The
Chancellor, George Osborne, has announced that the UK will allow
Chinese companies to take a stake in British nuclear power plants.
The announcement also said that Chinese firms might eventually be allowed to take majority stakes in British nuclear plants.
Mr. Osborne made the announcement on the last day of a trade visit to China.
According to the British Broadcasting Corporation, the first China deal could be as early as next week, with the go ahead for a new £14bn plant at the Hinkley C site.
Also on Thursday, a report commissioned
for the prime minister warned of a growing risk of power shortages over
the next few years.
The Royal Academy of Engineering said
the closure of older power plants and the slow progress in building news
ones was likely to stretch the system “close to its limits”.
Supply is expected to come under strain in the winter of 2014-15.
Most existing coal-fired plants are
expected to be closed in 2015 to meet European Union pollution
directives, while many gas-fired power plants are not being used at the
moment because gas is so expensive.
These would take time and money to bring back on stream.
The Hinkley C project, in Somerset, will be the first new nuclear power station since 1995.
Hinkley C’s construction will be led by
the French state-controlled giant, EDF, which has been looking for a
partner or partners to share the costs.
EDF has been negotiating with three
Chinese nuclear giants on the Hinkley C project – CGN, CNNC and SNPTC –
all of which have been seen by the chancellor this week.
Our business editor, Robert Peston, says
he has been told that one or two of these will end up owning perhaps 30
per cent of Hinkley C.
A DECC spokesperson said talks about a
contract were underway: “Negotiations remain ongoing between the
government and EDF on the potential terms of an investment contract for
Hinkley Point C. No agreement has as yet been reached.
“A contract will only be offered if it
is value for money, fair and affordable, in line with government policy
on no public subsidy for new nuclear and consistent with state-aid
rules.”
Mr. Osborne made the announcement while
on a visit to a nuclear plant in southern China on Thursday which is
itself a collaboration between EDF and the China General Nuclear Power
Group.
He said: “Today is another demonstration
of the next big step in the relationship between Britain and China, the
world’s oldest civil nuclear power and the world’s fastest growing
civil nuclear power.”
The memorandum of understanding also includes roles for British companies in China’s nuclear programme.
China has 17 nuclear reactors in operation, which provide about 1per cent of its electricity production capacity.
In the future, Chinese firms might be
allowed more than just minority stakes in UK plants. The government said
that “over time, stakes in subsequent new power stations could be
majority stakes”.
At the weekend, the Energy Minister, Ed
Davey, said he believed that a “massive” wave of investment from China,
Japan and Korea would secure UK’s power supply into the future.
Securing future energy supplies is a major challenge.
A portion of energy bills is being diverted to alternative energy investment in wind farms and solar energy.
But these, renewable, energy sources cannot provide enough power for the country’s energy needs.
The industry regulator, Ofgem, has also warned of the “unprecedented challenge” to secure power supplies.
It said spare electricity power production capacity could fall to two per cent by 2015, increasing the risk of blackouts.
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