In the early 2000s, under the leadership of
Tony Blair, the UK government again proposed a second generation of nuclear power plants and the British government announced that Wylfa was one of the sites it considered suitable. PAWB was re-established. In 2009
Horizon Nuclear Power (originally an
E.ON and
RWE joint venture, bought by Hitachi in 2012) announced intentions build two
advanced boiling water reactors (ABWRs) at a site to the south of the existing Wylfa station. Amongst PAWB's activities to have been a protest demonstration in
Llangefni in January 2012 to support the Jones family of Caerdegog Farm who refused to sell their land to Horizon for the construction of the new plant. Following the
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in 2011 PAWB established contacts with anti-nuclear campaigners in Japan. In 2015, at PAWB's invitation,
Naoto Kan the prime minister of Japan at the time of the Fukushima disaster, visited Anglesey to plead for further nuclear power developments to be stopped. PAWB have consistently voiced doubts over the financial viability of the proposed Wylfa. In January 2019 Hitachi announced that they were unable to attract sufficient investment and were suspending their involvement in the Horizon Wylfa project. ==External links==