Ed Miliband is strangling Britain's nuclear power potential
'Swift and decisive action is required to jump start America's nuclear energy industrial base,' President Trump wrote last week, to 'ensure our national and economic security'.
Trump is turbocharging what Biden tentatively began in his Advance Act by simplifying licencing and speeding up the building process for nuclear infrastructure. The mood shift is significant, because since the Nuclear Regulation Commission was created 50 years ago, it hasn't commissioned a single new plant.
Elsewhere, Europeans are also shaking off their long-standing hostility, which is not easy to do when a coalition government may require the support of the Greens.
Last month, Belgium reversed a 2003 law phasing out nuclear energy. And here? While the UK was the world's pioneer in civilian nuclear energy, with a working reactor bubbling away in Harwell in 1947, things are anything but 'swift and decisive'.
In 2022, as his final act, a demob-happy Boris Johnson announced a massive expansion of nuclear power by 2050. Just in time, you might think, considering a vast deficit in generation capacity loomed.
By 2030 we could have just three operational reactors left. A roadmap published in January 2024 committed the UK to building 24GW of new capacity by 2050, both large and small.
Great British Nuclear was created and a competition launched to encourage the building of small modular reactors (SMRs). The value of our spent nuclear fuel, an asset which can be usefully exploited in ways unimaginable in the 1950s, was also recognised.
Bidders were informed that the six chosen for the initial shortlist would be whittled down to two. One would be a 'spades in the ground' choice with safety and design approval suitable for rapid deployment, to plug the energy gap. The other was understood to be a native design with export potential, which is a way of saying 'Rolls-Royce' without using the words 'Rolls' or 'Royce'.
'We were told that we won't put all our eggs in one basket,' says one industry insider. 'Very few nations have chosen just one'.
Bureaucrats delayed the competition using the election as an excuse, and then once again. Astonishingly the only design capable of putting spades in the ground, NuScale, was rejected last year, as I reported at the time.
NuScale had been Rolls-Royce's original partner before they divorced, had a head start, and would not be asking the taxpayer for subsidies. But the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (Desnz) explained that it 'did not meet the criteria for the SMR competition, as it had already begun production and did not need support getting to market'.
The goalposts had shifted – and haven't stopped moving.
Now officials insist there was only ever going to be one SMR competition winner – an account disputed by competition entrants and former ministers.
'It's dishonest and simply not true,' says one bidder. 'There were six bids for four slots in the final round, with everyone assuming it would have to be Rolls-Royce plus one. That was made clear in the bid process. It was always six, to four, to two.'
'Ed [Miliband] needs to stop his fixation with renewables at the expense of all else, and elect SMR technologies for deployment in the UK,' says Andrew Bowie, the shadow energy minister.
A Desnz spokesman says: 'Great British Nuclear is driving forward its SMR competition and has received final bids, which it is evaluating ahead of final decisions being taken.' NuScale sources maintain it could have working reactors by 2030, now the earliest is 2035, and that looks optimistic.
SMRs were originally envisaged as powering industrial installations, but the hype made nuclear more palatable. The UK's focus on going small has neglected the advantages of going big, with proven designs.
'We absolutely need more large-scale nuclear because those reactors have the design maturity, construction experience, operational record and supply chain readiness to mitigate project risks,' explains Tom Greatrex, chief executive of the Nuclear Industry Association.
'Since we need so much more reliable, clean power, we have to build more of the big proven technologies.' More than 70 reactors are currently under construction, according to the World Nuclear Association, almost all are large, gigawatt-scale reactors, and many of those are in China.
Prolonging the SMR beauty pageant might be good for civil servants and consultants, but not for industry or consumers who face the prospect of blackouts.
As Kathryn Porter, an energy analyst at Watt Logic, explains, the Iberian blackout in April and our very near miss on Jan 8 remind us how costly a generation deficit can be.
'With much of the gas generation fleet expected to retire in the coming years there are real blackout risks towards the end of this decade and into the 2030s depending on the rate of these retirements,' she says.
'The Iberian blackout resulted in seven fatalities in very benign weather conditions – a winter blackout in the UK would be significantly more dangerous.'
Ed Miliband sees himself in a heroic role as the saviour of the climate, but he is also a temporary steward of a great nation's scientific and technical heritage – we have engineers and scientists who the world envies. He has a duty to keep this alive. And even more so, to keep our lights on.
Andrew Orlowski Tweets at @andreworlowski
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
9 minutes ago
- The Hill
Here's Trump's schedule with Zelensky on Monday
President Trump is set to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and European leaders on Monday following his controversial meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday. 'I have already arrived in Washington, tomorrow I am meeting with President Trump. Tomorrow we are also speaking with European leaders. I am grateful to @POTUS for the invitation. We all share a strong desire to end this war quickly and reliably. And peace must be lasting,' Zelensky said in a post on the social platform X late Sunday night. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in an X post of her own Sunday that she would 'join the meeting with President Trump and other European leaders in the White House tomorrow.' The White House released a schedule that shows Trump, Zelensky and their teams will first hold a meeting, before a larger meeting is held that will also include European leaders. Here's a rundown. 12:00 p.m. European leaders are expected to be at the White House by noon EDT at the South Portico, with television crew and photographers allowed to document the arrival. 1:00 p.m.-1:15 p.m. Zelensky and Trump are set to greet each other an hour after the European leaders arrive, and will shortly after go into a meeting with each other in the Oval Office. Vice President Vance is also expected to attend this meeting. The last time the three met in February, there were fireworks. 2:15 p.m.-2:30 p.m. Trump will greet other European leaders in the State Dining Room an hour after he begins his Oval Office meeting with Zelensky. Fifteen minutes after the greetings, Trump and European leaders will take a family photo together in the Cross Hall. 3:00 p.m.


The Hill
9 minutes ago
- The Hill
Zelensky arrives in DC, says war must be ended ‘reliably'
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky arrived in Washington, D.C., on Sunday night, saying he was grateful for President Trump's invitation and wanted to end the war with Russia 'quickly and reliably.' He also said that if there is a peace deal, it must be set up to be lasting to avoid a situation where Russia might invade Ukraine again. He specifically noted Russia's taking of Crimea and parts of the Donbas region, saying in a post on X that a new deal couldn't be set up to give Russian President Vladimir Putin things that he could then use as a springboard for a new attack. Zelensky also criticized 'security guarantees' he said were given to Ukraine in 1994 that didn't work. 'And peace must be lasting. Not like it was years ago, when Ukraine was forced to give up Crimea and part of our East—part of Donbas—and Putin simply used it as a springboard for a new attack. Or when Ukraine was given so called 'security guarantees' in 1994, but they didn't work. 'Of course, Crimea should not have been given up then, just as Ukrainians did not give up Kyiv, Odesa, or Kharkiv after 2022. Ukrainians are fighting for their land, for their independence,' he wrote. 'I am confident that we will defend Ukraine, effectively guarantee security, and that our people will always be grateful to President Trump, everyone in America, and every partner and ally for their support and invaluable assistance,' Zelensky said. 'Russia must end this war, which it itself started. And I hope that our joint strength with America, with our European friends, will force Russia into a real peace. Thank you!' U.S. officials on Sunday said Ukraine may get security guarantees similar to NATO Article 5 guarantees in which European countries and the U.S. would commit to defending Ukraine, though not NATO itself.


Newsweek
9 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Trump Defends Putin Summit Against Media 'Major Defeat' Claims
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. President Donald Trump dismissed criticism of his summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska as "fake news" Sunday night on Truth Social, saying the war in Ukraine could be ended "almost immediately" but critics were making it harder to do so. Trump also appeared to rule out any return of the Russian-occupied Crimea region or NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) membership for Ukraine. Why It Matters Critics have slammed Trump for providing Putin with red-carpet treatment in Alaska on Friday in exchange for seemingly little in the way of concessions. The meeting ended without any agreement on a ceasefire or peace deal, but Trump officials have talked up possible concessions made by the Russians, although details have yet to surface. Trump's comments come as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is due to travel to Washington, D.C. on Monday to discuss with Trump a possible settlement of the war, which Putin launched in February 2022. Several European leaders are due to participate in the meeting. U.S. President Donald Trump (R) walks with Russian President Vladimir Putin as they arrives at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson on August 15, 2025 in Anchorage, Alaska. U.S. President Donald Trump (R) walks with Russian President Vladimir Putin as they arrives at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson on August 15, 2025 in Anchorage, Alaska. Andrew Harnik What To Know Trump rejected any suggestion that holding the summit on U.S. soil represented a defeat. "The Fake News has been saying for 3 days that I suffered a "major defeat" by allowing President Vladimir Putin of Russia to have a major Summit in the United States. Actually, he would have loved doing the meeting anywhere else but the U.S., and the Fake News knows this. It was a major point of contention!" the president said in a post on his Truth Social platform. "If we had the Summit elsewhere, the Democrat run and controlled media would have said what a terrible thing THAT was. These people are sick!" he said. The decision to hold the summit at Anchorage's Joint Base Elmendorf–Richardson surprised many observers as previous suggestions indicated a third country, such as the United Arab Emirates, would host the two leaders' first meeting in six years. Senator Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat, did not hold back on his assessment of the Trump-Putin summit, saying in a Sunday appearance on NBC News' Meet the Press that the meeting was a "disaster" that gave Russian Putin "everything he wanted." "The very unattractive (both inside and out!) Senator from Connecticut, Chris Murphy, said "Putin got everything that he wanted." Actually, "nobody got anything," too soon, but getting close," Trump fired back in another Sunday Truth Social post. "Murphy is a lightweight who thinks it made the Russian President look good in coming to America. Actually, it was very hard for President Putin to do so. This war can be ended, NOW, but stupid people like Chris Murphy, John Bolton, and others, make it much harder to do so." In advance of his talks with Zelensky and his European allies, Trump appeared to rule out any chance that the Ukrainian leader would succeed in his long-held aims of getting back Crimea, which Russian forces occupied in 2014, or of membership of NATO. "No getting back Obama given Crimea (12 years ago, without a shot being fired!), and NO GOING INTO NATO BY UKRAINE. Some things never change!!!" Trump said. Kyiv has repeatedly said it is against the country's constitution to give land away to Moscow. One of Putin's fears is that Ukraine would become a member of NATO, expanding the U.S. and European footprint even more along the border of Russia. U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff on Sunday said the Russians had agreed to a "game-changing" concession, which would allow the U.S. to establish security guarantees modeled after NATO's Article 5 protections, which states that an attack against any member of NATO is an attack against all members of NATO—also known as the collective defense clause. Looking ahead to Monday's talks, Trump said: "Big day at the White House tomorrow. Never had so many European Leaders at one time. My great honor to host them!!!" What People Are Saying In a post on Truth Social, President Donald Trump said: "President Zelenskyy of Ukraine can end the war with Russia almost immediately, if he wants to, or he can continue to fight." Senator Chris Murphy told NBC News: "It was a failure. Putin got everything he wanted…He was invited to the United States: War criminals are not normally invited to the United States of America." What Happens Next? Zelensky and several European leaders are due to meet Trump in Washington on Monday.