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Trump's visit to Britain will see the signing of a nuclear power agreement between the US and Britain

The British government announced that during Donald Trump's visit to the United States this week, Britain and the United States would sign an agreement to boost nuclear power together, which will help secure funding for new plants.

The British government has been pushing to expand the use of nuclear energy in recent months. It has pledged to invest 19 billion dollars in a new Sizewell C plant and is advancing plans to have a Rolls-Royce division build Britain's first small-modular reactors.

Trump will arrive in Britain on Tuesday for a 2-day visit, where he and Keir starmer, the Prime Minister of Britain, will announce their nuclear power partnership. The collaboration aims at accelerating new projects and investment, including plans that are expected to be announced from U.S. Nuclear reactor company X-Energy (and Britain's Centrica) to build up 12 advanced modular nuclear reactors in Northeast England.

The statement also said that a 15 billion-pound project, powered by SMRs, to build advanced data centres in central England, at the former Cottam Coal-fired Power Station, was set to be announced soon by the U.S. firm Holtec International and France's EDF, along with real estate partner Tritax.

Starmer stated on Monday that "these major commitments put us on a course for a golden age in nuclear power, which will reduce household bills over the long term."

When Trump and Starmer met in Scotland at the U.S. President's golf club in July, they discussed working together more closely on SMRs.

In a statement, U.S. Energy Sec. Chris Wright stated that "Today's deals will create a framework for commercial access both in the U.S.A. and UK".

The new tie-up covers nuclear regulation. If a reactor passes safety tests in one country then the other can use those findings to support their own checks. This will reduce the licensing time from three to four to two years.

Chris O'Shea, Group CEO of Centrica, commented on the new partnership with X-Energy. He said that it would create a low-carbon, resilient energy system. J. Clay Sell, CEO of X-Energy said Hartlepool is the best place to scale up its technology in Britain, given its skilled workforce and local service.

Simone Rossi CEO of EDF UK said that the plan will benefit energy security. Holtec CEO Kris Singh stated that the plan will create thousands of jobs in Michigan by leveraging the lessons learned from the Palisades Project in Michigan.

Rolls-Royce announced that it has entered the U.S. regulation process for its SMR. This could lead to new jobs and investments in the U.S.

Urenco, a UK-based company, is expected to announce a deal to supply uranium of varying levels of enrichment to the U.S. ($1 = 0.7377 pound) (Reporting and editing by Helen Popper; Sarah Young)

(source: Reuters)