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Newcleo Energy has announced that it will no longer be developing UK lead-cooled reactors.

The energy firm newcleo announced on Wednesday that it will suspend its programme for developing lead-cooled fast nuclear reactors in Britain, and wind down substantially its UK activities because of the lack funding and support from the government.

LFRs is a type advanced nuclear reactor which can be constructed in factories, assembled on-site and provide heat to industrial processes or hydrogen production.

The company, founded in 2021 in Britain, has said that it plans to build up to four reactors of this type in the UK. This would produce a total output of 800 megawatts - enough to power 1.6 million households - and represent an investment of around 4 billion pounds.

The company stated that it had been in contact with successive UK governments regarding access to stored plutonium, which it planned to recycle and use in reactors.

Stefano Buono is the founder and CEO at newcleo. He said that despite numerous attempts to engage political stakeholders, the UK Government has decided not to make its plutonium readily available in the near future. Instead, it will lend its considerable political backing and funding to other technologies.

The firm stated that although funding and support were made available for other small modular reactors, they had not been provided to LFR developers in Britain such as newcleo.

It will instead focus on other markets.

In Slovakia, newcleo announced that it had formed a joint venture, with the state-owned JAVYS, to build four LFRs, powered by spent nuclear fuel from the country. This has been endorsed by government officials.

A similar strategy was used to sign an agreement in June with the Lithuanian Government.

The company stated that "newcleo believes these markets, by comparison, offer better prospects than UK at this point in time, and this decision has driven it to focus its attention on territories more aligned to its offering."

(source: Reuters)