Prime Ministers Office 10 Downing Street

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- Prime Minister puts Britain back in the global race for nuclear energy.
- Changes will allow for Small Modular Reactors for the first time.
- Latest step in Governments determination to grow the economy and deliver cleaner, more affordable energy.
More nuclear power plants will be approved across England and Wales as the Prime Minister slashes red tape to get Britain building - as part of his Plan for Change.
Reforms to planning rules will clear a path for smaller, and easier to build nuclear reactors known as Small Modular Reactors to be built for the first time ever in the UK. This will create thousands of new highly skilled jobs while delivering clean, secure and more affordable energy for working people.
This is the latest refusal to accept the status quo, with the government ripping up archaic rules and saying no to the NIMBYs, to prioritise growth. It comes after recent changes to planning laws, the scrapping of the 3-strike rule for judicial reviews on infrastructure projects, and application of common-sense to environmental rules.
For too long the country has been mired by delay and obstruction, with a system too happy to label decisions as too difficult, or too long term. The UK was the first country in the world to develop a nuclear reactor, but the last time a nuclear power station was built was back in 1995. None have been built since, leaving the UK lagging behind in a global race to harness cleaner, more affordable energy.
The industry pioneered in Britain has been suffocated by regulations and this saw investment collapse, leaving only one nuclear power plant Hinkley Point C under construction. And this was after years of delay caused by unnecessary rules meaning companies produced a 30,000-page environmental assessment to get planning permission.
Meanwhile, China is constructing 29 reactors, and the EU has 12 at planning stage, giving these places a huge advantage in the global race to harness new technologies, create jobs and deliver cleaner, cheaper, independent energy.
Investors want to get on and build reliable, cheap nuclear power, which will in turn support critical modern infrastructure, such as supercomputers to power the UKs ambitions - but they have been held back.
Todays plan will shake up the planning rules to make it easier to build nuclear across the country delivering jobs, cheaper bills in the long term, and more money in peoples back pockets. This will be achieved by:
Including mini-nuclear power stations in planning rules for the first time so firms can start building them in the places that need them.
Scrapping the set list of 8-sites which means nuclear sites could be built anywhere across England and Wales.
Removing the expiry date on nuclear planning rules so projects dont get timed out and industry can plan for the long term.
Setting up a Nuclear Regulatory Taskforce that will spearhead improvements to the regulations to help more companies build here. This will report directly to the PM.
This is the Government delivering on a manifesto commitment to galvanise nuclear to help the UK achieve energy security and clean power, while securing thousands of good, clean jobs.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:
This country hasnt built a nuclear power station in decades. weve been let down, and left behind.
Our energy security has been hostage to Putin for too long, with British prices skyrocketing at his whims.
Im putting an end to it changing the rules to back the builders of this nation, and saying no to the blockers who have strangled our chances of cheaper energy, growth and jobs for far too long.
My government was elected to deliver change. Ill take the radical decisions needed to wrestle Britain from its status quo slumber, to turbocharge our plan for change.
Currently, nuclear development is restricted to eight sites - as part of archaic planning rules that havent been looked at since 2011. With the reforms unveiled today, the refreshed planning framework will help streamline the process to encourage investment and enable developers to identify the best sites for their projects, supporting development at a wider range of locations.
Developers will be encouraged to bring forward sites as soon as possible at the pre-application stage in the planning process, speeding up overall timelines.
It will include new nuclear technologies such as small and advanced modular reactors for the first time, providing flexibility to co-locate them with energy intensive industrial sites such as AI data centres.
These technologies are cheaper and quicker to build than traditional nuclear power plants and require smaller sites, meaning they can be built in a greater variety of locations.
There will also continue to be robust criteria for nuclear reactor locations, including restrictions near densely populated areas and military activity, alongside community engagement and high environmental standards.
Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said:
Build, build, build - that is what Britains clean energy mission is all about.
The British people have been left vulnerable to global energy markets for too long - and the only way out is to build our way to a new era of clean electricity.
Nuclear power creating thousands of skilled jobs. That is what this government will deliver.
Alongside reforms to the siting process, a specialist taskforce will lead on making sure nuclear regulation incentivises investment, to deliver new projects more quickly and cost efficiently, while upholding high safety and security standards.
Britain is currently considered one of the worlds most expensive countries in which to build nuclear power. The taskforce will speed up the approval of new reactor designs and streamline how developers engage with regulators.
Nuclear regulation will cover both civil and defence nuclear to help unlock economic growth in the sector.
The taskforce will better align the UK with international partners so reactor designs approved abroad could be green lit more quickly, minimising expensive changes. It will also examine how to reduce duplication and simplify processes where there are multiple regulators covering overlapping issues, as well as ensuring regulatory decisions are both safe and proportionate.
The work will help the issues faced by projects such as Hinkley Point C, where three European regulators reached different assessments on the reactor design, leading to delays and increased costs.
The UKs rigorous safety standards and record will continue to be upheld. Nuclear plants are designed with multiple layers of safety measures including making them robust enough to withstand a direct aircraft impact.
This is part of the government push to drive growth building on the Prime Ministers announcement to overhaul the legal challenges to major infrastructure projects including nuclear with Sizewell C having suffered increased legal costs and uncertainty as a result of local activists taking them to court.
In a volatile world, where oil and gas prices are driven by tyrants like Putin, the drive for new nuclear is an integral part of the governments plans to replace the UKs dependence on fossil fuel markets with clean homegrown energy, to make the UK energy independent and protect consumers with clean, homegrown power.
Since July, the government has committed to driving forward new nuclear including further funding for Sizewell C at the Autumn Budget 2024.
Great British Nuclear also continues to progress the small modular reactor competition, with contract negotiations currently underway.
Gary Smith, GMB General Secretary, said:
GMB has long said there can be no net zero without new nuclear.
For too long, the failure to deliver new nuclear has weakened our energy security and undermined economic growth.
Sizewell C stands ready and waiting for the green light to power up our countrys future.
Now we need to see spades in the ground without delay.
Alistair Black, Senior Director, UK at X-energy said:
Opening up new siting opportunities for a fleet of advanced reactors will help unlock tens of billions of pounds of investment and growth across the country, bringing clean secure electricity and heat for industry.
We welcome this step today, and the intent to streamline assessment processes whilst ensuring robust regulatory standards continue to be met. We look forward to reviewing this in detail and responding to the consultation.
Simone Rossi, CEO of EDF in the UK, said:
As a major operator, investor and developer, EDF welcomes the proposals designed to speed up new nuclear projects in the UK and unlock economic growth.
Nuclear is essential to a secure, low carbon energy system and is the ideal partner to renewables. There is a great opportunity to build new infrastructure across England and Wales, to replace aging stations and take advantage of available skills, existing grid