By Paul Messad | Euractiv France | translated by Daniel Eck Est. 5min 04-12-2023 Content-Type: News News Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. The purpose of the alliance is simple: to bring together existing industry players to accelerate the development of the nuclear reactors of the future. [Union européenne, 2023] Euractiv is part of the Trust Project >>> Languages: Français | DeutschPrint Email Facebook X LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram As the European Commission prepares to launch its industry alliance for small modular reactors, Euractiv France looks closely at the group’s planned structure, work programme and remaining grey areas. Read the original French article here. The alliance on small modular reactors (SMRs) is due to be launched “at the beginning of 2024”, the EU’s internal market commissioner Thierry Breton announced Tuesday (28 November) at the opening of the World Nuclear Exhibition in Paris. The launch date could even be as early as “February”, according to French Renew MEP and staunch nuclear supporter Christophe Grudler. A long-standing plea from the nuclear industry, the initiative was first announced by EU energy commissioner Kadri Simson at the European Nuclear Energy Forum in Bratislava in early November. “The Commission will carry out all the preparatory work with a view to launching the Industrial Alliance in the coming months,” she said. In other words, a new wind seems to be blowing in Europe, as “nuclear power is no longer a taboo, even within the European Commission,” Breton told the WNE. EU Commission to launch industry alliance on small nuclear reactors The EU’s Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson backed the development of an industrial alliance on small modular reactors at the 16th European Nuclear Energy Forum in Bratislava on Tuesday (7 November). Bringing together the industry Like other industry alliances supervised by the Commission, the purpose of the SMR alliance is to bring together existing industry players, research organisations, government officials, and civil society groups to accelerate the development of the industry. The alliance’s work is initially expected to focus on SMRs based on proven third-generation nuclear technologies, Euractiv understands. But “although this alliance will mainly focus on third-generation SMRs, it will also cover advanced modular reactors (AMRs),” confirmed Nuclear Europe, the EU industry association. The European Commission has reportedly been reluctant to include fourth-generation technologies in the alliance, fearing it could become a “research and development organisation”. But Grudler insists it is “essential to support all generations of SMRs”. Belgium, Italy, Romania, US unite to boost small modular reactors research Five industrial and research actors from Belgium, Romania, Italy and the US want to speed up the development of small modular reactors (SMRs), a memorandum of understanding between the five signed on Wednesday reads. Structure According to a draft organisational chart seen by Euractiv, the alliance will be organised across seven working groups: “Development”, bringing together end-users, vendors and developers; “Public acceptance”, bringing together civil society, the European Economic and Social Committee and NGOs; “Financing”, bringing together member states and developers; “Fuel Cycle”, also bringing together member states and developers; “Workforce and skills”, bringing together supply chain actors and developers; “Research”, bringing together those involved in research and development community, industry community and licensing parties; “Security”, whose members have yet to be defined. These groups would be overseen by a board made up of EU member states, and the European Nuclear Safety Regulators Group (ENSREG), and a steering committee made up of Nuclear Europe and the Sustainable Nuclear Energy Technology Platform (SNETP) – all with the support of the European Commission. “At this stage, many companies have expressed interest in this alliance, but we cannot yet provide a concrete list of companies/organisations that are expected to join,” says Nuclear Europe. Membership criteria have yet to be defined, it adds. The association for the defence of nuclear power, Voices of Nuclear, told Euractiv that “if a stakeholder group is set up, we could play a part in it.” An annual stakeholder forum would also be organised. US aiming to deploy Europe’s first small modular reactor 'in late 2020s', official says The US is aiming to deploy Europe’s first American-made small modular nuclear reactor in Romania and Czechia by the end of the decade, according to a US official, who said the “forecasted deployment timeline is 2029”. Ongoing work As for the alliance’s work, it can be broken down into four phases, with the first two devoted to project Design, the third to Demonstrator and the last to Deployment. For now, the focus is to compile work already carried out since the 2021 Pre-Partnership. “We need to prove to the European Commission that the players in the sector are developing the human, financial, technical and diplomatic resources to match their ambitions,” explains Grudler. The French MEP also defends the idea that SMRs could eventually be supported by an Important Project of Common European Interest (IPCEI) to facilitate their financing without running the risk of breaking EU state aid rules. “This could be decided very quickly once the alliance is launched,” he told Euractiv France. Indeed, IPCEIs have already been set up for other similar industrial alliances, such as those previously formed on hydrogen, solar and batteries. EDF reactor boss urges Brussels to make 'clear commitment' to nuclear The European Commission should make a “clear commitment” to nuclear, the president of French energy giant EDF’s small nuclear reactor project, Renaud Crassous, told EURACTIV France in an interview, describing the EU’s Net-Zero Industry Act proposal as a failure. Grey zones Pending the alliance’s launch, stakeholders are working hard to ensure EU legislation follows suit. “We need to go back on the European texts that exclude nuclear power from a certain number of measures”, says Valérie Faudon, Executive Delegate of the French Nuclear Energy Society (SFEN), an association that defends the interests of the nuclear industry. In the same vein, Grudler will be “keeping a close eye on the launch of the alliance”, starting with the vote in the European Parliament on 14 December on the own-initiative report on SMR tabled by conservative Slovenian MEP Franc Bogovič. “It will also be the first time since the start of the European Parliament’s term of office that a 100% nuclear text will be put to the vote,” Grudler noted. “If the vote fails, I am not sure that the European Commission will want to launch such an initiative before the end of its term of office [October 2024]”, he fears. The vote is thus to be viewed as the very first full-scale test at a time when Euractiv France understands that some in the European Commission are questioning the wisdom of launching such an alliance so close to the EU elections. Is nuclear power set for a European renaissance? Nuclear power is making a comeback on the EU energy scene after an eventful 2022-2023 year, which according to Paris, reflects an “excellent diplomatic record” for France in defending atomic energy. EURACTIV looks at the bigger picture. [Edited by Frédéric Simon/Alice Taylor] Read more with Euractiv COP28: The new global crackdown on climate-wrecker methaneReducing methane emissions from the energy sector are among the key actions developed by the global climate conference in Dubai to avoid a rapidly warming climate. Subscribe now to our newsletter EU Elections Decoded Email Address * Politics Newsletters