Difference between revisions of "Tim Stone"

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==Views==
 
==Views==
 
According to the minutes of the May 2012 meeting of the [[Nuclear Development Forum]]:
 
According to the minutes of the May 2012 meeting of the [[Nuclear Development Forum]]:
:Dr Tim Stone agreed that the UK was the best destination for investors in new nuclear and would lead to the creation of high quality jobs. The first Japanese prefecture has agreed to
+
:Dr Tim Stone agreed that the UK was the best destination for investors in new nuclear and would lead to the creation of high quality jobs. The first Japanese prefecture has agreed to restart a reactor and hoped this would lead to more positive new stories. Following a trip to China, he remarked that programme management was a big challenge for the new nuclear programme. In China he was impressed to see that construction was to time and budget and expressed confidence that the UK could do the same.<ref> Nuclear Development Forum
restart a reactor and hoped this would lead to more positive new stories. Following a trip to
 
China, he remarked that programme management was a big challenge for the new nuclear programme. In China he was impressed to see that construction was to time and budget and expressed confidence that the UK could do the same.<ref> Nuclear Development Forum
 
 
Minutes - 15th May 2012.</ref>
 
Minutes - 15th May 2012.</ref>
  

Revision as of 09:04, 31 August 2012

Nuclear spin.png This article is part of the Nuclear Spin project of Spinwatch.

Dr Tim Stone is a senior adviser to the Secretary of State for Department of Energy and Climate Change and the expert chair of the Office for Nuclear Development.

He is Global Senior Adviser at KPMG Corporate Finance and the founder and former chair of KPMG's global infrastructure and project group. He has also been a non-executive director at Anglian Water since October 2011. [1]

Views

According to the minutes of the May 2012 meeting of the Nuclear Development Forum:

Dr Tim Stone agreed that the UK was the best destination for investors in new nuclear and would lead to the creation of high quality jobs. The first Japanese prefecture has agreed to restart a reactor and hoped this would lead to more positive new stories. Following a trip to China, he remarked that programme management was a big challenge for the new nuclear programme. In China he was impressed to see that construction was to time and budget and expressed confidence that the UK could do the same.[2]

Notes

  1. Tim Stone, LinkedIn profile, accessed 31 August 2012
  2. Nuclear Development Forum Minutes - 15th May 2012.