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UK chooses North Wales for its first mini-nuclear power station

The United States has criticised Britain's plans to expand its nuclear energy infrastructure.

The government announced in June that it would spend 3,36 billion pounds on SMRs. These are smaller and faster to build than large nuclear power plants. They aim to improve energy security while helping to achieve climate targets.

The U.S. Ambassador criticized Britain's choice of Wylfa, an island off the coast of North Wales in the North Sea, to host the first SMR in a statement that was unusually strong on the day before the announcement.

The United States has been pushing for an ambitious project at Wylfa. This is the location of a former nuclear power plant that shut down in 2015.

The UK government has said that its nuclear expansion may also include the building of a large-scale facility. It added that it had tasked GB Energy-Nuclear, a state-owned company, with finding a large-scale location by autumn 2026.

In June, the government chose a Rolls-Royce-designed SMR.

Construction of the mini-reactors will create up to 3,000 local jobs. They will be connected to the grid by 2030.

Two large-scale nuclear plants are currently being constructed in Britain. One is at Hinkley Point C, in western England. The other one is at Sizewell C, in eastern England. ($1 = 0.7451 pounds) (Reporting and editing by Peter Graff, Matthew Lewis and Sarah Young in London)

(source: Reuters)