Who might benefit from small modular reactors?published at 14:42 British Summer Time 10 June
Kate Stephens
Senior science producer

A small modular reactor in Hainan, China, in 2024
Alongside the £14.2bn for Sizewell C - a conventional nuclear power plant - the government also announced £2.5bn for a small modular reactor programme.
The idea with small modular reactors (SMRs) is they will be not only quicker and cheaper to install but they will be smaller and more flexible in where they can be sited - so closer to people where energy demand is greatest.
If Rolls Royce (the government's preferred bidder in the programme) can turn the designs into reality, and Great British Nuclear approves further funding in 2029, then the government says the equivalent of around three million homes could be provided with clean, secure homegrown energy.
They could also be beneficial for companies who could site an SMR nearby.
Microsoft, Amazon and Google - with their power hungry data centres - have signed deals in the US to use the reactors when they become available.