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º£½ÇÊÓÆµ nuclear projects being slowed by red tape, taskforce says

Changes could cut energy costs for consumers, according to the group of experts

Hinkley Point C nuclear power station during construction(Image: Hinkley Point C)

Nuclear regulation in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ needs to be reformed to speed up projects and make them less expensive to deliver, an independent taskforce has said.

Overly complex regulation has contributed to the “relative decline” in the country’s leadership position in nuclear on the global stage, according to the final report of the Nuclear Regulatory Taskforce.

The expert group said changes could cut energy costs for consumers.

It comes after an announcement last week that household energy bills are set to rise by 0.2% from January 1 after Ofgem increased its next price cap – a change which took into account Government policy and operating costs, including funding the Sizewell C nuclear project, which is thought to add around £1 a month to bills.

The taskforce also estimated reforms could save tens of billions from the current £150bn projected cost of decommissioning legacy nuclear activities.

They said a “radical reset” is needed as they set out 47 recommendations for the Government to speed up building new nuclear projects at a lower cost and on schedule.

One of their recommendations is to establish a “one-stop shop” for decisions on nuclear and simplifying regulation to avoid overly bureaucratic and expensive processes while improving safety standards.

They also called on the Government to provide a “robust strategic direction” for the civil and defence nuclear sectors; recommended that a Commission for Nuclear Regulation is established as a unified decision maker; and that the Defence Nuclear Safety Regulator be merged into the Office for Nuclear Regulation.