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Manufacturing

Rolls-Royce has 'positive talks' on Gloucestershire mini-nuclear plants

A senior team from the engineering giant has visited two sites it is considering for its small modular nuclear reactors project, which is expected to create thousands of jobs

The site in Oldbury, South Gloucestershire where Rolls-Royce has identified as a potential location to develop small nuclear reactors(Image: Nuclear Decommissioning Authority)

Rolls-Royce has said it has held “positive talks” on potentially establishing mini-nuclear power stations in Gloucestershire.

Senior representatives at the engineering giant have visited two sites at Oldbury and Berkley, which have been identified by the firm as possible locations to base some of its planned national fleet of small modular nuclear reactors (SMR).

The plants are around a tenth of the size of a conventional nuclear station, and could each generate enough power for around one million homes. The plans have already generated hundreds of millions of pounds of investment and are expected to create tens of thousands of jobs.

The Oldbury site was one of four - alongside Trawsfynydd and Wylfa in Wales and land near the Sellafield nuclear site in Cumbria - Rolls Royce announced it was prioritising to host the generation of 15GW of nuclear power in November. The Berkeley site also made a further list of potential locations it was exploring for the major project.

A senior team from Rolls-Royce has now toured the two South West sites and held meetings with local stakeholders, including landowners and the Western Gateway - an economic partnership of local authorities, city regions, local enterprise partnerships and government in Wales and the West of England, which previously led an unsuccessful bid to bring the the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s first nuclear fusion plant to Oldbury and Berkeley.

BusinessLive understands the Berkeley site may have the potential for “four to six” SMRs while “about four” could be based at Oldbury. A source close to the talks added that the Rolls-Royce team were said to be “very impressed” by South Gloucestershire and Stroud College’s engineering campus at Berkeley.

David White, chief operating officer at Rolls-Royce SMR business, said: “This has been an extremely important step for us – allowing us to better understand the sites, see the potential for Rolls-Royce SMRs and, most importantly, meet representatives from the communities to discuss their aspirations for bringing new nuclear to the region.

"Rolls-Royce SMR’s factory-built power stations will play a significant part in guaranteeing future energy security for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and providing clean, affordable electricity for generations to come while supporting thousands of highly skilled jobs.”