Scotland For Nuclear Energy is a campaign coalition, united in the belief that the Scottish Government should drop its opposition to new nuclear energy projects.
The coalition is made up of campaigners, businesses, community groups, local authorities and energy industry experts.
Scotland has the sites, skills and nuclear energy heritage to play a major role in the global renaissance of nuclear energy.
Nations all over the world are exploring the next generation of nuclear energy technology.
Scotland shouldn't be left behind.
Nuclear energy brings jobs, investment and clean power to Scotland
JOIN THE CAMPAIGN
Add your name to our petition or find out how to get your organisation involved in the campaign.
THE CAMPAIGN IN 60 SECONDS
Why Holyrood should change tack and back new nuclear energy in Scotland - in 60 seconds
The majority of Scots agree with us.
Our polling found 56% of Scottish adults want to see Holyrood drop its opposition to new nuclear energy.
DOWNLOAD THE ‘NUCLEAR POWER? AYE CHEERS’ POSTER

There’s also an alternative Scotland For Nuclear Energy poster design you can download here.
Show your support for new nuclear energy in Scotland with one of these posters. We want to see them cropping up all over Scotland. Be sure to send us a picture of yours when it’s up!
SCOTLAND SHOULD JOIN OUR NORTHERN EUROPEAN FRIENDS

The ‘Nuclear Power? Aye Cheers’ design is a Scottish spin on the Nuclear Power? Yes Please movement that originated in Scandinavia.
Campaigners in Sweden (Kärnkraft? Ja Tack) convinced their government to back the new generation of nuclear reactors to meet Sweden’s decarbonisation and energy security needs.
In Denmark, Kernkraft? Ja Tak turned the tide on a 40-year ban on nuclear power.
Scotland doesn’t just have to follow in our northern European friends’ footsteps. With our skilled nuclear workforce, we can take the lead.
Why Nuclear Energy? Why Scotland?
Jobs and Investment
Nuclear energy brings secure, well paid jobs and transformative investments to the communities that host it. For example, the project to build the Sizewell C nuclear power station in Suffolk will see £4bn invested in the east of England. There is a golden age of nuclear energy building momentum all over the world, bringing massive investments and thousands of new jobs to the areas where nuclear power is generated.
If Scotland continues to sit out this nuclear energy renaissance, the jobs and investment will go elsewhere.
Scotland has the sites and expertise
Existing nuclear sites are the best places for new reactors because they have skilled Scottish workers, supportive communities who understand the nuclear industry and existing electricity grid connections.
Scotland has four of these sites. They are enormous assets that should be put to use driving Scotland’s economy.

We can’t power Scotland with renewables alone
Scotland has done an excellent job of harnessing renewable energy, particularly wind. But renewable energy is intermittent; the amount of wind fluctuates.
You’ve probably heard it said that Scotland generates more renewable energy than it needs. And while it’s true that the amount generated can add up to more than 100% of Scotland’s electricity usage over a year, that energy doesn’t necessarily match up to when it’s required.
There can be way more renewable energy than Scotland needs on very windy days, and way less on days when the wind drops.
Nuclear energy is not intermittent, it provides constant power which balances the grid and ensures that supply meets demand. This is known as ‘base load’.
Nuclear energy and renewable energy are not in competition, in fact, nuclear is a perfect complement to renewables. Because nuclear energy is also clean, having it in Scotland’s energy mix is a reliable carbon-free back up that overcomes the challenge of fluctuating renewables.
Clean energy
Nuclear energy emits no carbon and runs constantly. Torness nuclear power station is Scotland’s biggest ever producer of clean energy.
The Scottish Government has an ambitious 2045 target for net zero greenhouse gas emissions. Clean nuclear energy can play a key role in meeting it.
Nuclear energy uses very little land
Nuclear power is very energy-dense, meaning it takes up far less space than renewables. For some forms of nuclear reactor, it would take more than a thousand times as much land to get the same amount of energy from renewables.
Building new nuclear energy on existing nuclear sites leaves more of Scotland’s incredible landscape untouched.

Banning nuclear energy is deindustrialisation
Scotland has a painful history of losing major industries.
When Torness shuts down, Scotland will be generating no nuclear energy for the first time since 1959.
But nuclear energy doesn’t have to be part of the same old story. If we act now, it can be part of Scotland’s future - reliable jobs, reliable energy, revitalised communities.
Supporters
These are the organisations joining the call for new nuclear energy in Scotland. Their appearance below does not signify any other commonality between them.







