D7.3 ETI Nuclear Cost Drivers Summary Report - April 20
D7.3 ETI Nuclear Cost Drivers Summary Report - April 20
D7.3 ETI Nuclear Cost Drivers Summary Report - April 20
Summary Report
20 April 2018
Kirsty Gogan
CleanTech Catalyst Ltd
Quadrant House, Floor 6
4 Thomas More Square
London, United Kingdom E1W 1YW
+44 7952 545355
[email protected]
OR
Eric Ingersoll
Lucid, Inc. (“Lucid Strategy”)
625 Massachusetts Ave. Suite 108
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA 02138
+1 617-359-7900
[email protected]
Notice:
All content of this document is copyright © 2018 Energy Technologies Institute LLP.
The information in this document is the property of Energy Technologies Institute LLP and
may not be copied or communicated to a third party or used for any purpose other than that
for which it is supplied without the express written consent of Energy Technologies Institute
LLP.
Contents
Executive Summary...................................................................................................................... i
Acknowledgements..................................................................................................................... ii
1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................ 1
1.1 Motivation: cost reduction will be necessary if nuclear energy is to play a significant
role in meeting the UK decarbonisation targets ....................................................................... 1
1.2 Objective of the ETI’s Nuclear Cost Drivers Project: Potential Cost Reduction
Opportunities Supported by Strong Evidence ........................................................................... 2
1.3 Rigorous approach underpins data collection and analysis ......................................... 3
1.4 Case studies exemplify key mechanisms of the cost drivers ....................................... 4
1.5 Project Team and External Reviewers ........................................................................... 4
2 Cost Driver Analysis and Methodology................................................................................ 5
2.1 Benchmark Plant ............................................................................................................ 5
2.1.1 Overnight vs. Total Cost ............................................................................................. 5
2.1.2 Major Cost Components in the PWR Benchmark..................................................... 7
2.2 Methodology for Deciding on Cost Drivers and Data Collection ................................. 7
2.4 Company Engagement ................................................................................................. 12
3 ETI Cost Model .................................................................................................................. 14
3.1 ETI Cost Model .............................................................................................................. 14
3.2 Plant Genres ................................................................................................................. 14
3.2.1 Advanced Reactor and SMR Costs vs. Historic Costs from Operational Plants..... 15
4 Findings............................................................................................................................. 16
4.1 Design Completion as an important factor ................................................................. 16
4.2 Conventional Plants...................................................................................................... 17
4.3 Broad range of costs and scores in completed nuclear plants .................................. 19
4.4 Differences between high cost and low cost projects ............................................... 20
4.5 Common characteristics of high cost and low cost projects...................................... 21
4.6 Alternative Cost Scenarios: Capital cost reduction is as important as reducing the
cost of capital ............................................................................................................................ 21
4.7 SMRs and Advanced Reactors: Potential cost reduction from several factors when
commercial deployment can occur ......................................................................................... 22
5 Case Studies ...................................................................................................................... 26
5.1 Sizewell B and Nuclear Electric’s proposal for Sizewell C (Operational; Proposed) . 27
5.2 Barakah 1-4 (Partially Complete) ................................................................................. 29
5.3 Vogtle 3&4 (Under Construction) ................................................................................ 30
5.4 Rolls-Royce SMR (Unbuilt; Design in Commercial Development) ............................. 31
5.5 Japan Atomic Energy Agency’s High Temperature Engineering Test Reactor (Test
Reactor; Commercial Design in Development) ....................................................................... 32
5.6 Generic Molten Salt Reactor (Unbuilt; Designs in Commercial Development) ........ 33
5.7 Offshore Wind .............................................................................................................. 34
6 Cost Reduction Opportunities ........................................................................................... 35
6.1 Cost Reduction Opportunities for the EU/US Genre .................................................. 35
6.2 Relative importance of cost drivers in dataset ........................................................... 35
6.3 Key Cost Reduction Strategies ..................................................................................... 36
7 Conclusions ....................................................................................................................... 39
8 Recommendations ............................................................................................................ 42
Appendix 1 Reliability of Report Contents ................................................................................. 43
Appendix 2 Project Team, Advisors, and Independent Reviewer .............................................. 44
Appendix 3 References ............................................................................................................. 47
Executive Summary
The UK Industrial Strategy and Clean Growth Strategy identified nuclear energy as having
potential to play a significant role in the UK transition to a low carbon economy; provided it is
cost competitive and there is a market need. Recent nuclear projects in North America and
Europe have been vulnerable to schedule delays and cost increases.1 By contrast, plants built
elsewhere during the same period demonstrate that nuclear energy can be highly cost
competitive.
The Project Team identified and verified the most significant drivers of overall, delivered
plant cost within different regions around the world, leading to a series of recommendations
for principal actors in the sector that are transferable to the UK new build context. Instead of
predicting specific commercial project costs, or Contract for Difference, or strike price, this
Project focused on potential trends impacting LCOE.
Cost reduction inherently requires increasing schedule and budget certainty. In doing so,
there is less project risk and higher confidence in successful project delivery, which benefits
all stakeholders, including the public and the project developer. Reducing risk lowers overall
construction financing costs, both in terms of leading to a shorter construction period, but
also a lowering in the risk premium. Engaging in the right kind of collective action and
demonstrating risk reduction by all project stakeholders can therefore yield lower electricity
costs for the consumer, allow for the vendor to realise its desired risk-adjusted rate of return,
and expand market potential.
Evidence gathered and analysed during this Project suggests that UK nuclear new build has
very significant cost reduction potential. Sections 2 and 3 describe how the documented
experience with successful multi-unit builds and intentional new build programmes in other
countries indicate the range of cost savings that could be achievable in the UK context. Key
characteristics of low cost and high cost new build programmes (described in Section 4) are
strongly supported by evidence from multiple sources and documented experience. Section 4
describes the key differences between high cost and low cost nuclear construction,
identifying important and consistent themes in each, including the importance of design
completion before construction starts. This evidence is further supported by a series of Case
Studies in Section 5, underpinning a series of cost reduction opportunities transferable to the
UK context in Section 6, conclusions in Section 7 and recommendations for next steps in
Section 8.
The report concludes that a carefully designed programme that engages all of the key
stakeholders with a shared vision and focus on the key characteristics of low cost, high
quality construction can start the UK down the path to affordable nuclear power.
The Project also identified the potential for a step-reduction in the cost of advanced reactor
technologies and SMRs. Whilst such technologies are not yet licensed, nor construction
1
Recent analysis of published historic cost breakdowns of LWRs in the U.S. shows that the main cost driver is
not the nuclear technology itself; rather, it is the cost of a large-scale construction project that is regulated by
strict nuclear standards. (Dawson et al., 2017)
i
ready, this Project provides further evidence in support of early testing of design claims by
regulators, and the examination of cost reduction strategies by potential investors.
From within 35 cost reduction opportunities identified in this Study, the following smaller
group of actions should be prioritised for reducing project cost and risk in the UK.
ii
Acknowledgements
The Project Team wishes to express deep appreciation to the many people who helped this
study reach successful completion. First and foremost, we thank the Project Manager at the
Energy Technologies Institute (ETI), Mike Middleton, for his exceptional guidance and steady
support throughout. We also thank three officials at the Department for Business, Energy &
Industrial Strategy (BEIS) who provided insights during our discussions: Craig Lucas (Director
of Science and Innovation), Craig Lester (Deputy Director of Nuclear Strategy), and Prof. John
Loughhead (Chief Scientific Adviser). We are very grateful to the 50+ interviewees around the
world who shared their experience and expertise in nuclear power plant design, construction,
ownership, and operation. Finally, many thanks to our independent expert reviewer, Dr. Tim
Stone; to expert advisors – Dr. Ken Petrunik, Charles Peterson, Esq., Prof. Jacopo Buongiorno,
and Dr. Ben Britton; and to Bill Carruthers and Richard Waite – who were pivotal members of
this collaboration.
ii
1 Introduction
Nuclear can play a significant role in the UK transition to a low-carbon economy provided it is
cost competitive and there is a market need. The amount of new nuclear capacity deployed
by 2030, 2050, and beyond will depend on a number of factors but cost competitiveness will
be critical. The Government’s Clean Growth Strategy highlights the importance of cost
reduction in the low carbon energy transition:
“The UK will need to nurture low carbon technologies, processes and systems that are as
cheap as possible. We need to do this for several reasons. First, we need to protect our
businesses and households from high energy costs. Second, if we can develop low cost, low
carbon technologies in the UK, we can secure the most industrial and economic advantage
from the global transition to a low carbon economy. Third, if we want to see other countries,
particularly developing countries, follow our example, we need low carbon technologies to be
cheaper and to offer more value than high carbon ones.”3
Recent nuclear new build projects, particularly in North America and Europe, have been
vulnerable to schedule delays and cost increases.4 By contrast, nuclear projects in other parts
of the world are performing far better on cost and schedule. In the UK, the initial challenge
for projects starting construction in the next 10 years will be to complete construction and
commissioning within acceptable norms of schedule and budget variation, while delivering
meaningful cost reduction for follow-on plants to meet the expectations of investors,
Government, and consumers. This first challenge requires strategies for mitigating ‘first-of-a-
kind’ (FOAK) or ‘first-in-a-country’ schedule risk, and the second requires strategies for
programmatic reduction of construction duration and total capital costs as additional units
are delivered.
A brief examination of the costs of recently completed plants from around the world
indicates that there is a wide range—a factor of four. This suggests that even if the UK cannot
re-create all the conditions in countries achieving the lowest cost in nuclear construction,
there may still be significant potential to lower the cost of nuclear energy in the UK.
2 Industrial Strategy: Building a Britain Fit for the Future, November 2017. This white paper sets out a long-term
plan to boost the productivity and earning power of people throughout the UK.
3
Clean Growth Strategy, October 2017 https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/clean-growth-strategy
4
Recent analysis of published historic cost breakdowns of LWRs in the U.S. shows that the main cost driver is
not the nuclear technology itself; rather, it is the cost of a large-scale construction project that is regulated by
strict nuclear standards. (Dawson et al., 2017)
1
Figure 1. Total Capital Costs for Historical and Ongoing Nuclear Projects in Database
$14,000 /kW
$12,000 /kW
Total Capital Cost
$10,000 /kW
$8,000 /kW
$6,000 /kW
$4,000 /kW
$2,000 /kW
$0 /kW
US France Finland UK UAE Japan Russia Korea China
(Vogtle (Flam- (Olki- (Size- (Bara- (3 units) (2 units) (10 units) (4 units)
3&4) anville 3) luoto 3) well B) kah 1-4)
1.2 Objective of the ETI’s Nuclear Cost Drivers Project: Potential Cost
Reduction Opportunities Supported by Strong Evidence
The purpose of the Energy Technologies Institute (ETI) Nuclear Cost Drivers Project was to
Identify what drives cost within nuclear projects completed globally in the last twenty-five
years, as well as for contemporary, and advanced reactor designs. The goal was to then
identify and quantify potential to deliver meaningful reductions in capital cost and levelised
cost of energy (LCOE) in the UK.5 Because significant cost reduction opportunities require
coordinated and sustained action of multiple parties, a key outcome was a framework
designed to enable shared understanding and coordination between all stakeholders.
While the principal charge of this study is to reveal the major cost drivers for nuclear
projects, in practice, reducing cost also requires reducing project risk by increasing certainty
on schedule and budget. Less risk and higher overall confidence in budget and schedule—and
therefore cost of energy— benefit all stakeholders, including the public and the project
developer. Cost reduction should therefore not be considered a zero-sum game that comes
purely at the expense of vendor or EPC profit margins. Reducing project risk – whether
related to project development, construction or supply chain - benefits all parties, creating a
“win-win” outcome.
In general, there is an assumption that higher risk projects present an opportunity for higher
returns. For nuclear projects, risk-adjusted returns do not conform with this assumption
beyond certain risk levels. There is a point where project risk is simply too high regardless of
return. This level of risk is reached when it becomes difficult to raise capital from traditional
project investors. Therefore, reducing overall risk will be critically important to the long-term
health of the sector.
5
Note that LCOE is not the same as the CfD price or strike price. There are a number of factors that account for
this, such as financing structure, taxes and other operating charges, site specific development and
preconstruction expenses, and differences in depreciation periods, to name a few that are significant.
2
It is important to note that the use of the term ‘risk reduction’ in this report does not mean
transferring risk from one party to another, for example from the developer to the
government, which might occur through a mechanism such as a loan guarantee and would
result in commercial lenders charging a lower risk premium on a loan to the project. Here the
term is employed to mean actual reduction of risk in the project fundamentals from
improvements in the supply chain, construction practices, labour productivity, or increased
certainty in demand for future units, or direct support from government in the areas of
permitting, labour relations, or the regulator. Improving these risk fundamentals will lower
financing costs which the proposed nuclear sector deal (part of the UK Government’s
Industrial Strategy) identifies as an important potential contributor to cost reduction.
Engaging in the right kind of collective action and demonstrating risk reduction by all project
stakeholders can yield lower electricity costs for the consumer, allow for the vendor to realise
its desired risk-adjusted rate of return, and can expand the market potential for new build
projects.
6Economic Modeling Working Group of the Generation IV International Forum. 2007. “Cost Estimating
Guidelines for Generation IV Nuclear Energy Systems.” https://www.gen-4.org/gif/
upload/docs/application/pdf/2013-09/emwg_guidelines.pdf.
3
Figure 2. Summary of Methodology
4
2 Cost Driver Analysis and Methodology
Identifying the primary cost drivers for new build nuclear projects is challenging for several
reasons. First, most cost and project delivery information is confidential and little relevant
data exists in the public domain. Second, while establishing the quantitative linkage between
certain cost drivers and final project cost can be straightforward (e.g., cost and quantity of
raw materials, financing interest rate, number of staff, etc.), for other drivers, the linkage is
less direct. Third, some cost drivers are within the control of the project delivery consortium
while others are not (e.g., extent of regulatory interaction/intervention, labour rates, political
climate, etc.). With these constraints and complexities in mind, the Project Team developed a
methodology for obtaining qualitative and quantitative information for the most significant
cost drivers for dozens of individual reactors.
This approach enabled rich, detailed, and non-confidential conversations about the plant
delivery experience. Interviewees were generally happy to share detailed stories about what
drove plant costs and worked with the project team to assign scores that reflected the
relative influence of each cost driver on the final cost. Experienced project managers love
their craft and enjoyed talking about project learnings and cost reduction opportunities.
Scoring methodology allowed the project team to turn comprehensive, structured interviews
into a set of quantitative measures for each plant in the database (and enabled subsequent
quantitative analysis of those measures).
5
Figure 3. Capitalised Cost Breakdown of the US PWR Benchmark
6
2.1.2 Major Cost Components in the PWR Benchmark
As shown in the pie chart above, Direct Costs and Indirect Costs and, to a lesser extent,
financing costs dominate overall cost. While financing costs are important and a function of
perceived risk (reflected as the financing interest rate) and construction duration, the ETI has
explicitly removed it from consideration as a cost driver (although it is included as a dynamic
variable in the ETI Cost Model). In not considering financing costs, Direct and Indirect cost
make up an even larger share of total cost, and labour makes up approximately 40% and 80%
of these categories, respectively. This demonstrates how the quantity of labour (and hourly
rates, productivity, etc.) can explain much of the cost variation across projects.
Prior to engaging with companies, the Project Team defined the term “Cost Driver” and
produced an initial exhaustive list of cost drivers for potential inclusion/consideration in the
project.
Using this definition, eight cost drivers were identified. Each driver is attributed an ‘owner’
and has multiple detailed quantitative and qualitative cost driver indicators. The ‘owner’ of a
cost driver plays a functional role critical to the delivery of the project. In many cases roles
may be combined, as in the case of a single entity playing the roles of Vendor and EPC, or
shared among parties, such as when there are multiple owners for a project.
Develop a Cost Driver Category “Scorecard”. Based on the finalised list of Cost Driver
Categories, the Project Team prepared a data input form (or “Scorecard”) in Microsoft
Excel that served to capture a qualitative score for each cost driver category as well as
underlying rationale that supports the assigned score. A simple scoring methodology
was chosen to allow respondents to score each category using a range of -2 to 2. The
range was set around the US PWR benchmark, which defined the score of zero. As
shown in Table 1, a score of less than zero indicates that the category reduced the
overall plant cost against the benchmark PWR. Similarly, a score above zero indicates
that the respective category contributed to higher cost in that area. The scores and
7
scorecards were designed so that confidentiality would not be an issue, enabling
them to be included in the ETI Cost Database.
Category Score
Significantly Reduces Cost -2
Somewhat Reduces Cost -1
Neither Increases nor Decreases Cost 0
Somewhat Increases Costs 1
Significantly Increases Cost 2
Assigning scores for each category required a clear definition what is included in the “zero”
PWR benchmark score. Therefore, on the scorecard itself, the Project Team included
indicators for a “zero” score. This is presented in Table 2 below.
Principal
Cost Driver Description
Actor
Includes all pre-construction efforts related to plant design, including
design decisions, design completion, and ability to leverage past project
Vendor Plant Reactor
designs. This covers specific plant details such as plant capacity, thermal
Design Vendor efficiency, and seismic design, but also includes broader topics related to
constructability and project planning processes.
Encompasses quantities of equipment, concrete, and steel (both nuclear
Equipment
EPC and non-nuclear grade) used in the plant but also covers strategies used
and Materials to address materials cost.
Covers all the decisions and practices carried out and support tools used
by the EPC during project delivery. This starts with site planning and
preparation and design rework costs and spans all onsite decisions (e.g.
project execution strategies, schedule maintenance, interactivity with
Construction subcontractors and suppliers, etc.) until the Commercial Operation Date.
EPC This includes independent inspection processes, QA, QC, and other
Execution
major cost and risk centres during project construction. This driver is a
measure of efficiency and productivity across the entire delivery
consortium. For multi-unit construction on the same site, this should get
better with each subsequent unit.
Involves all direct and indirect construction labour performed on the
project site. This also includes any labour related to offsite
manufacturing or assembly. It covers productivity, wages, training and
Labour Labour prep costs, percentage of skilled workers with direct applicable
experience, etc. This driver measures efficiency and productivity at the
individual level.
Project
This driver includes all factors related to developing, contracting,
Governance
Owner financing, and operating the project by the project owner. This covers
and Project topics from the interdisciplinary expertise of the owner’s team to
Development
8
Principal
Cost Driver Description
Actor
number of units ordered (at the same site), discretionary design changes,
WACC, and contracting structures with the EPC and suppliers.
Includes the country-specific factors related to regulatory interactions
Political & Government and political support (both legislatively and financially). This driver
includes regulatory experience, pace of interactions, and details on the
Regulatory and site licensing process. It also includes topics related to the government’s
Context Regulator role in financing and how well it plays certain roles otherwise reserved
for the project customer.
Involves factors that characterise supply chain, experience, readiness,
Supplier
Supply Chain and cost of nuclear qualification as well as nuclear-grade and non-
Vendors nuclear-grade equipment and materials.
Covers all costs related to nuclear power plant operations (e.g.., fuel
Operations Operator price, staff head count, wages, capacity factor, unplanned outages, etc.)
9
Table 3. Indicative Cost Driver Values by Category for the US PWR Benchmark Plant
10
The “zero score” was one of several components used to help assign a final score. The
Scorecard also included two dynamic sliders (shown below) that changed positions as total
plant cost and average cost driver scores were adjusted. This effectively constrained the
participant into allocating the difference between their project and the benchmark cost
subject to the constraint that the average score aligns with the final plant cost.
Figure 4. Dynamic Cost and Cost Driver Sliders on the plant “Scorecard”
The Scorecard also provided a place for respondents to enter “one-digit” plant costs
according to the Gen-IV cost accounting framework.7 We anticipated that a full set of one-
digit cost detail be less onerous on the participating companies (than requesting 2- and 3-
digit level cost data).
The following figure shows the relationship between total capital costs and average driver
scores for nuclear plants included in the study. The figure shows that the Benchmark plant
with driver scores of zero has total capital cost of $6,870/kW, while plants with average
scores above zero have higher costs (up to about $12,000/kW) and plants with average
scores below zero have lower costs (down to about $2,000/kW).
Figure 5. Relationship Between Total Capital Costs and Average Driver Scores
7
See the ETI Report on Cost Database and Associated Model for more detail on the Generation-IV cost
accounting framework.
11
An eligibility cut-off date was set for plants that started construction past 1985, with priority
given to plants most recently commissioned (including those that will be commissioned in
2018).
In total, the Project Team obtained scorecards for 33 units that have been built or are
currently under construction.
Regression analysis of cost drivers. The Project Team performed a regression analysis to
quantitatively estimate the influence of each cost driver on total plant cost. Precision (or
“sensitivity”) of the coefficient values is largely a function of sample size. While the
Project Team was successful in obtaining cost driver score for 33 plants in a very short
period of time, it is a relatively small sample size for 8 independent variables. The
regression results should be treated as indicative and considered alongside the results
from the structured interviews, plant costs, and case studies.
“Cost Database Development,” consisted of inputting plant costs, cost driver scores, and
regression outputs (i.e. cost driver coefficients) into the Lucid/CTC database and
anonymising the data for transfer to the ETI Cost Database and ETI Cost Model without
violating confidentiality agreements.
If company participants were unable to provide cost information within the time
constraints for this study, the Project Team relied on public cost information from
12
Lovering et al. (2016).8 The Project Team added interest during construction (IDC) to the
overnight costs using the methodology described above.
Consistent Currency Values Cost information sources using US dollars from previous years
were inflated to 2017 dollars using the Consumer Price Index from the US Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS 2018). The cost sources using historical dollars were Lovering et al.
(2016) and US national energy laboratory reports on nuclear plant designs: Oak Ridge
National Laboratory (1980, 1986) and Idaho National Laboratory (2012). Cost sources
using a different currency than the US dollar were converted at the appropriate exchange
rate for the time, and then inflated to 2017 dollars.
8 Lovering, J. R., Yip, A. & Nordhaus, T. Historical construction costs of global nuclear power reactors. Energy Policy 91,
371–382 (2016). Some variables were originally sourced from the IAEA’s Power Reactor Information System (PRIS)
database, and more information can be found for individual reactors on their website: https://www.iaea.org/pris/
13
3 ETI Cost Model
The Project Team developed a methodology for storing, organising, synthesising, and
distilling value from the confidential data it obtained to make it actionable to the ETI.
Described in this section is the development, structure, and function of the ETI Cost Model.
These outputs create an evidence base of primary cost drivers for different nuclear
technologies in different markets. This helps define potential cost reduction for UK new build
projects.
The main model feature is an interactive “Dashboard,” which is an interface that allows users
to load plant genres and adjust cost driver assumptions to see how they affect overall cost.
Another important worksheet contains the values for the imported plant genres from the ETI
Cost Database.
14
The “genre” concept serves two purposes. First, they are fundamental features of
the cost model. Second, they enable confidential information to support estimates
of genre costs, without publishing confidential data. Reflecting averages across
multiple plants, confidential data is transformed and effectively anonymised while
the common characteristics and experience of a subgroup of plants are preserved.
3.2.1 Advanced Reactor and SMR Costs vs. Historic Costs from Operational Plants
It is important to note that costs and scores for advanced reactor concepts and SMRs reflect
projects that have not yet been built. These costs are estimates for NOAK plants, which
assume a relatively standardised design that reflects learnings from multiple, previous builds.
Providing NOAK estimates is useful in understanding whether these concepts are likely to be
cost competitive. However, today, most of these reactor designs are unlicensed and no
company has gone through the process of building a commercial demonstration or FOAK
plant. In the ETI database, it is important to distinguish between these forecast costs and
actual costs obtained from completed and operational plants (most, of which, have been
refuelled multiple times).
15
4 Findings
A relatively small number of understandable factors drives the cost of nuclear plants. Building
nuclear plants takes place through large, complex projects. However, there was a high degree
of consensus among the experts consulted. The findings of this study are therefore
straightforward.
The plant data reflects two vastly different environments – one where the nuclear industry is
attempting to restart (i.e. building the supply chain, training labour, a regulator with little
project experience, etc.) and another where all project stakeholders are experienced and
competent due to continuous projects.
This section describes the key differences between high cost and low cost nuclear
construction, identifies important and consistent themes in both of these. This evidence is
further supported by a series of Case Studies in Section 5, underpinning a series of
recommendations for cost reduction opportunities transferable to the UK context in Section
6.
16
Figure 6. Design Completion Percentage and Total Capital Cost
In Figure 7 below, the base case results reflect an interest rate and discount rate of 7%, while
the lower marker reflects rates of 6% and the upper marker reflects rates of 9%. The
methodological assumptions used to calculate the cost breakdowns and a full presentation of
the list of genre-specific plants, cost driver category scores, averaged capitalised and
annualised costs are provided in the Cost Drivers Analysis Report. Conventional plants in
Europe and North America have an average driver score of +1.4, while conventional plants in
17
ROW have an average of -1.4. Genre average scores for each driver are shown in the Cost
Drivers Analysis Report.
Note: For the three LCOE figures in this section, base case results reflect an interest rate and discount rate of
7%, the lower marker reflects rates of 6%, and the upper marker reflects rates of 9%.
18
4.3 Broad range of costs and scores in completed nuclear plants
The chart below shows 33 completed units that were included in the ETI cost database,
representing a wide range in terms of total capital cost (from $2,000/KW to $11,500/KW) and
each units’ associated cost driver scores (from -2 to +2).
A cluster of low cost plants scored well against all cost drivers, demonstrating that low cost is
not necessarily only attributable to country or context, but is the result of a concerted effort
to drive down costs across all indicators. High cost plants also demonstrated high scores
against most cost drivers.
+2.0
+1.5
+1.0
Average Score
+0.5
0.0
-0.5
-1.0
-1.5
-2.0
$1,500 /kW $3,500 /kW $5,500 /kW $7,500 /kW $9,500 /kW $11,500 /kW $13,500 /kW
Total Capital Cost
19
4.4 Differences between high cost and low cost projects
The chart below contrasts the EU/US light water reactor genre (conventional in Europe and
North America) and the Rest of World (ROW) genre. Evidence suggests the ROW genre is the
result of a highly focused, deliberate and intentional programme to drive down costs and
drive up performance over time.
20
4.5 Common characteristics of high cost and low cost projects
The Study set out to understand what drives the vast range of costs in nuclear construction
around the world. The findings suggest a strong correlation between high costs and high
scores against the identified cost drivers. In addition, there was a high degree of consensus
amongst experts interviewed for this study about key characteristics within projects that
drive costs.
Key characteristics of both high cost and low cost projects that were consistently highlighted
by multiple sources are summarised in the following table.
21
It is important to note that it may not be possible for European or North American plants to
achieve -2 scores and the associated low costs that are achieved in rest of world examples.
Reaching a cross driver score of -1 or even zero in western Europe of North America will be a
challenge, but an average of almost minus 2 is too challenging to envisage without multiple
units of 4 or more per site, levels of worker hours not permitted by the EU working time
directive, and levels of pay which some skills in nuclear site construction can command.
4.7 SMRs and Advanced Reactors: Potential cost reduction from several
factors when commercial deployment can occur
The project included light water Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) and three advanced reactor
(“Gen-IV”) technologies: High Temperature Gas Reactors (HTGRs), Molten Salt Reactors
(MSRs), Liquid-metal cooled fast reactors (LFRs). All the advanced reactors in commercial
development are based upon reactor technologies that have had decades of development
and some degree of prototyping/testing at national nuclear laboratories. Companies are
combining this experience with more recent scientific and computing breakthroughs to
develop improved designs that address many of the challenges of the current, conventional
nuclear fleet and associated delivery models.
Gen-IV plants are still in relatively early stages of commercial development. None of the
companies have a completed detailed design and all are actively engaged (or preparing to
engage) in the first stages of reactor licensing activities. Only after obtaining a reactor license
and completing a detailed design can a company build commercial demonstration or FOAK
plant. While advanced reactor companies are projecting lower costs than conventional
plants, these costs will remain inherently uncertain until FOAK (and perhaps several
additional plants) are delivered. At present, these reactor technologies are not available for
near-term deployment.
The methodology for calculating genre-specific CAPEX and OPEX for advanced reactor
technologies can be found in the Cost Drivers Analysis Report. The following figure presents
the average capitalised and annualised operating costs for SMRs and the three types of
advanced reactors included in the analysis.
22
Figure 10. LCOE for SMRs and Advanced Reactor Technologies
The Project Team assumes that the same drivers for conventional plants will be relevant to
advanced reactors. Many companies view that not yet having a detailed design provides
continued opportunity to integrate cost reduction into the design. SMRs and Advanced
Reactors can implement cost reduction opportunities earlier in the design process. While this
is true, the lack of a detailed design inherently obscures cost and risk. The design should be
considered incomplete until licensed, and until it has been built, the significance of such cost
reduction opportunities is harder to assess. Still, advanced reactor vendors are conscious of
the shortcomings and risk centres that plague conventional, stick-built construction and are
integrating several cost reduction approaches into their plant design and delivery strategy.
Typical strategies being pursued by advanced reactor and AMR/SMR vendors that may
reduce construction costs include:
Reduced construction scope, duration, and labour, particularly at site due to fewer
buildings and fewer safety systems needed due to passive safety design.
Designed to enable a much higher percentage of factory production of key
components and assemblies.
Simpler plants design enabling a less labour-intensive Quality Assurance and
verification.
Highly-standardised, modular designs
Design for design reuse and constructability
o Designed-in seismic isolation reduces site specific design costs
Fewer operating staff due to the inherent safety characteristics of the reactor/plant
design and fuel type. Some companies are incorporating virtual/remote operation
enhancements.
23
Advanced reactors do present the possibility of a step change in cost reduction in EU/US
markets compared to conventional EU/North America – although uncertainties remain.
One challenge will be to significantly reduce fixed costs associated with site licencing, control
systems, and planning approval, for example. Historically, vendors increased plant capacity
to spread fixed costs and, as a result, reduce LCOE.9 However, the resultant increase in the
scale of the capital required and complexity of the project can significantly increase risk
unless the project delivery organisation has a proven record of successfully managing such
risk. The following figures provide a comparison of the conventional genres as well as NOAK
estimates from the three advanced reactor genres.
9
Part of the reason why Westinghouse’s AP600 was “up-sized” to the AP1000 was to spread fixed costs.
24
Figure 11. Comparison of Capitalised Costs Across All Genres
$160 /MWh
Estimated costs; not yet approved by
$140 /MWh
regulators or construction ready
$120 /MWh
$100 /MWh
$80 /MWh
$60 /MWh
$40 /MWh
$20 /MWh
$0 /MWh
Reference US Conventional in Conventional in Light Water High Temp Gas Liquid Metal Molten Salt
PWR Europe / North Rest of World SMRs Reactors Cooled Fast Reactors
America Reactors
Levelized Construction Costs O&M Costs Fuel Costs
25
5 Case Studies
This section presents case studies on nuclear plants and concepts that illustrate key
relationships between costs and drivers. The case studies provide illuminating details on the
reasons for wide variation in nuclear cost values around the world, and offer important
lessons on potential strategies to pursue, as well as pitfalls to avoid, for new nuclear build in
the UK or elsewhere.
The Project Team worked closely with knowledgeable experts to develop a complete picture
of each plant or concept among the case studies, identify the principal causes behind their
high or low costs, and highlight the most useful implications for future contexts. The case
studies include historical nuclear projects, a previously planned project, ongoing projects, and
innovative concepts in development.
Case Study Overview Table 8 below presents an overview of the nuclear projects and
concepts discussed in the case studies. The Project Team selected them from the many
projects and concepts in the ETI Cost Database because they span a wide range of
technologies, costs, driver scores, experiences, and lessons. Green circles in the table’s cost
driver columns denote positive factors associated with low costs, while orange circles denote
negative factors associated with high costs.
26
5.1 Sizewell B and Nuclear Electric’s proposal for Sizewell C (Operational;
Proposed)
Important finding: All projects that have achieved low costs have built multiple units on a
single site enabling maximum learning for cost reduction, shared use of infrastructure, shared
operational facilities, and more organised and efficiently-timed construction to optimise the
use of labour and project management resources.10 The factors that make a project
expensive (e.g. FOAK, new supply chain, inexperience labour, etc.) can all be improved during
a second project. The Sizewell case study clearly demonstrates how much cost reduction is
possible by improving multiple drivers.
Sizewell B was the first power generation PWR in the UK and the most recent nuclear plant
built in the country (1989-1995). It was a successful first of a kind project and avoided
significant schedule delays and cost overruns. Nuclear Electric planned Sizewell C (“NE’s
Sizewell C”) in the 1990s, but it was not built (and current expansion plans at Sizewell are not
addressed here). Cost information in the figure for Sizewell B includes some very high first-of-
a-kind expenses for the project, such as plant design, software, interest during
construction11. NE’s Sizewell C shows potential cost reductions from a multi-unit construction
programme. Reusing the design primary contractors, and suppliers from Sizewell B for NE’s
Sizewell C, planned in both single and twin configurations, would have lowered costs
significantly for software (over $1,000/kW savings), nuclear steam supply system (over
$750/kW savings), civil works (over $250/kW savings), and controls and instrumentation
(over $180/kW savings). In addition, there were significant learnings that enabled a much
shorter construction schedule. By building two units in 51 months vs. one unit in 76 months
for Sizewell B, the twin configuration would have cost less than $4,000/kW, according to
detailed estimates from the planning process in the 1990s, by sharing designs, buildings,
systems, and staff across the units.
Sizewell B - 1,345 MW Nuclear Electric’s Sizewell C (Twin) – 2,690 MW
(Operating) (Planned in 1990s)
CAPEX with IDC: $8,315/kW; LCOE: $113/MWh CAPEX with IDC: $3,963/kW; LCOE: $71/MWh
10
Reflecting the high cost of working capital, construction of a second unit is sometimes deferred to allow
revenues from the first unit (when operational) to defray some of the working capital needs for the second unit.
11
Although the owner of the plant did not explicitly borrow money for the construction of the plant, the team
used our proxy for 7% to make the conditions and reported costs similar to current practice in the UK.
27
Cost Driver Experience
● Vendor Plant Sizewell B uses a basic PWR design from two previous plants in the United
Design States with additional safety features to achieve licensability in the UK. NE’s
Sizewell C would have largely reused the blueprints for Sizewell B, but with
25% reductions achieved in concrete and steel quantities due to structural
and site efficiencies.
● Construction Sizewell B’s construction period of 78 months was only 4 months beyond the
Execution planned timeline. The planning team for NE’s Sizewell C developed a detailed
construction schedule with total duration of 54 months, a 31% reduction
from Sizewell B.
● Project Sizewell B’s PWR Project Group was an integrated delivery organisation that
Governance supported every aspect of the project, from the project management office
and Project to the engineering, licensing, quality control, quality assurance, and
Development commissioning. Consolidating all these functions, responsibilities, and
authorities under one organisation streamlined many processes and enabled
short lines of communication.
● Political & Sizewell B received substantial attention and support from the UK
Regulatory government as the first PWR in the country and sole nuclear plant under
Context construction at that time. Nuclear Electric managers made timely submissions
to the regulators and worked with them to resolve problems quickly.
● Supply Chain Sizewell B has a slightly worse score than the benchmark for supply chain
because the switch from gas-cooled reactors to a PWR required many
adaptations among vendors.
28
5.2 Barakah 1-4 (Partially Complete)12
Important finding: Multi-unit efficiencies
included factors such as shared site Barakah Unit 4 - 1,345 MWe
infrastructure, one site mobilisation effort (not (Under construction)
separate or requiring of stop/start mobilisation), CAPEX with IDC (extrapolated):
bulk purchasing, same contracts and overhead, $2,300/kW; LCOE: $51/MWh
etc. Numerous multiple learning effects enabled
continual improvements in efficiency and
productivity. The project also reinforces the need
to have an effective owner in addition to a proven
strong vendor.
Emirates Nuclear Energy Corporation (ENEC)
signed a contract in December 2009 with Korean
Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO), as the head
of a Korean consortium to build four APR-1400
units at the Barakah site in the UAE. KEPCO, has
extensive experience in nuclear construction
along with its consortium partners through Korea’s fleet programme, building 17 plants since
the 1990s. The turnkey contract for the Barakah project had a total price of $20.4 billion,
including funding for construction of a port facility and other project infrastructure. The total
price indicates an average cost across the four units of $3,700/kW. Early units have higher
costs and later units have lower costs through both multi-unit efficiencies and learning
effects. (The figure shown here relates to Unit 4.).
12
As of March 26, 2018, Unit 1 was complete; Unit 2 was 92% complete; Unit 3 was 81% complete, and Unit 4
was 67% complete (World Nuclear News, 2018).
29
5.3 Vogtle 3&4 (Under Construction)
Important finding: Vogtle 3&4 reflects how cost Vogtle 3&4 – 2,234 MWe
can quickly escalate when cost drivers are CAPEX with IDC: $11,950/kW; LCOE: $127/MWh
poorly managed or reflect contextual factors
(e.g. lack of readied supply chain, slow pace of
the regulatory interactions, expensive regulator
billing rate, etc.) that can present intractable
burdens on the project.
Georgia Power Company (GPC) is currently
building two additional reactors at the Vogtle
plant. Vogtle 3 and 4 are the first Westinghouse
AP1000 PWRs in the United States and the
country’s first new nuclear projects in three
decades (the recent Watts Bar 2 project
completed work begun in the 1980s). Partly
because of their FOAK status, the units have suffered numerous setbacks in the ten years
since GPC requested approval from the Georgia Public Service Commission and the US
Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The expected cost in the initial plans from 2008 was
$6,400/kW, and the expected completion year for Unit 3 was 2016 (about 5 years after
pouring the first nuclear concrete), followed by Unit 4 in 2017. The approval process and
initial site work went slower than expected, significant regulatory interventions delayed the
project, notably requiring redesign of the aircraft impact protection structure and further
problems arose with construction of the large concrete structures. The latest estimates put
the cost at $11,950/kW and completion in 2021-2022. As the two most costly projects in the
ETI Cost Database, the Vogtle units have scores of +2 in six cost driver categories.
30
5.4 Rolls-Royce SMR (Unbuilt; Design in Commercial Development)
Important Finding: Rolls-Royce’s SMR design demonstrates that many of the risk and cost
centres of conventional nuclear can be “designed out” during the plant design phase and
radical evolutions in the delivery process are possible.
Rolls-Royce is continuing to develop its design for a small, modular, Gen III+ PWR with a
power rating between 400 -450 MWe. The design includes multiple, advanced passive safety
systems and reflects a comprehensive understanding of the broad range of risks and
challenges faced by conventional approaches to nuclear plant delivery. In addition to their
primary focus of reducing LCOE, the company has intentionally incorporated several “down-
stream” considerations into the design process such as: ease of plant licensing,
manufacturability, design reuse, reduced construction scope, Optimised inspection and QA,
operation, and decommissioning, and ease of accessing commercial financing. The SMR
design significantly reduces or avoids major cost and risk centres associated with stick-built
construction approaches.
31
5.5 Japan Atomic Energy Agency’s High Temperature Engineering Test
Reactor (Test Reactor; Commercial Design in Development)
Important finding: Japan’s HTTR shows the potential viability of a low-cost advanced nuclear
concept.
The Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) has been developing high temperature gas reactor
technology since the mid 1980’s. In the early 1990’s a decision was made to build a test
facility that was large enough to meaningfully test commercial scale or close to commercial
scale components and provide the technical basis for all aspects of a 100MWe+ commercial
scale power plant. The 30MWt High Temperature Engineering Test Reactor (HTTR) was
completed in 1998 and has been undergoing test operations ever since. JAEA’s HTGR
developments constitute a relatively mature advanced reactor technology platform due to
extensive testing of fuels, reactor materials, fuel handling procedures, control systems,
balance of plant component development and demonstration, safety related tests, and
accident simulations. In addition to the technology validation, there has been an intensive
design focus on cost reduction through: simplification, modularity, factory-based
manufacturing, simplicity of safety, simplicity of operation and control-reduced operational
cost (fewer staff). Operational testing has exceeded 15,000 hours of continuous operation,
enabling the development of the full complement of operational procedures and numerous
safety related tests have been conducted and documented.
Concurrent R&D work has demonstrated key components of a complimentary helium-based
gas turbine technology that allows a more efficient and lower cost direct cycle power
generation system. Compared with steam turbine technology, the direct cycle helium turbine
enables an improvement in overall efficiency, a more compact arrangement for the plant,
and the turbine power cycle components are expected to cost less than a comparable steam
turbine system. The helium gas turbine has been under development for 20 years and several
key milestones have been reached, including demonstrating a compressor with commercial
level of efficiency (89%) for a 150 MWe turbine (~50% power level for a 275 MWe unit
design). High temperature gas cycle enables CHP for medium temperature applications such
a desalination and industrial heat, without reducing electrical production, which is not
possible with steam cycle.
● Vendor Plant JAEA’s HTTR technology is estimated to be more cost-competitive than most
Design other commercially-available nuclear technologies. These economics can be
further improved by the cogeneration applications being pursued by JAEA.
They have already demonstrated H2 production and are now validating the
process using commercially-available materials.
● Equipment and The HTTR is expected to be lower cost than other HTGRs in part due to its
materials direct cycle helium gas turbine power generation system which eliminates the
need for several components. It also increases efficiency from a typical rating
of 33% for most current nuclear plants to between 45-50%. This 40%
increase in efficiency, is equivalent to a 30% reduction in capital cost, and also
reduces LCOE further by reducing fuel cost per MWh.
32
5.6 Generic Molten Salt Reactor (Unbuilt; Designs in Commercial
Development)
Important finding: The inherent benefits of using Generic Molten Salt Reactor
molten salt as the primary coolant (or 190 – 1,000 MWe
combination of fuel and coolant) enables several CAPEX with IDC: $3,664; LCOE: $51
transformative cost reduction opportunities. (Nth-of-a-kind design)
Molten salt reactors are a class of advanced
reactors that use molten fluoride or chloride salts
as the primary reactor coolant and, often, the fuel
itself. The high operating temperatures, low
operating pressure, inherent safety, load
following capabilities, and relatively low waste
production offer several advantages over typical,
light water reactors. As of spring 2018, there are
at least 13 different companies and organisations
developing molten salt reactor designs. While the
safety and operating characteristics enable
significant cost reduction opportunities, the
reactor technology has not been licensed
(although several companies are pursuing the licensing process in Canada.
Cost Driver Notes
● Vendor Plant The reactor operates near atmospheric pressure, which dramatically reduces both the
Design quantity of engineered safety systems as well as the specification (or classification) of
the safety systems. Such low operating pressures make an expensive pressure vessel
unnecessary and the containment building can be held to much less strict design
specification. Many MSR reactor designs are placed below the ground level. Without
high pressure steam in the nuclear island, there is no need for the related equipment or
engineering, which reduces overall construction complexity and cost. Many MSR
designs have orders of magnitude smaller footprints than conventional reactors of the
same power rating.
● Equipment MSR plant designs are physically much smaller (and more power dense) than
and Materials conventional plants and require less safety-grade materials (and components). This
means that materials are not only less expensive, but the training, qualification,
documentation, supply chain QA (and onsite component QA) is drastically reduced.
● Construction Most MSR designs are based on having a relatively high degree of factory- or shipyard-
Execution based production. This is intended to limit on-site construction and shorten
construction schedules. Shortening the design and construction period leads to lower
borrowing costs overall, and lower financing costs on the borrowed amount.
● Operations Continuous refueling capability, fewer required reactivity controls, fewer components
and moving parts that require servicing, simpler reactor control systems, and
conventional power generation system (less onerous and costly to operate and
maintain) lowers operating costs.
33
5.7 Offshore Wind
The offshore wind industry recently smashed expectations with astonishingly low prices:
£57.50 per MWH for new build starting in 2022/23. This represents a halving of costs
achieved in a five-year period, illustrating the power of innovation, collaboration, and drive.
By identifying and demonstrating cost reduction across key areas including foundations, high
voltage cables, electrical systems, access in high seas and wind measurement, the sector has
transformed its overall performance on cost and delivery.
Technical routes to increase reliability and size have been examined and achieved. 9MW
turbines are already 190m high and need to get even higher. The optimum size will be as tall
as the Shard and 15MW. In order to meet the required fleet size (30GW by 2035), off-shore
wind deployment must increase significantly from current levels: from one to two turbines
per day, whilst moving towards higher power density. Current projects to 2023 / 2025 aim for
10GW installed capacity by 2022, equivalent to 110 turbines per year, at one per day. Future
build aims for 30GW by 2035, delivering two per day.
Cost reduction efforts have been identified and achieved across design, delivery and
deployment.
Conclusion: The rising tide that lifts all boats. Learning from the success of the offshore wind
industry suggests that in addition to design and delivery improvements, innovation through
collaboration; cost and risk sharing across the public sector, supply chains and developers will
be critical in realising strategic priorities for the nuclear sector. Such priorities include the
need to tackle construction delay; cost over-runs; slow build rate; and high financing costs. A
key feature of the off-shore wind sector transformation was a transition to modular build and
factory-based assembly of mass-produced units that can be manufactured and shipped to
sites for installation rather than custom-built, thereby speeding up delivery times and
lowering direct and financing costs. Investment in engineering solutions that are
subsequently standardised and deployed at scale enables non-recurring engineering costs to
be absorbed across a higher number of units. Technological innovation has been coupled
with a laser-like focus on accelerating commercialisation of new products, at scale, within
rapid timescales.
34
6 Cost Reduction Opportunities
LCOE
$6,000 /kW $60 /MWh
$0 /kW $0 /MWh
+1.4 0.0 -1.0
Average Driver Score
35
Table 9. Relative importance of cost drivers in dataset
Relative
Cost Driver
Importance
Supply Chain High
Labour High
Project Governance and Project Development High
Construction Execution Med
Political and Regulatory Context Med
Equipment and Materials Med
Vendor Plant Design Med
Operations -
36
Table 10. Cost Reduction Strategies by Cost Driver
Government support should be contingent on systematic application of best practices and cost
reduction measures
Government must play a role in supporting the financing process
Political and
Design a UK program to maximise and incentivise learning, potentially led by a newly-created entity
Regulatory Owner
Support regulator exposure to projects outside the UK
Context
Transform regulatory interaction to focus on cost-effective safety
Engage the Regulator early and agree on a process for resolving licensing issues
Reform and update nuclear safety culture
37
Cost Driver Responsible Party Key Cost Reduction Strategies
Innovate new methods for developing alignment with labour around nuclear projects
Improve labour productivity
Labour Labour
Invest in the labour force
Apply principles of the Kaizen system
Involve commissioning staff and operators in project planning and related construction activities
Operation Operator Develop excellence in plant operations and maintenance through training and benchmarking such as
the World Associated of Nuclear Operators peer review programme
38
7 Conclusions
The project objectives of assembling a credible cost database and associated model,
improving the understanding of cost drivers for contemporary UK new build projects and
advanced reactor technologies, and identifying potential cost reduction opportunities have
been achieved. The extent of evidence gathered was limited by the time and resources
available for the project. However, there is strong confidence in the importance of the cost
drivers selected and the associated cost reduction opportunities. The project’s figure of
merit for cost was based on cost of energy, calculated as Levelised Cost of Energy (LCOE).
This is principally driven by three factors, overnight cost (CAPEX), cost of capital, and
Operating and Maintenance expense. Because the scope of the study excluded financing
methods and assumed a constant set of interest rates, and because the CAPEX portion of
LCOE is currently expected to dominate the LCOE of UK nuclear new builds, understanding
the drivers of CAPEX was a major focus of the study. The weight of evidence of the collected
data, interviews, and case studies support the following conclusions:
A relatively small number of understandable factors drives the cost of nuclear plants. While
building nuclear plants takes place through large, complex projects, the findings of this
study are straightforward and there was a high degree of consensus among the experts
consulted.
Strong evidence of applicable cost reduction in the UK. There is strong evidence,
particularly demonstrated by projects delivered outside of Europe and the United States,
that cost reduction opportunities are applicable to new build projects in the UK.
Successful new build programmes have lowered costs by consciously designing in ways to
maximise captured learning and incentivise cost reduction from all parties.
Cost Driver Owner
Supply Chain Vendors
Labour EPC
Project Governance and Project Development Government
Construction Execution EPC
Political and Regulatory Context Government
Equipment and Materials EPC/Vendor
Vendor Plant Design Vendor
Operations Operator
Fleet deployment by itself does not necessarily guarantee cost reduction. To realise cost
reduction within a fleet or sequenced, multi-unit build, project delivery consortia must
implement and manage a well-designed and intentional programme that incorporates
multiple cost reduction opportunities by all principal actors.
Relatively significant cost reduction is possible outside reducing the cost of capital during
construction. Averaging costs across large Gen III/III+ reactors in Europe and North
America corresponds to a “genre” capital cost of $10,387/kW or $132/MWh (LCOE), (see
explanation of how we created genres on page 35) assuming a construction interest rate
39
of 7%. In our study’s methodology, this cost corresponds to having the highest (worst)
score for each of the eight cost drivers. If it were possible to improve to the average of
the world performance in each cost driver score, this would result in a cost reduction of
at least 35% – without reducing the rate of interest during construction. It is critical to
note that this assumes all project stakeholders are pursuing cost reduction opportunities
– not just the project developer and EPC. Collective action is required by all project
stakeholders, including government, to bring about the integrated programme of
activities necessary to realise this potential.
Larger Gen III/III+ reactors and light-water SMRs are more market-ready than advanced
reactors. Large Gen III/III+ reactors have the potential to deliver substantial low carbon
UK electricity in the near future. There also appears to be potential for advanced reactors
to deliver a step change reduction in LCOE below large Gen III+, and a licensed,
commercial-scale high temperature gas reactor will be connected to the grid in China this
year. It is highly likely that HTGR’s will be under active consideration for nuclear new build
projects within the next five years. Due to their ability to provide high temperature
process heat, and potential for different siting requirements, these reactors may also play
a complementary role to the 1.5GW class LWR’s. These advanced designs will need to be
approved by the UK regulators.
Cost reduction and more predictable delivery can reduce perceived risk and potentially
lower the cost of interest during construction (reducing CAPEX even further). Addressing
the drivers identified in this study has the potential to reduce project duration and
increase the predictability of project schedules as has been demonstrated by Chinese,
Korean, and Japanese consortia. This can lower the actual and perceived risk of nuclear
construction and the related cost of capital during construction.
The cost reductions in “Rest of World” LWRs are a consequence of national nuclear
programmes and the consistent, rational implementation of best practices. National
nuclear programmes with a consistent focus on cost reduction enable multiple “learner
effects.” Continuity through on-going construction allows companies to systematically
realise learnings, keeps supply chains at a level of readiness, enables the same EPC
consortium and labourers to work from project to project, and allows for economies of
scale for components and materials (both nuclear and non-nuclear grade). Long-term,
politically-supported fleet programmes, in Japan, Korea, and China have demonstrated
repeatable low costs. These low costs are reflected in our Rest of World (ROW) genre.
Some of these cost reductions were also experienced in the UK, US, France, and Sweden
during the height of new build programmes in the 1960s through 1980s. Such low cost
nuclear build programmes require long-term cooperation of all key stakeholders involved
in plant deliver and relentless focus on driving efficiency and savings across all key cost
drivers.
Project delivery organisations in China, Korea, and Japan allocate adequate resources
toward maintaining constant efficiency improvements in plant delivery. Many companies
formalise the integration of lessons learned in the field to the design process of the
subsequent plant. There is living “post-mortem” documentation of what went well (and
what did not) so mistakes are very rarely repeated and EPC consortia are always applying
the latest construction technology and methods. China, Korea, and Japan are also highly-
40
experienced in delivering large, complex construction projects. Many of the “soft skills”
(e.g. logistics, planning, procurement, site management) transfer well to nuclear
construction.
It is important to note that China, Korea, and Japan also enjoy several “contextual”
benefits, especially for in-country projects that may not be transferrable to projects in the
UK. They benefit from significantly less expensive and more productive labour (i.e. more
hours on task). The regulator is paid by the government as opposed to the reactor
vendor or project developer and the regulator while being sufficiently independent is
aligned on project completion. China benefits from the ability of state-run enterprises to
quickly make large decisions once the political direction has been set – decisions that
otherwise require a lengthy board approval process for private companies. All three
countries benefit from cultures where litigious responses to problems are extremely rare
for on-site issues. Nevertheless, none of these ‘contextual’ factors would prevent an
effective cost-reduction programme from being implemented in the UK.
Recent challenges in North America and Europe new build projects are partially
attributable to local “context.” Domestic industry experience has suffered from decades
of inactivity and developers have been unable to leverage or depend on and labour or
supply chain experience. Therefore, significant resources must be allocated to train or
retrain workers and stand up the supply chain. This is both a reflection and result of a
lack of a unified, long-term effort and vision between government and companies.
Within the 35 cost reduction opportunities identified in this study, the Project Team
identified a smaller group of actions that present the best opportunities for reducing
project cost and risk in the UK. This group of actions is strongly supported by the evidence
base, interviews, and regression analysis. These include the following:
41
8 Recommendations
Evidence gathered and analysed during this Project suggests that UK nuclear new build has
very significant cost reduction potential. Documented experience with multi-unit builds and
intentional new build programmes indicate the range of cost savings achievable. This can be
demonstrated with this Project’s cost database and model. Low cost nuclear builders reduce
all costs over time, starting with the most significant. Interaction between costs and drivers is
illustrated in this project’s database and model. A carefully designed programme that
engages all of the key stakeholders with a shared vision and focus on the key cost drivers can
start the UK down the path to affordable nuclear power.
How might the UK implement the findings from this study? Two important points for
potential further work could include: (1) in-depth analysis of captured knowledge and
experience (learning) to deliver meaningful cost reduction in new build over calendar time
and over multiple projects; (2) designing a sequence of optimal near-term and subsequent
actions by Government, developers, the regulator and other stakeholders. This deeper
examination of successful new build programmes, and subsequent translation into actions for
the UK context should remain rooted in the underpinning evidence.
The Project also identified the potential for a step-reduction in the cost of advanced reactor
technologies and SMRs. Whilst such technologies are not yet licensed, nor construction
ready, this Project provides further evidence in support of early testing of design claims by
regulators, and the examination of cost reduction strategies by potential investors.
42
Appendix 1 Reliability of Report Contents
Several factors support the ETI’s ability to rely on the report contents:
43
Appendix 2 Project Team, Advisors, and Independent Reviewer
+15 years experience as a senior advisor to Government, industry and non-profits;
including No.10 and the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
Senior trusted advisor and consultant e.g. to UK government; IAEA expert lecturer;
strong links with OECD-NEA; World Economic Forum; nuclear industry
As Deputy Head, Civil Nuclear Security, reformed civil nuclear emergency
communications protocol and led national public consultation on new nuclear sites
Recent nuclear-sector clients in a consulting capacity include BEIS, NuGen, Cumbria
Kirsty Gogan Centre of Nuclear Excellence (CoNE), and the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority
Played a central role in building Lucid’s nuclear cost model and cost databases for
the recent EON/EIRP advanced nuclear cost study
Has closely tracked nuclear trends in the UK, US, and around the world for several
years, including in-depth information collection on the Hinckley Point and Horizon
projects in the UK as well as the Vogtle and Summer projects in the US
Participates as a cost expert in MIT’s Future of Nuclear Study
Has over 10 years of experience in quantitative analysis of innovative energy
technologies, energy market dynamics, environmental quality, and related issues
Andrew Foss
Lead author and project manager of recent EON/EIRP advanced nuclear cost study
Involved in an array of projects related to regulatory, financing, and project delivery
barriers in the nuclear sector
Spent the past 12 years working for economic and corporate strategy consultancies
and clean energy start-up companies
Involved in developing several capitalization strategies to take different types of
nuclear technologies through to commercial demonstration
John Herter
44
Project Advisors
Former Chief Program Officer for the Emirates Nuclear Energy Corporation since
2009 is managing the Contract with KEPCO for the delivery of four APR 1400
nuclear power plants being constructed at Barakah in U.A.E.
Former President of the CANDU Reactor Division responsible for AECL’s commercial
CANDU business including new build reactors and services to operating stations.
Led the construction and project management of CANDU 6 nuclear power stations
in Argentina (1), Korea (2), Romania (1) and China (2) on time and on budget.
45
Independent Reviewer
Former Expert Chair of the Office for Nuclear Development in DECC and
the Senior Advisor to successive Secretaries of State responsible for
energy
Chairman of Nuclear Risk Insurers and the longest serving member of
the Board of the European Investment Bank
Non-executive director of Horizon Nuclear Power and a member of the
Wylfa Newydd site licence company board
Only foreign member of the Expert Advisory Committee of the Royal
Commission on the Nuclear Fuel Cycle established in 2015 by the
government of S. Australia
Chairman of Nuclear Risk Insurers
46
Appendix 3 References
Dawson, Karen; Sabharwall, Piyush. 2017. A Review of Light Water Reactor Costs and Cost
Drivers. Light Water Reactor Sustainability Program, Idaho National Laboratory. September
2017.
Economic Modeling Working Group of the Generation IV International Forum. 2007. “Cost
Estimating Guidelines for Generation IV Nuclear Energy Systems.” https://www.gen-4.org/gif/
upload/docs/application/pdf/2013-09/emwg_guidelines.pdf
Idaho National Laboratory (INL). 2012. Assessment of High Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor
Capital and Operating Costs. http://www.ngnpalliance.org/index.php/resources/
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