
Alastair Darling , The Secretary of State for Trade and Industry has announced today that he has appointed Dr Tim Stone as senior advisor on the "arrangements for the costs associated with potential nuclear new build decommissioning and waste management" (sic) . This is done under the stated need in the Energy review Report - Paragraph 5.141 of the report stated that "Government intends to appoint an individual with senior management or financial experience.... etc, etc," He has been appointed as senior advisor to both the Secretary of State for Trade and Industry and to the Chief Secretary of the Treasury and will initially devote one/two days a week to this role for a period of one year.
That's Tim Stone, Chairman of KPMG Corporate Finance, and Global Infrastructure and Projects Group. The Group specialises in advising asset owners, government bodies, contractors and infrastructure funds on the financing of major projects worldwide across a wide range of sectors.

Paragraph 5.96 of the report set out that "Any new nuclear power stations would be proposed, developed, constructed and operated by the private sector, who would also meet full decommissioning costs and their full share of long-term waste management costs".


"The aim is to examine global and strategic nuclear issues, as a context for a subsequent, more UK-focused discussion which develops on from policy and regulatory examinations to a more delivery-oriented analysis of supply chain issues."
The Gubment have finally realised that the story that graphically and simply explains the FCUKED - Forth Coning UK Energy defecit on Page 3 of the report by Time Stone (essential reading for anyone insterested) means that something has to be done to secure an ebergfy future for the UK.
The Gubment have finally realised that the "private" sector ain't interested unless the rules of the game are changed.
The Gubment have finally realised that they have to poach someone who can rig and re-jig the rules of the PFI game in conjunction with the private sector / generators / users / financiers to get the Gubment out of the hole.
The Gubment haven't finally understood yet how they will get these nuclear power stations planned, designed, built and running in time and where the qualified engineers, staff etc., will come from - probably India and China having seen (and approved) BNFL's sale Westinghouse to Toshiba in October.
Have we been here before ? Times March 21st 2004
Darling calls in KPMG to fix the railways "Tim Stone, chairman of KPMG’s financing group who is leading the KPMG advisory team, said: “We are delighted — as a team and individually — to be playing a role in the revitalisation and restructuring of the national railway for the benefit of passengers as well as the national economy.”
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