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The UK and US have struck a landmark deal aiming to cut licensing time for new nuclear power plants by half — from 3-4 years down to around 2 years.
The deal is expected to be officially signed during US President Donald Trump’s state visit to the UK this week, with both sides hoping it will unlock billions in private investment.
What’s in the Atlantic Partnership for Advanced Nuclear Energy deal?
The agreement, part of the newly announced Atlantic Partnership for Advanced Nuclear Energy, lays out several major commercial commitments:
- Centrica & X-Energy will deploy up to 12 Xe-100 advanced modular reactors at Hartlepool. That’s ~960 MW capacity, enough to power 1.5 million homes, and create up to 2,500 jobs. First generation expected in the mid-2030s
- a UK-wide fleet targeting 6 GW from advanced modular reactors is planned
- Holtec, EDF, and Tritax will build advanced data centres powered by small modular reactors at the former Cottam coal-fired power station in Nottinghamshire. Valued at ~£11 billion, the project promises thousands of construction jobs and long-term operational roles
- last Energy & DP World plan a micro modular reactor to supply power to the London Gateway business park, backed by ~£80 million in private investment
- Urenco & Radiant signed a deal (~£4 million) to supply HALEU (high-assay low-enriched uranium) fuel to the US market, while TerraPower & KBR will evaluate UK sites for deployment of the Natrium reactor design
What are the strategic stakes and economic upsides?
This is about more than just energy infrastructure: it’s about industrial strategy, clean power, and geopolitical competition. In particular, the licensing timeline cut will significantly lower regulatory risk, a major barrier for investors.
The deal is expected to generate more than US$54 billion (£40 billion) in economic value, with +US$16 billion (£12 billion) particularly aimed at benefiting the North East of England.
Over 11,000 jobs have already been added in the UK’s nuclear sector this year under government-led investment, a sign the industry is scaling.
What It Means for Uranium
The expansion of advanced and modular reactors under the UK-US partnership will tighten global uranium demand. Many designs, including HALEU-fueled reactors, require enriched uranium streams beyond the current commercial supply base. With Russia still the world’s largest HALEU producer, Urenco’s role becomes strategic, creating new opportunities for miners and enrichers in the US, Canada, and allied markets. For uranium producers, this signals long-term demand growth — an important tailwind as global supply is already projected to fall short of reactor requirements later this decade.
What are the risks?
- regulatory approvals must actually accelerate as promised. Delays in site permitting, safety reviews, or supply chain bottlenecks (especially for reactor components or HALEU fuel) could undermine timelines
- financing remains heavy-lift. Even with private investment, many projects require public risk guarantees or subsidies
- public acceptance and local planning approvals will matter, particularly for modular and micro modular reactor sites
Conclusion
The UK-US partnership is a clear signal: nuclear is back at the centre of clean energy and energy security strategies across the West. For investors, the opportunity lies in reactor manufacturers, HALEU fuel supply, construction firms, and local supply chains. For policymakers, matching ambition with delivery—regulation, funding, workforce—will determine whether this golden age becomes real.
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