Moorside clean energy hub

Moorside clean energy hub is a proposal put forward on 30 June 2020 by two consortia, one led by EDF and the other by Rolls-Royce, to create an energy hub that would produce electricity and hydrogen through the use of nuclear power and renewable energy.[1][2]

Moorside clean energy hub
CountryUnited Kingdom
LocationSellafield, Cumbria
Coordinates54.429566°N 3.510911°W / 54.429566; -3.510911
StatusProposed
Owner(s)Nuclear Decommissioning Authority
Nuclear power station
Reactor typePWR (EPR) and SMR or AMR modular reactors
Power generation
Units planned2

The hub would be constructed on the cancelled Moorside nuclear power station site, which was abandoned by Toshiba in 2018.[3]

History

In 2020, EDF Energy put forward plans to build two EPR units, replicating Hinkley Point C and Sizewell C, for a total capacity of 3.2 GWe. In parallel, a Rolls-Royce-led UK SMR consortium announced plans for a low-carbon power station around a small, light-water reactor Rolls-Royce SMR linked with renewable energy generation, hydrogen production and battery storage technologies.[2] The Nuclear Industry Association welcomed the proposal for the Moorside site, with the CEO adding, "These are exactly the attributes the country needs to bounce back from COVID-19, deliver jobs, and get us on track to hit Net Zero. Large scale and smaller, next generation technologies have a huge amount to offer working as part of the clean energy hub concept. They can deliver clean electricity and achieve deeper decarbonisation through the creation of hydrogen, clean fuels and district and industrial heating."[4]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.