The Hinkley Point C power station project has smashed its target of spending £1.5 billion with businesses in the South West, five years ahead of schedule. New figures released in the project’s latest Socio-Economic impact report show that £1.7 billion has now been spent with more than 1,100 companies across the region.
Somerset has benefitted from £368 million of the spend, whilst the Bristol area has seen £448
million. £147 million has been spent in Gloucestershire and £59 million in Devon.
The report shows that:
640 apprentices have now been recruited so far, from steel fixing and crane operations to
commercial management and hospitality
More than 10,000 jobs have been created to support the project so far and it is on track to
hit a target of 25,000 by the end of construction
11,000 people have been trained and assessed in Somerset at the Construction Skills Centre.
New facilities such as a Welding Centre of Excellence are being established to help to
overcome nationally significant skills gaps
Spending across the UK is also increasing as construction progresses – boosting the UK’s
industrial capacity and creating new jobs. For example, spending on contracts in the
Midlands and across the North of England, for example, has already reached almost £1.1bn.
The target for spending in the South-West was set during the planning of the new nuclear power
station in 2012 and was reached early thanks to a continued focus on using local suppliers. Hinkley
Point C has worked with organisations like the Somerset Chamber of Commerce, SWMAS and the
Local Enterprise Partnerships to help a large variety of local businesses into the supply chain. Firms
range from catering and hospitality suppliers to steel fabrication, electrical engineering and logistics
specialists.
Hinkley Point C’s Managing Director, Stuart Crooks said: “This report charts another year of success
for Hinkley Point C in delivering on our ambitious targets for social, economic and environmental
benefits. As the country and our region emerge from the current crisis, we will serve as a catalyst for
national recovery – both through this project and the follow-on project at Sizewell C.”
Stephen Henagulph, Chief Executive of Somerset Chamber of Commerce, said: “We’re extremely
proud to be playing our part in this hugely important infrastructure project and to help secure a
legacy for Somerset’s highly-skilled and diverse business community through collaborative working
with EDF.
“To have Hinkley Point C on our doorstep is a huge opportunity and to be able to ensure local
businesses can prepare for and win contracts for the project has been hugely rewarding for the
Hinkley Supply Chain team, which is overseen by Somerset Chamber.”
Karl Tucker, Chair of the Heart of the South West Local Enterprise Partnership (HotSW LEP) said: “We
welcome the news that the regional investment target for Hinkley Point C has already been beaten.
The LEP invested some £30m into training, skills and workforce development to maximise on its
economic benefits through projects such as the National College for Nuclear, the Institute of
Technology, the Welding Centre of Excellence and road and rail infrastructure and innovation. With
our partners at the West of England LEP we invested £1m in the Hinkley Supply Chain which enables
local businesses to secure contracts from its development and operations;
“We’re also one of the major stakeholders in shaping and growing the regional nuclear cluster
through Nuclear South West – a partnership between three LEPs, the academic sector and the
nuclear industry network - which generates the on-going legacy that Hinkley Point C brings to the
wider community. “We look forward to continuing to work with these partners in the post-COVID-19 climate; in which
clean energy will play a significant role in boosting the national economy.”
Cllr. David Hall, Cabinet Member for Economic Development, Planning and Community
Infrastructure at Somerset County Council, said: “This is a much needed financial boost to our region
at what has turned out to be difficult and unprecedented times. I am incredibly proud and impressed
at how Somerset businesses have seized the opportunities the HPC construction project has
presented - the economic and skills boost to the region is vast and will undoubtedly create an
industrial legacy for the region.
“It is extremely promising to see this target being exceeded in such a short time and shows the
power and potential of the construction project. I have said it before but it really is the biggest boost
to the economy of the region for a generation and looks set to get even bigger in the years to come.”
Hinkley Point C is providing more than a financial boost with the project’s multi-million pound
investment into skills provision and training facilities focussed on developing the UK’s wider
engineering and nuclear capability. In collaboration with local and national partners, including
colleges and the industry training boards, Hinkley Point C is helping to overcome critical national
skills shortages whilst opening up new, sustainable, career opportunities for people in the South
West and throughout the Country.
The collaborative work across the South West has also been a stimulus for additional funding into
skills development and training. To date, well over £40 million of additional funding has been
accessed as a direct result of the initial support provided by EDF.
The proposal for a near identical project, Sizewell C in Suffolk, would bring similar UK-wide benefits –
not only to the UK supply chain, but also through employment opportunities, skills and training
provision, the creation of 1,000 apprenticeships and investment in local infrastructure
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