LANSARY. Nuclear Bring us the decision
Nuclear · read the position

Is there a defensible position here, or is the ground taken?

Before the programme or the framework opens, capability and demand are already concentrating somewhere. The question is whether there’s a gap you can hold — or a lane someone already owns.

Settled as the Market Entry Evidence Pack
The exposure

A market-entry case is usually argued on ambition. What it needs is an evidenced read of where the capability already sits, where the demand is forming, and who holds the position you’re eyeing — on the record, not a forecast of who will win.

What the Market Entry Evidence Pack settles

Whether the ground is open — or already held.

Is the ground already held?
Where nuclear-island, forging and fuel-cycle capability and demand are concentrating, and who already owns the lane you’re eyeing.
Where is the defensible position?
The gap on the public record you could hold — not a forecast of who will win.
How sure are we?
Each finding graded against the published standard — descriptive, never predictive.

Typical reader: a strategy or corporate-development lead.

Why now

The programmes are being defined — and the routes in are narrowing.

The government’s Civil Nuclear Roadmap set an ambition for up to 24 GW of nuclear by 2050 — around a quarter of projected electricity demand, a 2050 ambition rather than committed capacity — and the build is now moving: Sizewell C at Final Investment Decision (22 July 2025) and Britain’s first SMR fleet at contract (13 April 2026). Where nuclear-island, forging and fuel-cycle capability concentrates, and who already holds the lane, is being set now — fast enough that last year’s read is already stale. See what changed →

Engage

Name the market you’re weighing.

We’ll read where the capability and demand sit, and who holds the position — to what grade, before you commit to enter.

You may also be asking: Who’s safe to team with? · What are you really buying?