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2026年3月11日 星期三

From Hinkley Point C to a Broken Model: Why the UK Can’t Build Big Anymore

 From Hinkley Point C to a Broken Model: Why the UK Can’t Build Big Anymore


Many people can feel that the UK economy is speeding downhill, not gently slowing. For a supposedly advanced, rich country, why is the government so short of money, and why do major projects struggle to get built at all? Hinkley Point C (HPC), the new nuclear power station in Somerset, is an almost perfect case study of what has gone wrong.

From nuclear pioneer to empty toolbox

The story starts well. Britain was once a nuclear pioneer: early breakthroughs in nuclear physics, one of the first atomic bombs, the world’s first commercial nuclear power station, and a sizeable fleet of reactors. At one point, nuclear provided over a quarter of the country’s electricity, supported by a full industrial chain from enrichment to fuel reprocessing.

Then came the fiscal squeeze of the 1970s and 1980s. Faced with oil shocks, deindustrialisation and the costs of running down empire, the UK state wanted to shrink its balance sheet. Nuclear, with huge upfront costs and slow payback, became an easy target. The Thatcher-era solution was to privatise: bundle the best-performing nuclear assets into British Energy and sell them off to the market.

On paper, this relieved the state. In practice, it hollowed out capacity. A private operator under pressure to maximise returns cut the most “expendable” spending: long-term R&D, skills pipelines, and heavy maintenance. Over two decades, the number of nuclear engineers collapsed, labs and specialist firms closed, and the UK quietly lost the ability to design and deliver complex nuclear projects by itself. British Energy itself eventually slid toward bankruptcy, precisely because ageing assets needed heavy investment which the balance sheet could not support.

Relying on foreign partners in a high-risk system

By the late 2000s, climate commitments and the decision to phase out coal forced the UK back toward nuclear. But when the government decided in 2008 to pursue a new generation of reactors, it discovered that the domestic toolbox was empty: few engineers, little recent project experience, and a weakened industrial base. The only realistic option was to rely on foreign partners.

Enter EDF from France, and later China General Nuclear (CGN). EDF bought British Energy and agreed to build a new plant at Hinkley Point. The initial vision looked bold but straightforward: around £16 billion in costs, first power by 2017, and a long-term contract guaranteeing a relatively high electricity price to make the numbers work.

Once this plan hit the UK’s real governance environment, the problems multiplied. The project had to navigate layer upon layer of approvals: extensive public consultations, environmental assessments, licensing and parliamentary scrutiny. Fukushima in 2011 added further delays as safety cases were revisited. Then Brussels raised competition concerns about the generous price guarantee, triggering EU-level investigations into state aid. Each step took years, not months.

At the same time, politics and geopolitics shifted. The “golden era” of UK–China relations under David Cameron, in which CGN was welcomed as co-investor, gave way to anxiety about Chinese involvement in critical infrastructure. Brexit raised fresh questions about the UK’s economic model, its relationship with Europe, and its bargaining power with investors. Each political turn justified more reviews, more conditions, more renegotiation.

Visible problems, deeper root causes

On the surface, the problems seem obvious: gigantic cost overruns, endless delays, investors dropping out, and a final bill that dwarfs original estimates. But these are symptoms, not root causes.

Underneath, three deeper issues stand out:

  1. Strategic sectors were treated as ordinary commercial assets
    For decades, British policy treated nuclear power and other big infrastructure as things the market could handle if the state simply got out of the way. The priority was to minimise public spending and public debt in the short term. That mindset justified privatising nuclear assets and cutting long-term investment in skills, R&D and public engineering capacity. It looked smart on the Treasury’s spreadsheet for a few years. It quietly destroyed the very capabilities needed to build the next generation of projects.

  2. A fragmented, risk-averse decision system with no clear “owner”
    Major projects in the UK must navigate a maze of actors—departments, regulators, courts, local authorities, international organisations and activist groups. Each has some power to delay or veto. Very few have the power or incentive to take responsibility for delivery. In such a system, the safest move for each actor is to avoid blame: demand more data, launch another consultation, insist on another review. Over time, the real bottleneck becomes decision-making itself.

  3. High geopolitical uncertainty layered on top of weak capacity
    Because the UK hollowed out its own capabilities, it became dependent on foreign companies and capital for delivery. But in a world of rising geopolitical tension, foreign partners come with political baggage. Chinese involvement became a security concern. EU oversight of state aid clashed with domestic industrial goals. US pressure to “de-risk” from China forced mid-course changes of plan. When your entire model depends on external partners, and your politics keeps shifting, investors will naturally demand a higher price—or walk away.

Put together, these create a vicious circle. The state lacks capacity, so it outsources. Outsourcing raises political and security concerns, so more oversight and conditions are added. The extra complexity slows projects and raises costs, scaring investors. The state then has to step back in, paying even more to rescue or complete projects it once wanted to keep off its balance sheet.

The hidden conflict at the heart of UK infrastructure

At the core is a simple but powerful conflict.

On one side, there is a strong desire to keep public borrowing and visible state intervention to a minimum. That leads to policies of privatisation, reliance on foreign investors, and treating big projects as commercial contracts with elaborate risk transfers.

On the other side, there is the reality that some infrastructures—especially nuclear power—are strategic. They require stable, long-term commitments, control over technology and security risks, and deep technical competence. They are not easily reduced to a neat private business case.

Trying to satisfy both sides simultaneously has produced the worst of both worlds:

  • The state is too weak, in-house, to design and drive projects effectively.

  • Yet it is still ultimately responsible when things go wrong, and ends up paying anyway—only later, and at a much higher cost.

Where could solutions lie?

If the UK wants to escape this trap, it needs more than better contract drafting or a new watchdog. The direction of change has to match the underlying problems.

  1. Recognise some sectors as strategic, not just commercial
    Nuclear energy, core electricity networks, and certain transport links are closer to defence than to retail. They justify long-term public investment, even when short-term fiscal metrics look worse. The question should be: what capabilities and assets must stay under robust public influence for the next 30–50 years?

  2. Rebuild state and domestic industrial capacity
    That means investing seriously in engineering education, technical agencies and public project-delivery expertise. It also means nurturing domestic supply chains that can take on complex, long-term work. Without this, every project is a fresh attempt to buy capacity abroad—and to manage it through lawyers and regulators rather than engineers.

  3. Streamline decision-making and clarify ownership of outcomes
    For truly strategic projects, the UK needs decision structures where one entity is clearly responsible for delivery, with the authority to cut through overlapping approvals while still respecting legitimate safety and environmental standards. “Everyone can say no, nobody can say yes” is a recipe for paralysis.

  4. Offer stability instead of maximum flexibility
    Investors and partners can live with stricter rules and lower returns if those rules are stable and credible. What kills projects is not strictness but unpredictability: political u-turns, sudden security reclassifications, or years-long regulatory ambiguity. The UK will have to decide what kind of long-term offers it can stand behind across electoral cycles.

Hinkley Point C is not just an expensive exception. It is a mirror showing a deeper pattern: a state that has tried to shrink and outsource its way out of responsibility, in sectors where responsibility cannot actually be outsourced. Until that tension is faced directly, every new “flagship project” will be at risk of becoming the next cautionary tale.

2026年2月4日 星期三

The Crumbling Inheritance: Why Britain’s Infrastructure is Failing in 2026

 

The Crumbling Inheritance: Why Britain’s Infrastructure is Failing in 2026

In early 2026, a "freeze and thaw" event across Kent and Sussex left thousands of British citizens without running water. In a nation that once pioneered the industrial world, people were forced to queue for bottled water just to cook and wash. This crisis serves as a stark reminder that the modern world rests on infrastructure—and Britain is currently living on borrowed time.

1. A Legacy in Decay

The comfort of modern British life was built by previous generations. The Victorian era gave us the reservoirs, railways, and sewage systems we take for granted. However, this inheritance is not eternal. According to the National Audit Office, at current investment rates, it would take 700 years to replace the UK’s ageing water system. We are relying on Victorian pipes that simply cannot handle 21st-century climate shifts.

2. The Great Stagnation

The statistics of neglect are staggering:

  • Water: No new reservoir has been built in the UK since 1992.

  • Energy: No new nuclear power station has been commissioned since 1995, leading to record-high industrial energy costs.

  • Transport: No new motorway has been built since 2003, while the London Underground risks chronic overheating.

3. From First World to Third?

While nations like Singapore transitioned from the "third world to the first" through forceful state-led construction, Britain appears to be slipping in the opposite direction. The issue is not a lack of capability, but a self-imposed web of regulations and a loss of national ambition.

4. The Victorian Lesson

In 1858, London faced the "Great Stink." Within just six years, the Victorians built 1,300 miles of new sewers. Today, despite having far more advanced technology, we struggle to maintain what they built. To fix this, Britain must slash the bureaucracy that stifles development and rediscover the drive to build for future generations.



The 2026 Manufacturing Pivot: Balancing Policy Strategy and Cost Pressures

 

The 2026 Manufacturing Pivot: Balancing Policy Strategy and Cost Pressures

Modern manufacturing is currently caught between two powerful forces: the optimistic pull of digital innovation and the heavy anchor of rising operational costs. To navigate this, businesses are moving away from isolated problem-solving toward a more integrated, strategic approach.

1. The Policy Constraint: The Need for an Industrial Strategy

The single greatest bottleneck for growth in 2026 is identified as the lack of a clear, stable Industrial Strategy. Without a roadmap from the government, businesses struggle to commit to long-term capital investments.

  • The Solution: Targeted sector plans that provide the stability needed to invest in "Industry 4.0" and green technologies.

  • The Impact: Strategic clarity allows for better synchronization between private investment and public infrastructure.

2. The Financial Constraint: The Tipping Point of Costs

Manufacturers are facing a "dual-pressure" system where both Employment and Energy costs are reaching critical levels.

  • Labor Costs: Nearly 90% of manufacturers expect employment costs to rise, driven by legislative changes and National Insurance adjustments.

  • Energy Volatility: High energy prices remain a persistent threat, often forcing companies to divert funds away from R&D and into basic utility payments.

3. The Competitiveness Constraint: Attractiveness as a Hub

There are growing warning signals regarding the UK’s status as a premier manufacturing destination. When costs exceed a certain threshold, "Investment Flight" becomes a real risk.

  • Risk Factors: Delayed or cancelled projects and the relocation of production lines to more cost-competitive overseas regions.

  • Mitigation: Government support for energy-intensive sectors and stability in employment law are seen as essential "safety valves."

4. The Innovation Opportunity: Digital and New Markets

Despite the pressures, the "Growth Drivers" for 2026 are clear. Manufacturers are focusing on:

  • Digital Transformation: Using AI and IoT to offset high labor costs through automation.

  • Market Expansion: Pivoting to new geographical regions and developing "green" product lines to meet shifting global demand.

Key Insight: While the sector remains cautiously optimistic, the transition from "momentum" to "sustainable growth" depends entirely on how quickly policy can catch up with the reality of the shop floor.



2025年9月15日 星期一

A Proactive Approach to the UK's Energy Crisis

 

Realigning Incentives: A Proactive Approach to the UK's Energy Crisis

The UK's housing and energy crisis, rooted in its inefficient building stock, requires not only a shift in housing strategy but also a fundamental change in the business model of energy companies. While building modern, energy-efficient homes is a long-term goal, immediate action is needed to tackle the existing inefficiency. A significant barrier to this is the current revenue model of energy suppliers, which directly conflicts with the goals of energy conservation. This paper argues for a change in how energy companies are measured and compensated, proposing a system where their profitability is linked to reducing energy consumption, not increasing it.


The Flaw in the Current Model

Currently, energy companies generate revenue and profit by selling units of gas and electricity (measured in kilowatt-hours, or kWh). The more energy their customers consume, the higher their sales and, consequently, their profits. This creates a powerful disincentive for companies to actively promote or invest in energy efficiency measures, such as home insulation upgrades, smart meter installations, or more efficient heating systems.

While some companies may participate in government-mandated efficiency schemes, their core business interest remains tied to consumption. This inherent conflict of interest means that even with good intentions, the system is designed to perpetuate the very problem it claims to solve: high energy use, high bills, and high carbon emissions. The government's efforts to subsidize bills and fund efficiency programs are merely treating the symptoms, not the underlying cause of this market failure.


A Proposal: The "Efficiency-as-a-Service" Model

To realign incentives, we must change the metric of success for energy companies from units sold to units saved. The government should introduce a regulatory framework that allows and encourages energy suppliers to profit from their customers' energy reductions.

This can be achieved by:

  1. Setting a Baseline: For each household or business, a baseline of energy consumption would be established based on historical data. This baseline would serve as the starting point for measuring efficiency gains.

  2. Performance-Based Compensation: Energy companies would be granted a guaranteed profit margin on the energy they supply, but they would also be compensated for every unit of energy their customers save below the baseline. For example, if a home's average consumption is 10,000 kWh per year and the energy company helps them reduce it to 8,000 kWh, the company would receive a pre-determined payment for the 2,000 kWh saved.

  3. Third-Party Verification: Independent auditors would verify the reductions to prevent fraud and ensure accurate reporting. This would guarantee that energy companies are genuinely helping their customers save energy.

This model transforms energy companies from simple commodity sellers into energy service partners.2 Their financial success would directly depend on their ability to help customers make homes more efficient. This would incentivize them to invest in home retrofits, provide expert advice, and innovate in energy-saving technologies.

The Benefits of Realigned Incentives

This proposal offers a workable and reasonable path to solving the crisis. It benefits all parties:

  • For Consumers: Lower energy bills and more comfortable homes, without having to navigate complex government grant schemes on their own.

  • For Energy Companies: A stable and predictable revenue stream that is less vulnerable to market volatility. They can become true partners in the energy transition.

  • For the UK Government: A significant reduction in the need for costly bill subsidies, a major step toward net-zero emissions, and enhanced energy security through reduced import dependency.

By changing the rules of the game, we can transform the energy crisis from a problem to an opportunity, turning the biggest players in the market into the most powerful allies for a sustainable future.