The most recent nuclear power station built was Sizewell B in Suffolk, which started generating in 1995 and delivers almost 1.2 gigawatts (GW) of electricity. At 1991 prices, it cost £2,733m to install, which is around £3.7bn today. All this money came directly from the state. Add on the interest that would have to be paid to banks on money borrowed during its 13 years of construction, and the cost of Sizewell B is over £4bn
Depends upon what you build it out of? And how the building is outfitted (Fixtures, power, air conditioning, etc)
The cost to build a house in Virginia varies depending on the size of the house. Some houses can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to build.
alot
50000
In Iowa, the average cost to have a contractor build a composite deck is $25.00 per square feet. The average cost to build a wood deck is $33.00 per square feet.
i asked this question so why dont you answer it
billions of dollars
$1000 trillion
Everything has its opportunity cost you just have to think .
Large scale stations cost approximately $5 million each.
About 2.4million
I can give you a link to a paper which discusses recent analysis of this, but I don't think it will be as good as getting the facts direct from a company which is going to build a new plant, though there are often cost overruns in actual building. See link below
Depends.....how much electrical capacity do you want?? 4MW 6MW 20 MW..varies.. on the low end maybe 2$million for a small 1.6MW plant. up to $18 million for a T turbine plant..these are small plants where u have a ample supply of CH4 and only need to filter/scrubber/blower/compress the gas..with the turbines the cost of raising the pressure hurtsthe payback..cd
No. A nuclear power station is a massive undertaking, and is cost effective only on the large scale.
The cost of the station has been estimated by ESA as €100 billion over 30 years; estimates range from 35 to 160 billion US dollars.
a small one is half a million a big one is 3 million
around £3.7 billion