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UK removes China from Sizewell nuclear project, takes joint stake
Britain on Tuesday removed China General Nuclear from construction of its new Sizewell C power station, announcing it would take a joint stake alongside French partner EDF as relations sour with Beijing.
The CGN announcement came after Prime Minister Rishi Sunak warned the "golden era" of UK-China links was "over" and said the Asian giant posed a "systemic challenge" to UK interests and values.
Tuesday's news comes also with a diplomatic storm brewing over the arrest and alleged assault of a BBC journalist covering widespread protests against Covid restrictions in a rare defiance of the Chinese authorities.
Sunak's Conservative government is stripping CGN of its controversial 20-percent Sizewell stake, and forming a joint venture with EDF.
The UK will invest £700 million ($843 million) in the project, a figure that was matched by EDF.
Sizewell C, which is under development on the Suffolk coast in eastern England, will comprise two EPRs or European Pressurized Reactors that will power the equivalent of about six million homes.
It is expected to start producing electricity from 2035.
- 'Energy sovereignty' -
Nuclear and renewables, such as offshore wind, are seen as critical to ramp up Britain's energy security, after key producer Russia's invasion of Ukraine sent gas and electricity bills rocketing across Europe.
EDF, which is in the process of being fully nationalised amid the region's worsening energy crisis, confirmed Tuesday it is still working with CGN to build Hinkley Point power station in southwestern England.
Hinkley, which has been blighted by delays and soaring costs, will be Britain's first new nuclear power plant in more than two decades and aims to provide seven percent of UK power needs.
Tuesday's news nevertheless further curbs UK ties with the world's second biggest economy.
London last month ordered a Chinese-owned company to divest most of Britain's biggest semiconductor maker -- a leading industrial asset -- after a national security probe.
And in 2020, Chinese telecoms giant Huawei was banned from involvement in the roll-out of the country's superfast 5G broadband network, after US concerns about spying.
The UK's "stake in Sizewell C is positioned at the heart of the new blueprint to Britain's energy sovereignty", the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) said in a statement.
The move "also allows for China General Nuclear's exit from the project, including buy-out costs, any tax due and commercial arrangements", it added.
The UK says Sizewell will deliver cleaner energy than fossil fuels and create 10,000 jobs for the local area and national economy.
Greenpeace UK policy director Doug Parr, however, slammed the nuclear push.
"Several academic institutes have shown we can have a 100-percent renewable system that would be cheaper than those based on nuclear or fossil fuels," said Parr.
"And it has the added benefit of not creating millennia of worry over the nuclear waste that future generations will end up dealing with."
Local campaign group Stop Sizewell C added that the project "can neither lower energy bills nor give the UK energy independence" and would cost "a huge amount of money".
- UK support 'essential' -
The news meanwhile comes as some of EDF's EPR nuclear reactors have been dogged by maintenance issues and delays.
"The support of the UK government through its direct participation... is essential" to Sizewell, EDF Energy chief executive Simone Rossi told AFP in an interview.
"This decision is a sign of confidence in the nuclear industry -- and in the French nuclear industry."
Business and Energy Secretary Grant Shapps said Sizewell would move Britain "towards greater energy independence and away from the risks that a reliance on volatile global energy markets for our supply comes with".
The UK has 15 nuclear reactors at eight sites but many are approaching the end of their lifespan.
Sizewell comprises two power plants: Sizewell A, which opened in the 1960s and shut in 2006. Sizewell B, which opened in 1995, is still in operation.
Britain is turning to new plants also to help meet its long-running target of net zero carbon emissions by 2050.
The government added on Tuesday it would create Great British Nuclear, a body overseeing development of more projects.
Sunak's administration is meanwhile partially subsidising household energy bills -- which have pushed UK inflation to a 41-year peak -- to cushion a cost-of-living crisis.
burs-rfj/phz/raz
L.K.Baumgartner--CPN