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Deliver New Gigawatt Power Plant at Wylfa

Conservative · what the evidence says

An independent, source-checked look at Conservative’s policy “Deliver New Gigawatt Power Plant at Wylfa” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.

Public finances & the next generation — Hurts

moderate · low confidence

Delivering a gigawatt nuclear plant at Wylfa, alongside Hinkley and Sizewell, involves very large public capital commitments with a strong track record of cost overruns; the fiscal risk to the public purse is real but the eventual scale depends heavily on the funding model chosen and whether past overruns are repeated. The main caveat is that a RAB-style model could shift much of the cost to energy consumers rather than the Exchequer directly.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether the project uses a Regulated Asset Base model (pushing costs to energy bills rather than public borrowing) or direct public finance, and whether cost-overrun patterns seen at Hinkley Point C repeat at Wylfa and Sizewell C.

Our reading: The policy commits to delivering a new gigawatt nuclear plant at Wylfa plus supporting Hinkley Point C and Sizewell C — three very large nuclear infrastructure commitments made without specifying a funding model or cost ceiling. On O12, the key question is whether these commitments worsen or are neutral to the public debt path. The fiscal risk case is strong. Hinkley Point C — the closest comparable UK project — is 90% over budget and seven years late. Sizewell C's estimated cost of £40.5 billion is already 70% above Hinkley's FID estimate, suggesting no learning dividend is being realised. The previous Wylfa Newydd project was abandoned specifically because of funding problems. The regulatory framework has been independently flagged as inadequate, creating further delay and cost-escalation risk. Public money has already been committed (£160m for the site), and the initial investment is stated at over £2.5 billion for Wylfa alone. The partial mitigant is the RAB model, which shifts capital recovery costs to energy consumers rather than direct public borrowing — but this is a fiscal mechanism not yet confirmed for this project, and it simply moves the burden from O12 to O2 (cost of living) rather than eliminating it. On the other side, long-run energy security gains could reduce fiscal exposure to imported fossil fuel price volatility, but this is speculative and not quantified in the evidence provided. Net verdict: the policy as stated involves large, uncapped public financial commitments on projects with a documented pattern of massive cost overrun and no confirmed fiscal envelope. The balance of evidence points to a worsening of the public finances outlook — moderate in magnitude because the RAB option and long-term energy savings create genuine uncertainty — but the direction is clear. Confidence is low because the funding model is unspecified and costs are highly path-dependent.

Prosperity & living standards — Helps

moderate · moderate confidence

Building a new nuclear plant at Wylfa would create thousands of jobs, attract billions in investment, and strengthen energy security — but the main gains are a decade or more away, and cost overruns at similar projects mean the benefits are not guaranteed.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether the project can avoid the severe cost overruns and delays seen at comparable UK nuclear projects (Hinkley Point C ran 90% over budget and seven years late), which would reduce or defer the living-standards benefits.

Our reading: The policy commits to a major nuclear infrastructure programme. On the positive side for O13, the evidence projects a substantial investment anchor (over £2.5bn at Wylfa alone), significant job creation (8,000 jobs, 3,000 high-skilled on-site), supply-chain development opportunities, and a contribution to energy security that reduces exposure to volatile fossil-fuel prices — all of which bear on real living standards, productivity, and economic opportunity over the long term. Absent this policy, this investment and the associated jobs and energy-security gains would not materialise. However, the near-to-medium term picture is more cautious. The sister projects the policy also supports — Hinkley Point C and Sizewell C — demonstrate a persistent pattern of severe cost overrun and delay, and regulatory fragmentation (flagged by the Commons Energy Committee) raises the probability of similar problems at Wylfa. Cost overruns translate to higher consumer energy bills via the RAB model, which would partially offset living-standards gains. The previous Wylfa Newydd project was abandoned on funding grounds, showing that commitment does not guarantee delivery. On balance, the evidence supports an 'improves' verdict for O13 over the long term: the investment scale, projected job creation, and energy-security benefits are material at population scale if delivered. The near-term effect is negligible to mildly negative (construction disruption, bill contributions via RAB). The magnitude is moderate rather than major because delivery risk is high and cost-overrun history could erode the net benefit. Confidence is moderate given the mixed track record on comparable projects.

Crime, justice & national security — Helps

minor · moderate confidence

Building nuclear power at Wylfa, Hinkley Point and Sizewell would strengthen the UK's energy security by reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels, which is a genuine national security gain — but the effect only materialises once plants are operating, which is at least a decade away for some, and cost overruns could delay or shrink the benefit.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether Sizewell C and a new Wylfa plant are actually completed on time and budget given Hinkley Point C's history of severe delays and cost overruns, which would determine whether the energy-security benefit is ever delivered at scale.

Our reading: O5's national security indicator explicitly includes resilience to external threats, and energy security — reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels whose supply and price can be weaponised by foreign actors — is a recognised component of national security. The policy directly addresses this: nuclear baseload power is domestically generated and insulated from fossil-fuel market volatility, as E22 confirms. If delivered, the combined output of Wylfa SMRs, Hinkley Point C and Sizewell C would contribute meaningfully to the UK's electricity mix, consistent with the 24 GW target cited in E23. This is a genuine, if modest, improvement on the national security dimension of O5. However, the time horizon is long-term: Wylfa SMRs are projected to start generating around 2030 at earliest, and Sizewell C not until 2039. The magnitude is rated minor rather than moderate because the stated policy's energy-security contribution is only one part of a broader national energy mix, and the delivery risk is substantial — Hinkley Point C is already seven years late and 90% over budget (E26), and Sizewell C's projected cost is 70% higher than Hinkley's own initial estimate (E30). These precedents mean the modelled security gain depends heavily on whether completion actually occurs. The counterfactual — absent this policy, the UK would remain more exposed to fossil-fuel import dependency and price shocks — supports a positive direction, but the marginal additionality is uncertain given current government commitments already exist. Crime and justice indicators are not directly affected by this policy. The verdict is 'improves/minor/long-term' with moderate confidence, reflecting a plausible and evidenced mechanism that is genuinely conditional on delivery.

Clean environment & nature — Mixed picture

moderate · moderate confidence

Building nuclear at Wylfa would provide large amounts of low-carbon electricity, helping cut climate emissions over the long run — but construction and operation risk significant harm to protected wildlife sites and local nature. The net effect on the environment depends on how well biodiversity impacts are mitigated.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether mitigation measures for protected nature conservation sites (SSSIs and seabird populations) prove effective, and how large the radioactive waste footprint ultimately is.

Our reading: This policy has genuinely divergent effects on O6's indicators, making a 'mixed' verdict the honest call. On the climate and emissions side, nuclear is established as low-carbon baseload power. Delivering gigawatt-scale capacity at Wylfa plus Hinkley and Sizewell would materially expand the UK's low-carbon electricity supply — directly improving the emissions trajectory indicator. The Wylfa SMR plan alone is projected to power 3 million homes on low-carbon electricity, and this substitutes for fossil fuel generation. The long-term climate benefit is real and significant. However, the same development imposes documented, site-specific nature harms. Protected SSSIs and internationally significant seabird colonies at Cemlyn Bay face potential significant negative impacts. The Anglesey Area of Natural Beauty and Heritage Coast face landscape harm that may be unmitigable. These are not speculative: environmental assessments already flag them, and further mitigation study is explicitly required — meaning the harms are acknowledged but their resolution is unresolved. Radioactive waste is managed under a statutory funding requirement, which limits (but does not eliminate) the long-term environmental tail risk. Delivery risk also matters for the O6 verdict: Hinkley Point C's 90% cost overrun and seven-year delay, combined with regulatory fragmentation concerns flagged by Parliament's own committee, mean the low-carbon benefit may arrive significantly later than claimed — and near-term construction impacts on nature would land first. The net verdict is 'mixed' at moderate magnitude: the policy would deliver real long-term emissions improvements but imposes real near-term and ongoing nature/biodiversity costs. Neither effect is trivial or merely theoretical. The balance tips to long-term climate benefit, but the biodiversity harm is not offsettable by that benefit — they fall on different indicators within O6.