Rolls-Royce and Fermi Energia have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to study the potential for the deployment of affordable, compact nuclear power stations, known as small modular reactors (SMR), in Estonia.
The study will cover all aspects of deployment including grid suitability, cooling, emergency planning, human resources, licensing feasibility, economics, and supply chain.
Rolls-Royce is leading a consortium that is designing a low-cost factory-built nuclear power station, known as a small modular reactor (SMR). Its standardised, factory-made components and advanced manufacturing processes push costs down, while the rapid assembly of the modules and components inside a weatherproof canopy on the power station site itself avoids costly schedule disruptions.
Fermi Energia is a company founded by nuclear scientists, energy experts, and entrepreneurs to bring small modular reactors to Estonia to meet its climate goals, help the economy develop, and gain energy security.
The consortium led by Rolls-Royce is working with its partners and UK Government to secure a commitment for a fleet of factory-built nuclear power stations, each providing at least 440MW of electricity, to be operational within a decade, helping the governments around the world net-zero obligations.
The consortium members feature the best of nuclear engineering, construction, and infrastructure expertise in Assystem, Atkins, BAM Nuttall, Jacobs, Laing O’Rourke, National Nuclear Laboratory, Nuclear Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre, Rolls-Royce, and TWI. The current phase of the programme has been jointly funded by all consortium members and UK Research and Innovation.