Scotland will be left behind unless SNP ends nuclear objection, group warns


Scotland risks being left behind in the world unless the Government urgently ends its opposition to nuclear energy, a coalition of businesses and campaign groups has warned.

Scotland for Nuclear Energy, launched by campaign groups Nuclear for Scotland and Britain Remade, said Scotland could miss out on jobs and economic growth as other countries invest in new nuclear technology.

While energy is reserved to Westminster, powers over planning has given the SNP an effective veto over nuclear energy โ€“ something the party has long opposed but which is backed by Labour and the Tories.

Scotland for Nuclear Energy claimed the country could build on its nuclear heritage to install new nuclear reactors in a move it said would complement, rather than compete with, renewable energy.

Sam Richards, chief executive officer of Britain Remade, said: โ€œScotland has done brilliantly with renewables, but the wind doesnโ€™t always blow when we need it.

โ€œNuclear is clean, reliable baseload power that keeps the lights on, stabilises bills and attracts huge investment.

โ€œAt a time when countries across Europe are embracing nuclear as a safe, clean and reliable part of the energy mix, the Scottish Governmentโ€™s refusal to even consider it is deeply irresponsible.

โ€œThey should drop their outdated opposition to nuclear power. If they donโ€™t, it will be the people of Scotland that miss out.โ€

The group said while Scotland still has four registered nuclear sites, only one โ€“ Torness nuclear plant โ€“ is operation and generating power, providing what it described as โ€œclean powerโ€ to two million homes.

It pointed to polling which shows majority support for nuclear energy.

Trudy Morris, chief executive of North Highland Chamber of Commerce, also backed the campaign.

She said: โ€œHere in the north Highlands, we have lived the reality of nuclear energy for decades and the transformative impact of NRS Dounreay on our economy, skills base and communities is impossible to ignore.

โ€œIt has supported thousands of high-value jobs, invested in our supply chains and created expertise that continues to benefit the region.

โ€œThe chamber supports a mixed energy economy. Renewables are central to Scotlandโ€™s future but they work best alongside clean, reliable baseload power.

โ€œWith the highest safety standards, nuclear can complement renewables, strengthen energy security, cut emissions and ensure communities like ours continue to share in the economic benefits.โ€

The Scottish Campaign to Resist the Atomic Menace said nuclear energy was a โ€œdistractionโ€.

Pete Roche, spokesman for the group, said: โ€œAs renewable energy-rich Scotland heads towards an election, it is all too predictable that nuclear lobbyists are again arguing that Scotland needs new nuclear power stations.

โ€œThey misleadingly present them as cheap, clean and โ€˜greenโ€™ โ€“ yet this is as far from the truth as it was 70 years ago when it was promised that nuclear energy would be โ€˜too cheap to meterโ€™.

โ€œAn energy system built around renewables is already happening. Meeting all our needs this way is not just possible but itโ€™s quicker and cheaper without the costly distraction of new nuclear.

โ€œLow-cost renewable energy combined with storage, flexible power to balance the grid and smart local energy systems will make the best use of our incredible renewable resources and engineering know-how.

โ€œWhy dilute that by backing eye-wateringly expensive nuclear power stations?โ€

The Scottish Government has been approached for comment.

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