Commercial

EDF Exits the UK’s SMR Competition

The most recent Nuward design. Image: EDF

There’s one less company in the race to build an SMR for Britain.

This week, Électricité de France (EDF), the French state power company, withdrew its Nuward SMR concept from a key UK program just before the competition’s latest deadline. The Nuward SMR concept is experiencing some growing pains, and the company doesn’t have a design ready for primetime.

A different approach: The failure to meet the UK solicitation deadline came just a few days after EDF announced it was taking a different approach to building SMRs. Where before, the Nuward design concept would have integrated new, in-house technologies, the company will now design an SMR using existing technologies.

  • EDF has been developing the Nuward concept for the last four years but hasn’t revealed any details about how much the design will have to change.
  • A Nuward source told Reuters last week that the decision was made to reassure potential buyers that development costs won’t balloon before the project is complete.

Now, EDF plans to use existing technologies and assemble them into a more cost-effective version of an SMR. What technologies those are and how they’ll be assembled remains to be seen.

The British competition: Five other companies are still vying for one of the two coveted spots in the UK’s SMR program, whose winners are expected to be named this year. And the nominees are:

  1. Rolls-Royce, with its Rolls-Royce SMR design
  2. GE Hitachi, with its BWRX-300 concept
  3. Westinghouse, which is building an AP300 SMR that is essentially a scaled-down version of the popular AP1000 light water reactor
  4. Holtec Britain, which is working on its SMR-300
  5. Nuscale Power ($SMR) and its Nuscale SMR project

What’s next? The British SMR competition has already been delayed once, and the bidders are hoping that there won’t be further postponements. The recent elections have created additional uncertainty: While the new Labour government in the UK has signaled its support for nuclear, the extent of that support remains to be seen. Barring any changes, however, two award recipients will be selected by the end of 2024.

+ posts

Lead Reporter of Ignition

Related Stories
CommercialFusion

Google Goes for Fusion With CFS

Watch out, world—Big Tech is making another move toward fusion power, and this time, it’s buying future power output. Google has signed the first formal offtake agreement for fusion power in the US with Commonwealth Fusion Systems. The expanded partnership is twofold: The companies declined to share financial details on a press call, including the […]

Commercial

A Change in the Talen and Amazon Deal

Big Tech is checking every nook and cranny for energy that can fuel a rapid and massive expansion of data centers. Nuclear has become a major part of that hunt, to the benefit of both traditional and advanced nuclear providers. But while one of the biggest deals between a nuclear operator and a hyperscaler has […]

Commercial

The IEA Tallies Energy Investment, and Nuclear Ranks High

Nuclear power is playing in the big leagues when it comes to attracting capital around the world. Each year, the International Energy Agency (IEA), an independent intergovernmental organization formed by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), counts up the dollars flowing into energy globally. This year, nuclear energy technologies are expected to pull […]

Commercial

Meta Teams With Constellation to Keep a Plant Running for AI

Why build a whole new nuclear power plant when you’ve got a perfectly good one already running? That’s the motivation behind a deal between data giant Meta and energy utility Constellation. This week, Meta agreed to a 20-year power purchase agreement for the entire output of the Clinton Clean Energy Center in Illinois beginning in […]