Chris Hummel
Associate
Article
8
Following on the heels of the recently-released federal Climate Plan, the Government of Canada has unveiled its Small Modular Reactor Action Plan (the "Action Plan"). Recognizing the potential of nuclear innovation to reduce emissions, decarbonize heavy industry, address energy needs in more remote communities and resource extraction locations, and spur economic development, the Action Plan sets out Canada's vision for the development, demonstration, and deployment of Small Modular Reactors ("SMRs") for multiple applications at home and abroad.
For more analysis of the federal government's new comprehensive climate change plan, see our articles on the Climate Plan, the Hydrogen Strategy, and the Clean Fuel Standard.
SMRs are a new class of nuclear reactors that are considerably smaller in size and power output than conventional nuclear power reactors. Given their portability and scalability, SMRs have a range of potential applications: from grid-scale units that can generate non-emitting reliable electricity and power remote communities, to smaller units suitable for heavy industry.
As with larger-scale nuclear generation facilities, SMRs do not emit greenhouse gasses, meaning they have significant potential to decarbonize electricity production and mitigate climate change.
The Action Plan builds on the federal government's SMR Roadmap released in 2018, and reflects a pan-Canadian partnership involving the federal government, provinces and territories, Indigenous communities, power utilities, industry, innovators, laboratories, academia, and civil society. In total, over 100 partners from across Canada contributed chapters to the Action Plan, with each partner describing the actions they are taking to make SMR deployment a reality.
In its chapter, the Government of Canada begins by highlighting some of the major developments since the release of the SMR Roadmap.
The remaining sections of the Government of Canada's chapter survey the key opportunities presented by SMR technology:
The remaining chapters in the Action Plan, written by the other 108 partner governments and organizations, flesh out the economic and environmental potential of SMRs. The Action Plan also features a list of 450 actions being taken by the various partners to develop SMR technology.
The Action Plan was a feature of Canada's recently announced $15 billion Climate Plan, as discussed in our recent bulletin on the Plan. While the Action Plan does not itself contain funding for SMRs, SMRs may be eligible for several funding programs intended for low carbon technology and innovation, including:
For years, SMR technologies - and their decarbonization potential - have been the subject of much speculation and debate. Yet those technologies have never been piloted in Canada, let alone deployed at scale.
Through the Action Plan, Canada is looking to finally make SMRs a reality, with several provinces signalling that they're on board.
In coming years, watch for SMR technology to be piloted at remote mining and resource extraction projects, and considered as an alternative to diesel generation among Canada's 280 off-grid communities.
Should you have questions about SMRs and their applications in Canada, please contact members of Gowling WLG's Nuclear or Energy sector teams.
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