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Economic Development

Staff numbers cut by more than half at Hinkley power station for ‘safety of workers’ during coronavirus pandemic

'We are aware that many people and families in the locality depend on us'

The view south across the Hinkley Point C site(Image: EDF Energy)

The workforce constructing the new Hinkley nuclear power station is to be reduced by more than half to around 2,000 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

French energy giant EDF said it was continuing with the project to build Hinkley Point C in Somerset but the “safety of workers and the community” was paramount.

It said the workforce would be “significantly reduced, falling by more than half to around 2,000” and that staffing levels would reduce further as work on the project progresses.

It comes just days after a worker at the site expressed his concerns to about the risk coronavirus spreading among staff.

A spokesman for EDF acknowledged concerns about workers’ health and safety at Hinkley Point C and stressed they want to keep everyone to be “as safe as possible”.

Hinkley Point C is estimated to cost between £21.5 billion and £22.5 billion to construct and is expected to begin generating power by the end of 2025.

“The project will preserve the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s specialist nuclear supply chain and its skilled workers by focusing on critical work on nuclear parts of the project,” a spokesman for EDF said in a statement.

“Keeping this capability intact is essential for a project of critical national importance and an industry which plays a key role in helping the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ reach net zero.”