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Nearly 100 research posts at risk at Sheffield nuclear centre

Former city MP suggests Nuclear AMRC should be removed from university control as job cuts loom

Published on
July 11, 2024
Last updated
July 15, 2024
Members of the Barbarian camp chop firewood as the lives of Roman Legionnaires are re-enacted in the UK to illustrate More than 100 research posts at risk at Sheffield nuclear centre
Source: Ian Forsyth/Getty Images

Dozens of jobs are set to be聽axed at a聽flagship research centre at聽the University of Sheffield.

Staff at the Nuclear Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (Nuclear AMRC), which employs 122 people across sites in Sheffield, Derby and Warrington, were informed about the likely cuts in a聽video call.

In one scenario outlined by Sheffield, only about 30 staff are likely to be retained, and they will be absorbed into the larger university-run Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre, which employs about 700 staff.

The Nuclear AMRC is one of seven High Value Manufacturing Catapult centres that were brought together in 2011 by Innovate聽UK to support commercialisation of new products and processes.

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The centre is owned by the University of Sheffield but has industrial partners such as Rolls-Royce, Sheffield Forgemasters and French energy giant EDF, which have made multimillion-pound investments at its site on the Sheffield-Rotherham border.

The centre鈥檚 research is part of work to ensure that a new generation of small modular reactors (SMR) are built in the UK, potentially securing up to 40,000 manufacturing jobs in South Yorkshire.

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Delays to the roll-out of SMRs in Europe 鈥 caused in part by worries related to the Fukushima nuclear accident in 2011 鈥 have meant that the anticipated orders of reactors have not materialised as hoped. However, leaders in the nuclear sector insist that the push to achieve net聽zero carbon emissions by 2050 will require the creation of these energy plants, which cost about 拢1.8聽billion each.

Richard Caborn, a former Sheffield MP, said he was 鈥済reatly concerned鈥 by the proposed research job cuts because the Nuclear AMRC 鈥渉as been critical in working with the British supply chain to ensure when we start building these SMRs they are built in the UK鈥.

鈥淲e鈥檝e seen in recent years that security of energy supply is as important as national security, and nuclear energy will be part of securing our energy in future,鈥 said Mr聽Caborn, who served as a trade minister in the Blair government.

Given the centre鈥檚 strategic importance for nuclear energy, there was a 鈥渟trong case鈥 for the Nuclear AMRC to be taken out of the university鈥檚 control and nationalised, Mr聽Caborn added.

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鈥淭he Nuclear AMRC has national importance for both industrial strategy and energy security 鈥 its future should聽not be decided by an individual institution, so it possibly should be taken out of the hands of the university,鈥 he said, noting that the defence manufacturer Sheffield Forgemasters was taken over by the government in 2021 because the parts it made were vital for Royal Navy ships and submarines.

Koen Lamberts, Sheffield鈥檚 vice-chancellor, said the proposed redundancies and 鈥渃hanges to the current structure of the Nuclear AMRC鈥 would help to 鈥渄eliver our priorities around clean energy research and innovation鈥.

鈥淭he proposals have been shared with our Nuclear AMRC staff, and there will be a 90-day consultation to consider the proposals and explore future options. We are actively working to reduce the need for redundancies where possible, and we are supporting our staff throughout the change process,鈥 said Professor Lamberts.

鈥淭he plans propose that the Nuclear AMRC鈥檚 core manufacturing research and development activities will be retained by the University of Sheffield,鈥 he added, stating that the 鈥減roposed changes reflect the university鈥檚 key strength in nuclear manufacturing R&D鈥 and that 鈥渙ur work to support the design and production of SMRs will continue to grow and offer significant opportunities for the South Yorkshire region鈥.

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jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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