
2 minute read
FUSION PROJECT COULD BRING BRITISH NATIONS CLOSER

By Ian Mean, MBE Gloucestershire director for Business West and vice-chair of GFirst LEP
In just a few weeks’ time, the South West and South Wales could be celebrating a major industrial and energy breakthrough with the announcement that our region’s bid to site the UK’s first prototype £220 million fusion plant on the Severn Estuary has been successful.
I haven’t got a government crystal ball, but I believe the Severn Edge bid, led by the Western Gateway Partnership, is destined to be awarded to the two decommissioned former nuclear sites at Oldbury in South Gloucestershire and Berkeley in Gloucestershire.
Our bid is in the final five sites being considered by government, and I think their final decision could be announced before Parliament rises for its summer recess at the end of July.
This fusion project is truly ground-breaking.
It is designed to harness the power of the sun and is the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority’s (UKAEA) flagship called STEP or Spherical Tokamak for Energy Programme to give its full title.
Why is it so important for our future energy needs?
Well, fusion has been described as having the potential to become the ultimate low carbon energy source recreating the reaction that takes place with the sun.
The impact of a successful bid has the potential of creating more than 30,000 skilled jobs in the long-term and will greatly enhance the career options for our young people in a whole range of engineering and digital skills.
Why do I think Severn Edge (or Bro Halfen in Welsh) will win the STEP nomination?
Severn Edge provides the lowest technological risk for delivery and the greatest technical capacity to expedite delivery.
Why?
It’s down to the skilled workforce and supply chain in our region. It is currently building Hinkley C and has substantial expertise in high temperature reactors and technologies at EDF Energy in Gloucester, as well as digital engineering design, instrumentation and advanced manufacturing.
But in my view, and an opinion very much moulded by Michael Gove’s Levelling Up mantra, it’s that I feel our unique asset in the
STEP race is the bringing together of two countries in the Union.
Bringing Wales and England together in technological harmony has gained huge support from major companies on both sides of the River Severn, with enthusiastic backing from MPs and local authority leaders.
Surely that piece of uniqueness in helping to bring two countries of the Union together as part of Levelling Up must be a winning combination?
I also think that STEP will be a major catalyst for Levelling Up the skills “cold spots” in South Gloucestershire and North Somerset.
But it will also be a big fillip for jobs and skills in the disadvantaged communities of Gloucester, the Forest of Dean and right across the Severn to South Wales and down to Somerset and Cornwall.
At the end of the day, the successful STEP bid will, of course, have an element of political influence behind it.
We accept that totally with the Levelling Up process.
But having worked alongside the Western Gateway team and our local councils for the last two years, I am confident STEP will be coming to this region.
I believe Severn Edge will be a winner on merit alone.