SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

POLITICS IN SWEDEN

Politics in Sweden: Where’s the money coming from for new nuclear?

Sweden's climate and environment minister said that Sweden needed to triple nuclear output by 2040, with the equivalent of ten new nuclear power stations to be built, but it's unclear how that's going to happen, writes The Local's Nordic editor Richard Orange.

Politics in Sweden: Where's the money coming from for new nuclear?
Climate and Environment Minister Romina Romina Pourmokhtari gives a press conference on August 9th. Photo: Ali Lorestani/TT

To judge by the headline and the soundbites, last Wednesday’s press conference by climate and environment minister Romina Pourmokhtari marked the launch of a massive new buildout of nuclear power. 

“Sweden needs three times as much nuclear power in 20 years,” ran the headline of the press release.

“This government has worked nonstop from day one to sweep away the barriers standing in the way of building new nuclear in Sweden,” Pourmokhtari followed up when she took to the podium. 

But when it came to the really big question, “where’s the money going to come from?”, she provided nothing but obfuscation. 

In reality, the press conference was about something technical dressed up to seem more important than it was.

Pourmokhtari was being presented with a report from the Radiation Safety Agency, originally ordered by the former Social Democrat government, on regulatory reforms to make the permitting for new nuclear more efficient. 

She said that the government would push ahead with changing the law in line with the agency’s recommendations, which would mean, among other things, removing rules that limit the total number of reactors allowed in Sweden to ten and new nuclear to existing sites, and that give local municipalities a veto.

But as Peter Alestig, climate editor at DN, pointed out in an article, and as the Lund University professor Lars J Nilsson, told the UK’s Guardian newspaper, none of these changes will make a jot of difference so long as the key question of how to subsidise investment in new nuclear remains unanswered.

When asked whether she favoured giving energy companies direct government subsidies to build a new nuclear plant or guaranteeing new plants an electricity price high enough to ensure profitability, Pourmokhtari suggested neither would be necessary. 

If all of the unnecessary limits and special rules for nuclear were swept away and there was a level regulatory playing field with wind and solar power, she said, private developers would step forward of their own accord. 

It wouldn’t, she added, even be necessary to give Sweden’s state-owned power company Vattenfall an order to build new nuclear plants, which the government is empowered to do. If the regulations were less onerous, Vattenfall would decide to do it itself. 

But that simply isn’t true, something she presumably must know. 

A report this May by the energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie found that the cost of electricity from nuclear power, when construction and operation costs are taken into account, was “at least four times that of wind and solar”.

This is why Nilsson told The Guardian that Pourmokhtari’s announcement was purely “symbolic” unless the subsidy issue was addressed. “I don’t expect any new nuclear power in Sweden, unless the government provides quite far-reaching guarantees similar to what you have at Hinkley Point [in the UK],” he said. 

The government is preparing a package of measures to promote new nuclear to be announced in the autumn, Pourmokhtari said, and she has told Alestig that “if [new nuclear] requires that kind of measure, then we quite simply have to do it”. 

It seems unlikely, though, that even this pro-nuclear government will offer energy companies quite as generous a deal as the UK did to get Hinkley Point built.

At the press conference, Pourmokhtari made much of additional funding the government was giving to the Swedish Radiation Safety Authority and the Swedish Energy Agency. 

But this extra funding totals only about 200 million kronor over two years, an infinitesimal fraction of what will be needed. 

Hinkley Point, the UK’s new nuclear plant, is now expected to cost a whopping £32.7 billion (€45 billion), and is already two years late. Finland’s Olkiluoto 3 came into production 12 years late last year at a cost of €11 billion. 

Now multiply that by ten. 

Pourmokhtari seems convinced energy companies will stump up this colossal sum, and soon, sticking fast to the government’s target of “breaking ground” on the first of Sweden’s new nuclear plants before the next election in 2026.

Not only did she think this was possible, she told the gathered journalists. She fully believed it would happen. 

We’ve got three years to find out. 

Politics in Sweden is a weekly column looking at the big talking points and issues in Swedish politics. Members of The Local Sweden can sign up to receive an email alert when the column is published. Just click on this “newsletters” option or visit the menu bar.

Member comments

  1. I am skeptical of cost comparisons of nuclear vs renewables. I have not read the Wood Mackinzie analysis if the analysis does not include costs of building out 3x the generation capacity and of storage to for 24-7 power the comparison is useless on costs. two yrs ago I ran a calculation of the costs (USA) of a solar installation with a 1GWe capacity. Land use was jätte huge and costs were numbing. It seems 2-unit Vogel (2GWe) cost about 31 billion dollars. A 2GWe 24-7 solar would cost 4x that.

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

WORK PERMITS

Business leaders: Work permit threshold ‘has no place in Swedish labour model’

Sweden's main business group has attacked a proposal to exempt some jobs from a new minimum salary for work permits, saying it is "unacceptable" political interference in the labour model and risks seriously affecting national competitiveness.

Business leaders: Work permit threshold 'has no place in Swedish labour model'

The Confederation of Swedish Enterprise said in its response to the government’s consultation, submitted on Thursday afternoon, that it not only opposed the proposal to raise the minimum salary for a work permit to Sweden’s median salary (currently 34,200 kronor a month), but also opposed plans to exempt some professions from the higher threshold. 

“To place barriers in the way of talent recruitment by bringing in a highly political salary threshold in combination with labour market testing is going to worsen the conditions for Swedish enterprise in both the short and the long term, and risks leading to increased fraud and abuse,” the employer’s group said.   

The group, which represents businesses across most of Sweden’s industries, has been critical of the plans to further raise the salary threshold for work permits from the start, with the organisation’s deputy director general, Karin Johansson, telling The Local this week that more than half of those affected by the higher threshold would be skilled graduate recruits Swedish businesses sorely need.   

But the fact that it has not only rejected the higher salary threshold, but also the proposed system of exemptions, will nonetheless come as a blow to Sweden’s government, and particular the Moderate Party led by Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson, which has long claimed to be the party of business. 

The confederation complained that the model proposed in the conclusions of the government inquiry published in February would give the government and political parties a powerful new role in setting salary conditions, undermining the country’s treasured system of collective bargaining. 

The proposal for the higher salary threshold, was, the confederation argued, “wrong in principle” and did “not belong in the Swedish labour market”. 

“That the state should decide on the minimum salary for certain foreign employees is an unacceptable interference in the Swedish collective bargaining model, where the parties [unions and employers] weigh up various needs and interested in negotiations,” it wrote. 

In addition, the confederation argued that the proposed system where the Sweden Public Employment Service and the Migration Agency draw up a list of exempted jobs, which would then be vetted by the government, signified the return of the old system of labour market testing which was abolished in 2008.

“The government agency-based labour market testing was scrapped because of it ineffectiveness, and because it was unreasonable that government agencies were given influence over company recruitment,” the confederation wrote. 

“The system meant long handling times, arbitrariness, uncertainty for employers and employees, as well as an indirect union veto,” it added. “Nothing suggests it will work better this time.” 

For a start, it said, the Public Employment Service’s list of professions was inexact and outdated, with only 179 professions listed, compared to 430 monitored by Statistics Sweden. This was particularly the case for new skilled roles within industries like battery manufacturing. 

“New professions or smaller professions are not caught up by the classification system, which among other things is going to make it harder to recruit in sectors which are important for the green industrial transition,” the confederation warned. 

Rather than implement the proposals outlined in the inquiry’s conclusions, it concluded, the government should instead begin work on a new national strategy for international recruitment. 

“Sweden instead needs a national strategy aimed at creating better conditions for Swedish businesses to be able to attract, recruit and retain international competence.”

SHOW COMMENTS