Last Energy, backed by investor in Elon Musk’s businesses, has identified its first location. A US energy developer backed by a fund linked to Elon Musk is in talks with the Government to build a fleet of small nuclear reactors across the UK. Last Energy wants to build its first “mini-nuclear” power plant by 2025 and is “in advanced talks over sites in England and Wales” The Sunday Telegraph has learnt. The company intends to spend £1.4bn on 10 reactors by the end of the decade. Last Energy’s end goal is to build “hundreds of plants” across the UK, sources close to the company said. The proposals are a direct challenge to Rolls-Royce, which is racing to secure approval for its own British-made fleet of mini reactors. Last Energy is one of 12 select investments by start-up backer Gigafund. Three of these – SpaceX, The Boring Company, and Neuralink – are founded by Mr Musk, 50, the world’s richest person and chief executive of electric car maker Tesla. Last Energy met with Government aides last week to discuss plans. Its reactors are considerably smaller than those of competitors and are forecast to cost £50m and are prefabricated before being transported by 80 lorries, company insiders claimed. Each plant is the size of a football pitch and the height of a double-decker bus – roughly half the size of rival reactors proposed by Rolls. Representatives from Last Energy are believed to have told Whitehall officials that they want the UK to be the company’s “test bed” and insist that its plants will be up and running years before Rolls-Royce. It is believed to have asked the Government for a commitment to pay £75 per MWh, considerably less than the £92.50 that the UK is locked in to paying the much larger Hinkley Point C nuclear plant once it is up and running.
Telegraph 2nd April 2022 read more »
‘Lego-style’ nuclear plants could start powering British homes by 2025, according to plans being considered by Ministers to tackle the energy crisis. The Government is looking at proposals for a new type of nuclear plant for which the components are built in a factory and then assembled, like the popular toy bricks, on the site. A presentation shown to Ministers and seen by The Mail on Sunday showed a 20MW plant that is split into blocks and then assembled one on top of the other. Each plant could power 45,000 homes.
Daily Mail 3rd April 2022 read more »
