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UK mulls direct stake in Hitachi nuclear plant: minister
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) June 4, 2018

The British government said Monday it is considering directly investing in a nuclear power station project planned by Japanese giant Hitachi in Wales.

Business Secretary Greg Clark told parliament that Hitachi and the government have decided to enter into negotiations over the Wylfa Newydd plant on the island of Anglesey.

"This is an important next step in the project, although no decision has been yet taken to proceed," he said.

He noted that Britain's spending watchdog and MPs had recommended changes to the way the controversial Hinkley Point nuclear project was financed, after warnings that much of the cost will fall on consumers.

"For this project the government will be considering direct investment alongside Hitachi and the Japanese government agencies and other parties," he told MPs.

Hinkley, a 19.6-billion pounds (22.3-billion-euro, $26.1 billion) project in southwest England between French energy giant EDF and China General Nuclear Power Corporation (CGN), is under construction but not expected to be completed until the mid 2020s.


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CIVIL NUCLEAR
World's first floating nuclear barge to power Russia's Arctic oil drive
Murmansk, Russia (AFP) May 19, 2018
To meet its growing electricity needs in its drive to develop oil resources in remote Arctic regions, Russia has built a floating nuclear power station, a project that detractors deride as a "Chernobyl on ice". Built in Saint Petersburg, the Akademik Lomonosov is currently moored in Murmansk where it is being loaded with nuclear fuel before heading to eastern Siberia. On Saturday, head of state nuclear power firm Rosatom unveiled the brown-and-mustard-painted facility in the city's estuary as an ... read more

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