Bills set to rise as Ed Miliband signs major ยฃ38bn nuclear deal | Politics | News


Consumersโ€™ energy bills will rise to fund the construction of a major nuclear plant after Ed Miliband struck a deal worth ยฃ38billion. The Energy Secretary on Tuesday signed the final investment decision to give Suffolkโ€™s Sizewell C the green light, the Department for Energy Security & Net Zero (DESNZ) said.

An average of ยฃ1 will be added to each householdโ€™s energy bills per month from autumn over the duration of the construction phase, which is expected to be at least 10 years. When Sizewell C is up and running, it is expected to create savings of up to ยฃ2billion a year across the future low-carbon electricity system.

The National Wealth Fund โ€“ the Governmentโ€™s investment vehicle โ€“ is providing the majority of the debt finance with a loan of up to ยฃ36.6billion.

The government’s stake in the project is 44.9%, while Centrica, EDF, La Caisse and Amber Infrastructure will also have holdings in exchange for funding.

The final deal clinches the investment needed to deliver the long-awaited nuclear plant since it was first earmarked for development in 2010.

It also confirms the cost of Sizewell Cโ€™s construction, which is nearly double a previous forecast of about ยฃ20billion by developer EDF five years ago.

Mr Miliband said: โ€œIt is time to do big things and build big projects in this country again โ€“ and today we announce an investment that will provide clean, homegrown power to millions of homes for generations to come.

โ€œThis government is making the investment needed to deliver a new golden age of nuclear, so we can end delays and free us from the ravages of the global fossil fuel markets to bring bills down for good.โ€

Chancellor Rachel Reeves said the development would reduce the UKโ€™s reliance on โ€œforeign dictatorsโ€ for energy.

Sizewell C is expected to create 10,000 direct jobs, thousands more in firms supplying the plant and generate enough energy to power six million homes, the Treasury said.

Ms Reeves added: โ€œThis is a public-private consortium. We as a Government are putting in money but that means that government โ€“ taxpayers โ€“ will get a return on that investment.โ€

Nuclear plants are seen as increasingly important electricity sources as the Government tries to decarbonise Britainโ€™s grid by 2030, replacing fossil fuels with green power.

However, the last time Britain completed one was in 1987, which was the Sizewell B plant.

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