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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

i-Nuclear update: UK creates Nuclear Industry Council to shepherd supply chain development

i-NUCLEAR

UK creates Nuclear Industry Council to shepherd supply chain development

by I-Nuclear
The UK government has announced creation of a Nuclear Industry Council to maximise development of the supply chain needed to support both a domestic and export nuclear industry.
The Council will involve government officials and industry executives in implementing a Nuclear Supply Chain Action Plan, to be published later this year.
The Council will be led by UK Energy Secretary Edward Davey or Energy Minister John Hayes and Business Minister Michael Fallon representing government with Lord Hutton, Chairman of the Nuclear Industry Association and former Labour Energy Minister, leading the industry side.
The Council is intended to replace the Nuclear Development Forum – a twice-a-year gathering of industry executives and government officials whose stated aim was to ensure “regular and high-level contact between all parties on the issues that matter the most to potential investors and operators.”
The Nuclear Industry Council will join the industry’s Programme Management Board, which also includes high-level government involvement from both the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) and the Office for Nuclear Regulation.
The PMB’s focus is on construction and delivery issues for new reactors, particularly the lead project by EDF to build two new EPR reactors at Hinkley Point C in Somerset, England.
The Nuclear Industry Council “symbolises the long-term strategic partnership developing between the UK nuclear industry and the Government,” John Hutton, Nuclear Industry Association Chairman, said in an October 30 statement.
“Through innovation and high-skilled job creation, the nuclear sector has the potential to be a driver of economic growth in the UK over the coming years. Our ambition is for it to be a globally recognised industry, with UK companies seeking and winning opportunities in the domestic and global nuclear markets,” Hutton said.
The Nuclear Supply Chain Action Plan is aimed at maximising UK economic activity and growth from the nuclear sector, including employment and business opportunities for the UK supply chain; ensuring the domestic nuclear market provides a platform for export; and raising awareness of nuclear sector opportunities, to identify barriers and help place the supply chain in a stronger position to compete for those opportunities, Hutton said.
The full extent of government funding for the new Council was unclear. The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) had not responded to requests for more information by press time.
But earlier this year, BIS had issued an invitation to tender for a £50,000 to £100,000 study to provide an “economic evidence base” for the Nuclear Supply Chain Action Plan.
A DECC spokesman said October 30 that DECC, with BIS and the Nuclear Industry Association, will provide a secretariat function to the new Nuclear Industry Council.
“However it is expected that any particular workstreams or issues which the Council want to explore in more detail will be resourced by industry,” the DECC spokesman said.
The DECC spokesman said the new Council’s remit will be broader than the Nuclear Development Forum it is replacing.
The Council will be looking at the whole nuclear industry and will focus on where collectively government and industry can harness UK economic benefit from new build, decommissioning and waste management work and how best to position the UK supply market to take advantage of global opportunities, the spokesman said.—David Stellfox
I-Nuclear | October 30, 2012 at 5:52 pm | Categories: DECC, New Build, UK | URL: http://wp.me/p22dAl-py

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