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Home Switzerland

Building a new nuclear plant would pay off, finds Swiss study

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
July 12, 2026
in Switzerland
Reading Time: 8 mins read
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Building a new nuclear plant would pay off, finds Swiss study
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nuclear power plant

Switzerland currently has five nuclear plants, including this one at Leibstadt, canton Aargau.


Keystone-SDA

A new nuclear power station would generate CHF1.6 billion ($1.97 billion) for the Swiss economy each year and create over 2,900 jobs, according to an analysis.





Generated with artificial intelligence.


This content was published on


July 12, 2026 – 10:26

The study, published on Sunday, was carried out by the BAK Economics research institute on behalf of the Swiss Business Federation, Economiesuisse.

The CHF1.6 billion in added-value was based on the assumption of an operational lifespan lasting 60 years, the study estimated. The calculations were based on a scenario involving a new EPR-type nuclear plant coming on stream in 2050.

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The Gösgen nuclear power plant in canton Solothurn is one of three still in operation in Switzerland.

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Emissions reduction

Why climate change and wars are reviving interest in nuclear energy




This content was published on


Jul 17, 2025



Is the Fukushima effect over? Here’s why there is renewed interest around the atom and which nations want to build new nuclear power plants.



Read more: Why climate change and wars are reviving interest in nuclear energy


The construction phase would generate domestic value added of CHF7.4 billion, the study reckoned. This corresponds to around 51% of the total construction costs. The analysis also estimated an annual increase in security of supply worth CHF520 million.

Direct tax revenues for federal, cantonal, and municipal authorities would come to some CHF95 million annually, the study calculated. Every franc of funding invested would generate a net GDP effect of CHF1.50 and CHF0.15 tax revenue, it said.

+ How we produce English news

Translated from German, reviewed by an English Department journalist. 

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