Following the 2006 Energy review the Nuclear Installations Inspectorate developed the Generic Design Assessment process (GDA), now operated by ONR, to assess new nuclear reactor designs ahead of site-specific proposals. The GDA initially started assessing four designs: • Westinghouse
AP1000 • Areva
EPR • CANDU
ACR-1000 • GE-Hitachi
ESBWR However the ACR-1000 and ESBWR were subsequently withdrawn from the assessment for commercial reasons, leaving the EPR and AP1000 as contenders for British new nuclear builds. Assessment of the AP1000 was suspended in December 2011 at Westinghouse's request, awaiting a firm UK customer before addressing issues raised by the assessment. In 2012
Hitachi purchased
Horizon Nuclear Power, announcing intent to build two to three 1,350 MWe
Advanced Boiling Water Reactors (ABWR) on both of Horizon's sites. The GDA was agreed in April 2013. In August 2014
Westinghouse resumed the AP1000 assessment, after
Toshiba and
ENGIE purchased
NuGeneration and announced plans to develop
Moorside Nuclear Power Station with 3 AP1000s. In November 2016 the ONR noted there was a "very large amount of assessment to complete with issues still emerging". On 30 March 2017 the
AP1000 successfully completed the GDA process, ironically the day after the designer, Westinghouse, filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy because of $9 billion of losses from its nuclear reactor construction projects, mostly the construction of four AP1000 reactors in the U.S. On 21 September 2015 Energy Secretary
Amber Rudd announced that a Chinese designed nuclear power station was expected to be built at
Bradwell nuclear power station. On 19 January 2017 the GDA process for the
Hualong One (HPR1000) started, and successfully finished in February 2022. The
ABWR GDA process completed successfully in December 2017.
2020 process update In 2020, the GDA process was updated to be more suitable for
small modular reactors and advanced nuclear technologies. A three step process was introduced: • Step 1: initiates GDA and agrees scope and timescales, identifying any immediate gaps in meeting regulatory expectations. • Step 2: fundamental assessment of the generic safety, security, and environment protection cases, to identify any potential "show-stoppers" that may preclude deployment of the design. • Step 3: detailed assessment of the generic safety, security, and environment protection cases on a sampling basis. On 1 April 2022, the GDA Step 1 of the 470 MWe
Rolls-Royce SMR started. Step 2 will begin once the timescales and resources have been agreed. ==Nuclear defence activities==