Britain has taken another major step towards becoming a world leader in fusion energy, with the UK Atomic Energy Authority unveiling its new roadmap for 2026 to 2030.
The plan sets out clear goals for the next five years, with a focus on turning decades of scientific research into real world economic benefits, skilled jobs and future clean energy production. Fusion energy, which recreates the process that powers the Sun, has long been seen as a potential game changer because it could provide safe, low carbon and virtually limitless electricity.
The roadmap builds on Britain’s existing strengths in fusion research and supports the wider STEP programme, which aims to deliver a prototype fusion power plant at West Burton in Nottinghamshire by 2040. Construction work is expected to begin from 2030, creating thousands of jobs and helping former industrial areas become centres of clean energy innovation.
Government backing for the sector is already significant, with hundreds of millions of pounds being invested into research, new facilities, skills development and supply chains. The UK fusion industry already supports thousands of jobs, and new plans suggest that figure could rise sharply over the coming years as more businesses, engineers and scientists get involved.
As well as helping Britain reach net zero, fusion could strengthen energy security by reducing reliance on imported fossil fuels and creating a dependable homegrown source of power. The roadmap also highlights opportunities for British firms to lead the world in specialist materials, robotics, AI and advanced manufacturing linked to fusion technology.



