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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 24 June 2026 [Draft]

24 Jun 2026 · S7 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Nuclear Power in Scotland

Absolutely. Inevitably, existing nuclear reactors will have to be decommissioned. That is an important part of the sector. However, we need to look at how to succeed in generating capacity in Scotland. The refusal to consider a small modular reactor at Grangemouth to power the complex, for example, left our petrochemical industry vulnerable to soaring energy costs.

The fallout of that extends far beyond energy-intensive industrial sectors such as Grangemouth; it hits communities in Ayrshire and East Lothian, where the high-quality, well-paid jobs provided by Hunterston and Torness are under threat. When we turn our backs on the nuclear sector, we tell our brightest science, technology, engineering and mathematics graduates, engineers, physicists and technicians that their future lies not here but overseas or south of the border; we bleed the very talent that we desperately need to build the clean industries of tomorrow.

The solution does not lie in overengineered and, frankly, obsolete designs of the past. I believe in the United Kingdom’s own Rolls-Royce small modular reactor technology, which is available today. Those reactors are roughly one third of the size of the current fleet and offer a revolutionary path forward to have more flexible load-following baseload capacity. We can repower the existing advanced gas-cooled reactor sites at Hunterston and Torness by capitalising on their established grid connections and vital cooling water infrastructure. Those SMRs are built in factories, modularly assembled and transported to sites, which drastically reduces the crippling construction delays that have plagued megaprojects such as Hinkley Point C.

That is not a hypothetical future. A European nuclear race is already under way, and Scotland is currently watching from the sidelines. Just this month, Rolls-Royce SMR secured a landmark multibillion contract to build three nuclear reactors in Sweden, following its selection by GB Energy as the preferred technology partner. Let us consider the huge scale of that untapped potential on our doorstep; we also have the capacity to build the heavy-pressure vessel fabrication and advanced modular assemblies that are needed for those reactors at the Rosyth and Govan shipyards.

If the Government dropped the ideological ban, there could be opportunities for export across the entire continent. Instead of merely exporting electricity, we could be supporting the engineering.

The ambition is written into our history. We can see it across Scotland. It is time to abandon the sunk-cost fallacy, which keeps the Government tethered to outdated dogma. Let us honour the legacy of electrical engineering in the country and integrate a modern nuclear baseload with our renewable wealth, which would unleash the industrial might of our shipbuilding capacity. We could secure an industrial future and provide clean, reliable power for generations to come.

18:25

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Katy Clark) Lab
The next item of business is a members’ business debate on motion S7M-00258, in the name of Liam Kerr, on nuclear power in Scotland.Motion debated,That the P...
Liam Kerr (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
In the years since I first contributed to a debate in this Parliament on new nuclear power in Scotland, four of the six parties in the chamber have come to s...
Alan Brown (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP) SNP
The member keeps talking about baseload. Does he realise that, as long ago as 2015, the then chief executive of National Grid said that baseload was an “outd...
Liam Kerr Con
For the member to stand up and say that baseload is an outdated concept is an extraordinary intervention. As I reminded him about three weeks ago, he does no...
Alan Brown (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP) SNP
I congratulate the member for securing the debate, which seems, in effect, to be on behalf of the trade body the Nuclear Industry Association. It will come a...
Liam Kerr Con
What the member has said is not true. As I said in my remarks, Hinkley Point C’s strike price is about £131 per megawatt hour, and the strike price for float...
Alan Brown SNP
The member is not listening to me. Okay—I said that the strike price was £130 for Hinkley Point C, and it is £131, so I stand corrected there.The strike pric...
Duncan Massey (North East Scotland) (Reform) Reform
The member makes some good points about Hinkley Point C, but that probably highlights issues with the planning and regulatory regime in the UK, as is the cas...
Alan Brown SNP
I thought that the member would return to the South Korea example. Clearly, it had lower labour costs, material costs and so on, and a different regime. Howe...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Katy Clark) Lab
The member is already in additional time so he should not take any interventions.
Alan Brown SNP
Okay—thank you, Presiding Officer.Of course, it is undeniable that new nuclear will create jobs. Give me £400 billion and I could create jobs in marine energ...
Stephen Kerr (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con
Alan Brown says that nuclear is not clean energy. He should tell his beloved European Union that, because it has redesignated nuclear as green and clean. He ...
Alan Brown SNP
I will go back to the point about the reliability of nuclear power. Aside from the stat that I gave earlier—that nuclear is operational only 78 per cent of t...
Stephen Kerr Con
Alan Brown is again finding some spurious reason to deny the reality of the reliability of nuclear power. Yes, there may be bottlenecks in the transmission s...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Katy Clark) Lab
The member cannot take any further interventions.
Stephen Kerr Con
It is because France has determined to become truly independent in terms of energy sources, including nuclear, which is the backbone of its energy system.The...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (Katy Clark) Lab
I remind members that they must show courtesy and respect to other members at all times.18:19
Paul Sweeney (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
I thank Liam Kerr, who is a member for North East Scotland, for lodging this motion for members’ business, which I was pleased to sign.Scotland gave the worl...
Michelle Campbell (Renfrewshire North and Cardonald) (SNP) SNP
Will the member take an intervention?
Paul Sweeney Lab
Yes.
Michelle Campbell SNP
I point to my entry in the register of members’ interests as a serving councillor on Renfrewshire Council.The Scottish councils committee on radioactive subs...
Paul Sweeney Lab
Absolutely. Inevitably, existing nuclear reactors will have to be decommissioned. That is an important part of the sector. However, we need to look at how to...
Tim Eagle (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I thank my colleague Liam Kerr for securing the motion for debate. He has done a sterling job of representing the nuclear industry for many years. It was als...
Paul Sweeney Lab
The member might want to note the heritage of Dounreay, in his part of the world. The pioneering development there is to try to create a closed-loop zero-was...
Tim Eagle Con
I absolutely recognise that. The member has just taken me back to a tour that I was given of Dounreay, which was an experimental site—did it have fast reacto...
Miles Briggs (Edinburgh and Lothians East) (Con) Con
I am grateful for the opportunity to contribute to this debate on nuclear power in Scotland, and I congratulate my friend and colleague Liam Kerr on securing...
David Green (Caithness, Sutherland and Ross) (LD) LD
I, too, congratulate Liam Kerr on securing the debate. As he knows, I share the concern, which has been echoed by Stephen Kerr, Paul Sweeney and Miles Briggs...
Paul Sweeney Lab
David Green makes an excellent point about Dounreay, but does he recognise that one of the key advantages of repowering existing sites is that they are alrea...
David Green LD
Yes, I absolutely agree with Paul Sweeney, and I will come on to talk about the connection between decommissioning and the opportunities for new nuclear ener...
Liam Kerr Con
I am very much enjoying David Green’s contribution. When I took an intervention earlier on decommissioning, which the member concerned was right to raise, it...