I gather the pilot for the RR small scale reactor was supposed to be Grangemouth, but the SNP have kyboshed due to opposition to nuclear. I mention the SNP just to give some balance to the dirty tories angle.dpedin wrote: ↑Fri Dec 09, 2022 3:33 pmMy mate who used to work at RR tells me this is timeline is never going to happen and his view is that it will be at least another 5+ years after that before they begin to make any discernible impact to the national power requirements. However the Gov funding for this helps cross subsidise RR investment in their defence work for the. MoD.inactionman wrote: ↑Fri Dec 09, 2022 2:11 pmWe are building nuclear, just veeeery slowly. And possibly badly. And in hock to the French, at least for the larger reactors.
My ex-next-door-neighbour in Bath was Engineering Director for the new reactors at Hinckley Point C, on the limited times we talked shop is sounded like dates were forever moving to the right.
Rolls-Royce are looking to branch into small-scale nuclear power (noting the market for jet engines, which is quite feast-or-famine anyway, is looking a bit barren). This makes some sense, seeing as they've developed the PWR reactors for the RN nuclear boats. These small scale generators aren't due until 2029 on current plans.
https://www.rolls-royce-smr.com/
The only thing we can do in the immediate term is to increase generation capacity using wind/tidal/renewable power and reduce demand with a concerted national effort to reduce consumption ie insulation, ensure new build is energy efficient, reduce wastage as per many EU countries are doing, push for more off peak utilisation, etc. Investment in renewables ie onshore wind farms, is quick and relatively inexpensive and England and Wales have huge capacity to do more if the politics, right wing oil and gas opposition and Nimbyism weren't issues. This could make a sizeable contribution to national requirements relatively quickly and way more cheaply than nuclear etc.
For me it is more essential in the short-medium term to see greater investment and R&D on energy storage technology such as batteries, hydro schemes, etc at a domestic, local and national level. In Scotland we have a surplus of energy, we export c30% to England, but until tidal becomes more commercially viable it can be difficult to ensure baseload requirements in Scotland.
However as long as we have a Tory gov in the back pockets of the oil and gas industries, dependant on their funding and who want to protect oil and gas profits rather than worrying about the country then we are fecked!
There are existing schemes to help with insulation etc, but I agree completely that this does need to be more concerted - a friend if mine if Fife on UC has had his loft, radiators, doors and boiler replaced for free, but his next door neighbour who is not on UC can't afford to do similar. I'm very happy my mate and his young family have a warm house this winter, but it doesn't make colossal broader sense to make his house energy gold-standard whilst his neighbours have leaking windows.