Sizewell c: too destructive, too costly, too late | thearticle

Sizewell c: too destructive, too costly, too late | thearticle


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Joan Girling grew up near the Suffolk coast, with its little terns, barn owls, harebells, ladies bedstraw, sedums, blue butterflies and acid grassland. There was no nuclear power station.  


“It was perfect, a nature lover’s paradise,” she told me. In 1959, Joan’s father, faced with compulsory purchase, was forced to sell off a corner of their front garden, with its large pond


full of water lilies and wildlife.  It was to make way for workers’ traffic to the site of Sizewell A, a nuclear power station. Sizewell A is today a great, ugly, Stalinist-looking


excrescence looming above the seashore.  Her grandmother, who lived next door, watched as they filled in the pond.  “The worst part was to hear my Grandma crying.  I remember it as if it was


yesterday.” In the late 1980s it all happened again: Sizewell B.  This time Joan moved house with her family to escape construction traffic.  From 1993-2005 she served on Suffolk County


Council.  Fifteen years ago, Joan Girling became a founding and deeply dedicated member of _Community against Nuclear Expansion,_ later renamed _Together Against Sizewell C _(TASC). The


human and environmental costs ought not be underestimated. The disruption and destruction accompanying years of building accounts for the level and persistence of local protest.   _Stop


Sizewell C_, originally a parish of Theberton and Eastbridge action group, alongside the local Friends of the Earth, joined TASC in a long-running legal campaign. Crowdfunding helped finance


three rounds of court action seeking judicial review of the Sizewell C project.   The last one challenged the Business Secretary (then Kwasi Kwarteng) over his 2022 Development Consent


Order giving the green light to start construction. Kwateng rejected the Planning Inspectorate’s conclusion (part of the process required by the 2008 Planning Act) that in the absence of an


assessed, permanent, potable water supply for the project, “the case for the grant of development consent is not yet made”.  Sizewell C will be forced to use a desalination plant during


construction.  The Court of Appeal found for the Government in December 2023. The construction of Sizewell C means heavy truck traffic.  New roads, a large park and ride facility, as well as


a railway branch line, will have a major impact over a large area. Much of it is designated by Natural England — sponsored, incidentally, by the Department of Environment, Food and Rural


Affairs (DEFRA) — as a Suffolk Coast and Heaths National Landscape (formerly Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty).  A small bite comes out of reed beds and marsh land, designated a Site of


Special Scientific Interest.  The new reactors will lie right next to Minsmere, a popular RSPB reserve where the drain-pipe boom of the bittern can be heard. Building Sizewell C will blight


tourism for two decades, though it will boost other aspects of the local economy.  But before dismissing protest as Nimbyism, it is as well to evaluate what lies in the backyard. Sizewell C


planning first saw the light of day under Prime Minister Gordon Brown, 2007-2010, when coastal Suffolk was selected alongside other sites with existing nuclear reactors. The initial choice


of investors, EDF (_Electricité de France_) and a Chinese Company CGN, was almost as contentious as the choice of site.  In 2009 EDF, 85% French government owned, bought British Energy, the


UK’s largest electricity energy-generating company.  By 2019 EDF was over 50 billion Euros in debt and its share price had dropped from 42 to 10 Euros.  The company was re-nationalised in


2023.  EDF’s track-record building two reactors at Hinkley Point, Somerset, does not inspire confidence that all manner of things will be well at Sizewell C.  Building of the EDF’s first


Hinkley Point reactor began in March  2017, but is unlikely to be completed before 2030, at a cost of possibly £47 billion (the initial estimate in 2016 was £18 billion). Actual construction


of a reactor starts usually after three years of preparatory work, once a _Final Investment Decision _(FID) is issued  indicating that financing for the entire project looks assured.  FID


for Sizewell C remains “expected” by the end of this year.  Professor Stephen Thomas of Greenwich University Business School estimates  the length of time from inception to first commercial


power production of nuclear power stations worldwide at between 15-20 years. Given the pace of climate change, that is too long to wait. Geopolitics put paid to Chinese part ownership in


Sizewell C; CGN’s stake was bought out by the UK government in 2022.  Nuclear power is costly.  Government, now the majority shareholder in the project,  turned to what is called the


Regulated Asset-based (RAB) model, an array of investors, in a bid to attract pension funds. But this has not been successful.  It is now wooing investors such as the United Arab Emirates


(UAE) and the UK electricity company Centrica.  Professor Thomas’ optimistic estimate of cost for 13 years of Sizewell C construction is £26.3 billion and his pessimistic, some would say


realistic, estimate for 17 years, £43.8 billion.  Just too costly. No-one knows what international energy prices will be when the reactors start up — thus creating a very wide margin of


risk.  RAB offers possibilities for the government to reward potential investors.  In Thomas’ words: “First, because the risks will fall on consumers and taxpayers, the project would be seen


by financiers as low risk to them and would attract a low interest rate.  Second, the finance charges [and these would be significant] would effectively be paid by consumers as a surcharge


on their bills payable from the date of _FID_ to completion of the plant.” There are alternative sources of energy.  In the past fifty years, the cost of renewables has gone down, real


nuclear costs have only ever gone up.  But Shell expects to make 15% profit on investment in oil and gas against 5-8% returns from renewables. This is one reason for the continuing


investment in new fossil fuel extraction and faltering financing of the realistic option for meeting carbon emission reduction targets: solar panels and wind turbines.  Government colludes


with energy companies and investors seeking to be as risk-free as possible, with their decisions and actions critical for mitigating climate change, based on profit taking at the expense of


the citizen/consumer. Windfarms, for example off Lowestoft with one hundred turbines serving 630,000 homes, take after a preparatory phase, 2-3 years for  construction offshore, longer for a


larger windfarm under more difficult conditions.  Their coastal infrastructure needs to be kept to a minimum, ideally with an offshore grid and subsea cables.  With the kind of money made


available for nuclear reactors, the energy-storage problem – caused by variable wind — is soluble. Renewables do not take 15 years to become operational, nor have an unmanageable afterlife:


the disposal of highly radioactive material.  Meanwhile access roads are being cut through nearby countryside, and the Government has found £2.5 billion for the Sizewell C preparatory pot.


Five years ago, it was estimated that 37.5% of the world’s carbon emissions came from electricity generation.  There is now an urgent need for low carbon electricity-generating


infrastructure.  Government is obsessed with nuclear power stations as a solution. But they are too late.    As Professor Thomas put it to me in conversation: “In an emergency you don’t


choose the slowest and riskiest option.”  A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important contribution to make, one


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