PI Global Investments
Private Equity

Building nuclear power is a bridge too far for world’s private investors


The next generation of nuclear reactors will need to be financed by taxpayers because private investors aren’t willing to bear the risks associated with building new plants.

That was the warning from bankers at a meeting of industry and government officials in Prague this week. The Nuclear Energy Agency event underscored the hard decisions Western economies soon need to make to keep one of their biggest clean energy sources going. While the public have warmed to nuclear in recent years, spiraling project costs have made private equity cautious.

Officials have estimated that the world needs to spend $5 trillion to triple nuclear-power generation over the next 25 years. The problem is that years of delays and billion-dollar budget overruns at European and the U.S. projects are spooking investors, and scores of reactors already running on borrowed time will need to be replaced. No private investors want to take on construction risks, said Simon Taylor, a financier at the Cambridge Nuclear Energy Center.



Source link

Related posts

Newlook Industrial and Infrastructure Services Fund III Announces Investment by Fort McKay Landing

D.William

VC Arjun Sethi talks a big game about selling his company-picking strategies to other investors; he says they’re buying it

D.William

Skeptics now shaping NFL private equity policy

D.William

Leave a Comment

* By using this form you agree with the storage and handling of your data by this website.