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Business secretary hails Hinkley Point C progress as MPs approve nuclear financing bill

The minister was joined by EDF’s chief executive at the plant in Somerset

(From left) Nigel Cann, delivery director, Hinkley Point C; Helen Whately MP; Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng; Jean-Bernard Lévy, chairman and chief executive of EDF.(Image: EDF)

Business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng has said that Hinkley Point C will help protect the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ from “volatile” wholesale gas prices during a visit to the nuclear power plant in Somerset.

Mr Kwarteng praised the progress made during construction of the plant as he and exchequer secretary to the Treasury Helen Whately were shown around the site near Bridgwater on Thursday (January 13).

Jean-Bernard Levy, the chief executive of French energy giant EDF, which is delivering the project, accompanied the ministers during the visit. They were shown how work had continued despite challenges posed by the pandemic, including through an outbreak of Covid-19 at the plant in October 2020.

Hinkley Point C is one of the largest building projects in Europe and, when complete, it is hoped the plant will be able to generate low-carbon electricity for six million homes over 60 years.

The visit came as MPs approved the government's new Nuclear Financing Bill, which introduces new laws to safeguard and help attract investment in future large-scale nuclear power projects.

EDF said the new financing scheme could help lower the costs of building new nuclear sites such as Sizewell C, EDF’s proposed £20bn nuclear plant in Suffolk which would replicate the design of Hinkley Point C.

The government has committed to putting nuclear at the heart of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s future energy mix, along with wind and solar as it seeks to reach its target of net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

It has invested £210m in plans from Rolls-Royce’s Small Modular Reactor business for the development of mini-nuclear power stations in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.