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Aecom fusion power plant JV: design and licensing notes for project engineers

May 8, 2026|

Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

Aecom fusion power plant JV: design and licensing notes for project engineers

First reported on New Civil Engineer

30 Second Briefing

Aecom has formed a consortium with Tokamak Energy and Canadian firm General Fusion to develop what is billed as the UK’s first private‑sector‑led fusion power plant, moving beyond government‑backed demonstrators such as the UKAEA’s STEP programme. Aecom will lead on site selection, grid connection, licensing strategy and balance‑of‑plant design, while the developers provide competing fusion technologies based on spherical tokamaks and magnetised target fusion. The move signals early demand for civil, structural, nuclear safety and high‑heat‑flux materials expertise tailored to commercial‑scale fusion facilities.

Technical Brief

  • Licensing strategy will need to reconcile novel fusion hazards with existing UK nuclear regulatory frameworks.

Our Take

Aecom’s role in the ILIOS JV for the STEP spherical tokamak prototype (March 2026) suggests it is building a specialised UK fusion delivery track record that will transfer directly into private fusion power plant design and licensing work.

Across recent UK Infrastructure coverage, Aecom appears repeatedly in complex, sustainability‑tagged programmes – from National Highways’ Water Quality Plan to RICS’ CLEAR coalition – signalling that its fusion JV is likely to be framed around whole‑life carbon and environmental performance rather than just core nuclear engineering.

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Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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