Britain and US to sign nuclear power pact during Trump's visit

A view shows construction works on the site of the new Sizewell C nuclear power plant, currently being built next to Sizewell B nuclear power plant in Suffolk England, June 11.

A view shows construction works on the site of the new Sizewell C nuclear power plant, currently being built next to Sizewell B nuclear power plant in Suffolk England, June 11. (Chris Radburn, Reuters )


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Britain and the U.S. to sign a nuclear power pact during Trump's visit.
  • The deal includes investments in new plants and advanced modular reactors in England.
  • Rolls-Royce enters US regulatory process for small modular reactors paving way for new jobs.

LONDON — Britain and the United States will sign a deal to work together on boosting nuclear power during President Donald Trump's state visit this week, the British government said, helping secure investment to fund new plants.

Britain's government has launched a major push to expand nuclear power in recent months, pledging to invest $19 billion in a new plant at Sizewell C and advancing plans for a Rolls-Royce unit to build the country's first small modular reactors.

Trump arrives in Britain for a two-day visit on Tuesday, during which he and Prime Minister Keir Starmer will announce the nuclear power tie-up. The collaboration aims to speed up new projects and investments, including plans expected to be announced by U.S. nuclear reactor company X-Energy and Britain's Centrica to build up to 12 advanced modular reactors in northeast England.

A $15 billion project to develop advanced data centres powered by small modular reactors in central England at the former Cottam coal-fired power station set to be announced by U.S. company Holtec International, France's EDF and real estate partner Tritax, is also on the cards, the statement added.

"These major commitments set us well on course to a golden age of nuclear that will drive down household bills in the long run," Starmer said on Monday.

Trump and Starmer discussed working more closely together on small modular reactors when they met at the president's golf resort in Scotland in July.

"Today's commercial deals set up a framework to unleash commercial access in both the U.S. and UK," Energy Secretary Chris Wright said in the statement.

The new tie-up will cover nuclear regulation, meaning if a reactor passes safety checks in one country, the other can use the findings to support its own checks, cutting licensing time to two years from three to four years at present.

Commenting on its new partnership deal with X-Energy, Centrica's Group CEO Chris O'Shea said it would build a resilient, affordable, low-carbon energy system, while X-Energy's CEO J. Clay Sell said Hartlepool was the right place for it to scale its technology in Britain given its experienced workforce and local services.

Holtec chair and CEO Kris Singh said its plan with EDF would create thousands of local jobs while drawing on the lessons from its Palisades project in Michigan, while Simone Rossi, CEO of EDF in the UK, said the plan would benefit energy security.

In a related announcement, Rolls-Royce said it had entered the U.S. regulatory process for its small modular reactors, paving the way for potential new jobs and investment in the U.S.

Among the other investments expected to be announced is a deal for UK-based Urenco to supply an advanced type of low-enriched uranium to the U.S. market.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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