
Boost of £14,200,000,000 for new nuclear power plant 'will lead to lower bills'
A new nuclear power station on the east coast of England will be given a £14.2 billion boost to finally get it off the ground.
Sizewell C in Suffolk has been mooted as the site of a new facility since at least 2009, when Ed Miliband identified it in his role as the Energy Secretary in the previous Labour government.
A decade and a half later, after returning to the same role, Miliband has secured funding from Chancellor Rachel Reeves as part of her major spending review.
He said the move would lead to 'lower bills and good jobs for energy security'.
The new power station at Sizewell would help fill the gaps left as all the UK's existing nuclear plants, except Sizewell B, are gradually phased out by the mid-2030s.
Miliband said: 'We will not accept the status quo of failing to invest in the future and energy insecurity for our country.
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'We need new nuclear to deliver a golden age of clean energy abundance, because that is the only way to protect family finances, take back control of our energy, and tackle the climate crisis.'
Sizewell C is described as a 'sister project' to Hinkley Point C in Somerset, which is currently under construction and is set to become the first new nuclear power station in the UK since 1995.
However, building work at Hinkley Point is far behind schedule and the budget for the project has ballooned massively since it began in 2017.
It is now expected to become operational around 2030.
Like Hinkley Point C, it is expected that Sizewell C will be jointly owned by the British government and French energy giant EDF.
Campaign groups have said the construction of the new facility would have a 'devastating impact' on its stretch of the Suffolk coast, which is susceptible to erosion.
It is set to be built on a platform seven metres above sea level to protect it from the sea as it rises due to climate change.
The Labour government has also backed the development of small modular reactors to supply nuclear-sourced power to millions of homes and power-hungry sites like AI data centres. More Trending
Once all these projects are in operation, they will 'deliver more new nuclear to grid than over the previous half century combined', according to the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero.
Reeves, who will announce the Sizewell C funding later today at the GMB Union Congress, said: 'Today we are once again investing in Britain's renewal, with the biggest nuclear building programme in a generation.
'This landmark decision is our Plan for Change in action.
'We are creating thousands of jobs, kickstarting economic growth and putting more money people's pockets.'
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
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Fifteen years after the Sizewell C nuclear power station was proposed, the government will announce a £14.2bn commitment to the Suffolk site. Chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to confirm the funding at the GMB union conference ahead of the spending review on Wednesday, which will set departmental budgets until 2029. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband will call it a "golden age" of nuclear to boost the UK's energy security. The funding will go towards creating 10,000 jobs, the government will say, including 1,500 apprenticeships, and will support thousands more jobs across the UK. On Monday, it was revealed Britain's nuclear power sector grew by a quarter in 2024 to £20bn compared with three years ago, underpinned by a record workforce which has increased by a third, according to research by the Nuclear Power Association. About 87,000 people now work in the industry, with the rise largely driven by new nuclear power projects at Sizewell C and Hinkley Point C in Somerset. Sizewell C was initially proposed by French energy company EDF and China General Nuclear Power Group, but in 2022 the Conservative government bought the Chinese company out and the state now owns 83.5% of the project with EDF. The green light for construction to begin was given in January 2024 under the Conservative government, and at last autumn's budget, Ms Reeves announced a £2.7bn commitment to Sizewell C and said a final commitment would be announced in the 2025 spending review. Construction is expected to take between nine and 12 years and when it is complete, it will provide around six million homes with nuclear energy. A total of £330m of contracts have been signed with local companies, with 70% of all contracts expected to go to 3,500 British suppliers. Ms Reeves said: "Today we are once again investing in Britain's renewal, with the biggest nuclear building programme in a generation. This landmark decision is our Plan for Change in action. "We are creating thousands of jobs, kickstarting economic growth and putting more money in people's pockets." HS2 all over again? Campaign group Stop Sizewell C called it "HS2 mark 2" after the high-speed train line that has faced high costs, delays and parts of it being axed. They questioned how much money the government will ultimately invest in the nuclear power station as they said no information has been provided about the expected total costs. 2:09 Alison Downes, from Stop Sizewell C, said: "Where is the benefit for voters in ploughing more money into Sizewell C that could be spent on other priorities, and when the project will add to consumer bills and is guaranteed to be late and overspent just like Hinkley C? "Ministers have still not come clean about Sizewell C's cost and, given negotiations with private investors are incomplete, they have signed away all leverage and will be forced to offer generous deals that undermine value for money. Starmer and Reeves have just signed up to HS2 mark 2." Or vital step towards domestic clean energy? But the funding was called a "vital step toward delivering the secure, domestic clean energy" the UK needs by "pro-growth" campaign group Britain Remade. Sam Richards, CEO of the Conservative thinktank, added: "The government must go much further."