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Blykalla, a Swedish company, has applied for funds from the state to build a nuclear reactor park

Blykalla, a Swedish nuclear reactor developer, said that it applied on Friday for a portion of the billions of crowns in loans at low interest rates and price guarantees promised by the government to build a 'advanced nuclear park' near Gavle.

Blykalla, the second applicant to the scheme, is state-owned utility Vattenfall. Vattenfall plans to build three to five small modules reactors at Ringhals Nuclear Facility in southwest Sweden.

Jacob Stedman, CEO of Blykalla, said: "We'll now start actual negotiations with government."

He refused to disclose how much funding the company sought, but said that projects of this type typically cost tens or even hundreds of millions of Swedish crowns.

Blykalla develops 55-megawatt nuclear reactors using a modernized version of the lead-cooling technology developed in the 1950s for Russian submarines.

The planned reactor park could produce enough electricity to power around 150,000 homes. It is expected that power production will begin in the first half of 2030.

The government, nuclear regulator, environmental court, and the European Union must approve new reactors.

The Swedish right-of centre government is looking to restart nuclear power in response to energy security concerns, and because of forecasts that demand for electricity will double by 2045.

The government is offering up to 440 billion crowns (47 billion dollars) in loans and 40-year guarantees, as well as support for the management of nuclear waste. This will encourage the construction of a minimum of 5,000 megawatts of new nuclear power.

It plans to also take a majority share in Videberg Kraft, Vattenfall’s nuclear development arm. The company will provide funding of up to 34 billion crowns.

The critics say that renewables, such as onshore winds, 'would be cheaper and faster to build. They also question whether the demand will rise as predicted, noting how electricity consumption has remained flat since 1990 due to improvements in efficiency.

The government aims to build a total of 10 full-size reactors, or the equivalent, by 2045, to replace the six that are currently operating.

Sweden's electricity is currently produced using only renewable sources, such as hydroelectricity and nuclear power.

(source: Reuters)