana answers these questions
and more in his comprehensive yet concise volume, covering not only the
illusory new reactors themselves but the propaganda around them, the insane
costs, interminable timelines, the jobs delusion, false sense of prestige,
persistent waste problems and, of course, the ties to nuclear weapons. In a
stroke of brilliant originality, Ramana finds the perfect analogy to
describe the folly of small modular reactors, by quoting, of all people,
the legendary British football manager, Brian Clough. “We had a good team
on paper. Unfortunately, the game was played on grass.” “On paper” is
exactly where small modular reactors remain.

 Beyond Nuclear 14th Sept 2025,
https://beyondnuclearinternational.org/2025/09/14/read-this-book/

September 20, 2025 Posted by | media | Leave a comment

  Plans to close Suffolk rail crossings for a Sizewell C upgrade will have a “huge impact” on residents and businesses.

East Anglian Daily Times 15th Sept 2025,https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/25463605.level-crossings-close-october-sizewell-c-upgrade/

September 20, 2025 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment