East of England launches plans to lead UK in Nuclear Operations and Maintenance

A national Nuclear Centre of Excellence has been proposed for Suffolk, to maximise the opportunities of the nuclear energy sector for the East of England. This proposal is included in the launch of a new ‘Nuclear Prospectus’ by GENERATE.
Published: 26 Mar 2026
artists impression of Sizewell C

GENERATE is a partnership of regional business and political leaders established to showcase and profile the significant inward investment and supply chain growth opportunities arising from energy projects and generation across Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex.

The Nuclear Prospectus proposes to develop of a nuclear operations and maintenance (O&M) Centre of Excellence. This would place the East of England as a leader in existing and future nuclear generation technologies across the UK and Europe.

This can be a unique opportunity for Ipswich, Suffolk, and the wider region. It is vital to ensure that the tangible economic benefits associated with the construction of a major project are sustained into the operational phase.
Councillor Richard Rout
Councillor Richard Rout, Suffolk County Council’s Cabinet Member for Devolution, Local Government Reorganisation and NSIPs

The East of England’s nuclear projects will generate 4.4GW of low-carbon baseload electricity, enough to meet the needs of 8.5 million UK homes.

Nuclear projects across the UK requires world-class operational, maintenance, and life-extension capabilities. A Centre of Excellence, located in Suffolk, can serve as the national hub for outage coordination, innovation, skills, and export development, centred around the county’s three operational reactors.

Councillor Richard Rout, Suffolk County Council’s Cabinet Member for Devolution, Local Government Reorganisation and NSIPs, said:

“GENERATE wants to make sure that the East of England’s nuclear capabilities and ambitions are heard in Westminster whilst highlighting the potential for inward investment and growth.”

“This can be a unique opportunity for Ipswich, Suffolk, and the wider region. It is vital to ensure that the tangible economic benefits associated with the construction of a major project are sustained into the operational phase, historically this has not always been the case.”

As an example of the potential, the three reactors across the sites at Sizewell B and C will require partial refuelling every 18 months, resulting in an outage of one reactor every six months. Currently each outage at Sizewell B brings up to 1,000 additional staff and specialist contractors to the region.

Unique opportunities such as this can enable the development of local skills and new investment by the businesses that are key to the maintenance of the UK's operational nuclear provision.

Robert Gunn, Station Director of EDF's Sizewell B power station, said:

“As one of the country's biggest power producers, and an employer of almost 1,000 people on our site, we know just how important consistent operation and high quality maintenance is to sustain vital plants like ours.

“Creation of this facility will be another positive step for the regional skills base. As the area becomes the nation's nuclear cornerstone, a centre like this will ensure more skilled jobs coming from this industry and into this region. And that is something we will all benefit from.”

Nigel Cann, Sizewell C’s Chief Executive Officer, said:

“Sizewell C is a natural catalyst for positive investment in Suffolk and the wider region. We are proud to work collaboratively with local partners to grow the skills needed to build, operate and maintain the power station.

“By creating new training pathways and long term career opportunities, we aim to strengthen the county’s economic future and ensure that the benefits of Sizewell C are felt by communities for generations to come.”

Beyond energy security, a thriving nuclear sector can fuel prosperity, create jobs, investment, and long-term opportunities for communities across the East of England.