European Commissioner (EC) for Energy Kadri Simson has announced that the EC will establish an Industrial Alliance dedicated to small modular reactors (SMRs) in early 2024 in response to calls from the nuclear industry, research community and nuclear safety regulators.
The Commission established a European SMR pre-Partnership in June with the overall objective of identifying enabling conditions and constraints, including financial ones, towards safe designs, construction and operations of SMRs in Europe in the next decade and beyond. This will be done in compliance with the E.U. legislative framework in general and the Euratom legislative framework in particular.
Simson spoke at a European Small Modular Reactor Partnership event in Bratislava, Slovakia in early November. She said, “After a long and intense work of preparation, we must now draw conclusions on the opportunity and potential for establishing a European Industrial Alliance on SMRs. Industrial alliances are a tool to facilitate stronger cooperation and joint action between all interested partners. Industrial alliances can play a role in achieving key EU policy objectives through joint action by all the interested partners. A successful deployment of SMRs by the next decade will be an important and timely milestone on our path to climate neutrality by 2050. I am confident that the EU can have a leadership role in achieving technological maturity for SMRs. This means to me that the first SMRs must be connected to the European electricity grid within a decade at the latest. This must be our goal.”
Simson noted that analyses undertaken by the European SMR pre-Partnership have indicated that an industrial alliance "is the appropriate concept" for the European SMR Partnership. The Stakeholders’ Forum “confirmed interest and readiness” for an industrial alliance. The Forum took place in Brussels in late October.
Simson added that “With a clear mandate from the Member States willing to use this technology in their energy mix, this determination of the stakeholders calls on the Commission to do its part and prepare the establishment of an Industrial Alliance on SMRs. I believe that there is today both the political opportunity and the industrial case to promote the development of SMRs in Europe. I stand ready to initiate within the Commission the necessary steps to establish the EU Industrial Alliance for SMRs early next year.”
Simson mentioned that skills and industrial competence, licensing, management of use fuel and radioactive waste will need to feature prominently in the next steps towards a European initiative on SMRs.
Yves Desbazeille is the Director General of European nuclear trade body Nucleareurope. He welcomed the announcement of the creation of the industrial alliance. He went on to say that “SMRs are expected to bring many benefits to the EU as a whole in terms of helping to decarbonize hard-to-abate sectors, as well as creating jobs and generating economic growth in the EU. The groundwork has been laid by its predecessor, the European SMR pre-Partnership and we are delighted that the European Commission is now giving its full backing to this key technology of the future.”