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A proposed new nuclear power station in Suffolk has cleared a legal hurdle after the Court of Appeal ruled the government’s decision to approve the site was lawful.

Protest group Together Against Sizewell C argues the nuclear site will cause irreparable damage to the Suffolk Coast and brought the challenge, which was dismissed on Wednesday morning.

The group had unsuccessfully argued that the government failed to consider the environmental impacts of the need for water supply when it gave the go-ahead for the plant.

The Court of the Appeal was hearing the case after the High Court in June refused to grant a judicial review of former energy secretary Kwasi Kwarteng’s July 2022 decision to grant development consent for the site.

Read more
Why taxpayers will share the pain of cost of building Sizewell C nuclear power plant

The station is to contain two reactors and is being built by French energy giant EDF. When fully operational it’s hoped Sizewell C will generate enough electricity to supply six million homes.

Lawyers for EDF had said the plant could be operational by 2034.

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