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Hinkley Point C nuclear power station delayed again as cost goes up by £3bn

Covid delays blamed for setting back £26bn project to 2027

Alan Jones
Friday 20 May 2022 06:09 EDT
General view of construction work at the Hinkley Point C Nuclear Power Station construction site in Bridgwater, Somerset. Picture date: Thursday April 7, 2022 (Finnbarr Webster/PA)
General view of construction work at the Hinkley Point C Nuclear Power Station construction site in Bridgwater, Somerset. Picture date: Thursday April 7, 2022 (Finnbarr Webster/PA) (PA Wire)

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The new nuclear power station being built at Hinkley Point will start operating a year later than planned and will cost an extra £3 billion, it has been announced.

French energy giant EDF published the findings of a review into the cost and schedule of the power station taking account of the continuing impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The revised operating date is June 2027 and the budget has increased by £3 billion.

EDF said this will have no cost impact on British consumers or taxpayers.

We are facing the same issues as other major projects with UK-wide supply and labour shortages and inflation

Stuart Crooks

The delay means the first reactor unit will start operating in June 2027, a year later than planned and costs are now estimated in the range of £25bn to £26bn.

A reduction in workers allowed on the site in Somerset due to pandemic safety measures resulted in the loss of more than half a million days of critical work in 2020 and 2021, said EDF.

Stuart Crooks, managing director of Hinkley Point C said in a message on Thursday evening: “You will all have experienced the severe impact of Covid-19 on the project over the last two years. You will remember how we suddenly had to cut numbers on site from more than 5,000 to around 1,500.

“For many months after that, we remained far below our plan for site numbers as our ability to fully ramp up activity was thwarted by the need for measures to prevent infection.

“Keeping workers safe with social distancing in canteens, buses and at work meant we had no choice but to become less efficient.

“In civil construction alone, having fewer people than planned means we lost in excess of half a million individual days of critical work in 2020 and 2021.

“Our supply chain was also hit hard and is still impacted now. In April 2020, 180 suppliers were fully shut down, but even as late as February this year, more than 60 suppliers were operating with reduced productivity due to Covid.”

Mr Crooks said that in January 2021, EDF estimated a six-month Covid impact, assuming an imminent return to normal conditions, but the second second wave of Covid-19 stopped that happening.

“In total, the start date for Unit 1 has gone back 18 months since construction started in 2016. In such a complex project, it wouldn’t be credible to say we can measure exactly how much of this is due to Covid-19 impact, but it is clearly in excess of 12 months.

“Other factors have affected the schedule and costs.

“Marine works have also cost more, although they are now in a good position – with legal hurdles finally cleared to allow the team to get on with the job.

“Running the site for longer and less efficiently during the pandemic also adds cost. We are facing the same issues as other major projects with UK-wide supply and labour shortages and inflation.”

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