POWER Digest [January 2026]

POWER Digest [January 2026]


News briefs curated from December 2025 by the editors of POWER, highlighting key developments across global power markets, technology, finance, and energy infrastructure.

Swedish state utility Vattenfall and industrial consortium Industrikraft i Sverige AB signed an agreement, announced on Nov. 10, to co‑invest in new small modular reactors (SMRs) at the Ringhals site on Sweden’s Värö Peninsula. The effort moves the project into joint development and clears the way for state risk‑sharing. Industrikraft—formed in June 2024 by ABB, Alfa Laval, Boliden, Hitachi Energy, Höganäs AB, SSAB, Saab, Stora Enso, and Volvo Group—will take a 20% stake in project company Videberg Kraft AB and invest SEK 400 million ($42.2 million) to finance early‑stage development. In addition to co‑financing, industry will contribute project management expertise and technology selection support to ensure Swedish technology has a place in a competitive European supply chain. Vattenfall has shortlisted GE Vernova–Hitachi’s BWRX‑300 and the Rolls‑Royce SMR for a 1,500 MW project—either five BWRX‑300s or three Rolls‑Royce units—and will submit an application for state risk‑sharing before selecting a final supplier. The agreement follows Sweden’s state-aid act, which took force in August 2025 and limits loans to the equivalent of four large‑scale reactors (about 5,000 MWe), provided new units are sited at existing nuclear locations with at least 300 MWe total output. Vattenfall CEO Anna Borg called the partnership “a sign that there will be a demand for the new fossil‑free electricity production capacity,” while Industrikraft Chairman Tom Erixon said the companies “have reached consensus on the most important issues.”

Global nuclear capacity could reach 1,428 GWe by 2050, exceeding the 1,200‑GWe “triple nuclear” target, if governments deliver on national plans, according to a preview of the World Nuclear Outlook Report 2025 released by the World Nuclear Association at COP30 on Nov. 13. The new assessment reflects extended operation of existing reactors, units under construction, and official targets, which total 1,363 GWe. Nuclear generation hit a record 2,667 TWh in 2024. The report identifies 50 countries with nuclear plans for 2050, including China, France, India, Russia, and the U.S., which account for nearly 1,000 GWe. The report, however, acknowledges that realizing the new figure will require accelerated licensing, expanded supply chains, and clear policy frameworks for large reactors and SMRs. It also notes that industrial giants including Amazon, Google, and Meta have pledged support, while the World Bank and 14 major financial institutions have affirmed backing for nuclear expansion. The full report is expected to be published later this year.




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