HC Deb 14 November 2001 vol 374 cc756-7W
Mr. Stunell

To ask the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry what was the total level of Government financial support to the nuclear industry in each year since 1990, including(a) research grants, (b) transfer of debt from privatised utilities, non-fossil fuel levy, (d) investment in BNFL facilities, (e) running costs of UKAEA and NIREX and (f) other sources. [12789]

Mr. Wilson

[holding answer 7 November 2001]Funding to the UK nuclear industry has been provided primarily in the form of grant and grant-in-aid to the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA). This funding has been primarily to enable the UKAEA to discharge historic nuclear liabilities arising form past civil nuclear research programmes and to decommission those research facilities and restore sites to normal use—with the exception of funding in respect of the UKAEA nuclear fusion research programme at Culham which complements the UK's participation in the European Union's Framework Programme V.

In the period 1999–2000, the DTI (Department of Energy prior to May 1992) provided grant/grant-in-aid to the UKAEA as follows:

£ million
Year Grant and

grant in aid1

Fusion Other nuclear
1990–91 94.3 26.9
1991–92 68.7 20.7
1992–93 2126.2 16.3
1993–94 2128.7 16.3
1994–95 2131.3 15.7
1995–963 199.3 15.9
1996–97 166.5 12.1
1997–98 174.5 16.6 8.5
1998–99 285 12.6 5
1999–2000 194.4 14.4 3.3
2000–01 223.4 14.3 3.5
1 Grant in aid to the UKAEA includes provision for its running costs
2 Grant payment
3 Prior to 1995 the UKAEA was a trading fund with a negative external financing requirement

Note:

Figures are from Government Expenditure Plan Reports

As regards the privatisation of the nuclear industry (which included both AEA Technology, and British Energy respectively) arrangements at the time included provision for debts to be included in the privatised companies balance sheets and for those debts to be paid back to the Government at fixed periods.

Turning to the non-fossil fuel obligation (NFFO), this obliged electricity suppliers to buy a certain proportion of their electricity from non-fossil sources (nuclear and renewables). Nuclear Electric plc received a premium over and above the market price for electricity in the period 1990–96, as follows:

£ million
Year Premium income
1990–91 1,265
1991–92 798
1992–93 864
1993–94 895
1994–95 892
1995–96 699

These additional costs incurred by electricity suppliers in meeting their NFFO obligations were reimbursed through the fossil fuel levy on electricity supplied in England and Wales.

BNFL, as a commercial company, does not receive investment capital from Government, although Ministers have provided assurances from time to time in respect of the Government's willingness to accept responsibility for any future liabilities which might arise.

The costs of UK NIREX are met by subscriptions from its members (UKAEA, BNFL, British Energy).

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