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St Bridget's Church, Calder Bridge

19th-century Church of England church buildingsChurch of England church buildings in CumbriaChurches completed in 1842Diocese of CarlisleEdmund Sharpe buildings
EngvarB from September 2013Gothic Revival architecture in CumbriaGothic Revival church buildings in EnglandGrade II listed churches in Cumbria
St Bridget's Church, Beckermet
St Bridget's Church, Beckermet

St Bridget's Church is on the north side of the A595 road in the village of Calder Bridge, near Beckermet, Cumbria, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Calder, the archdeaconry of West Cumberland, and the diocese of Carlisle. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Bridget's Church, Calder Bridge (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Bridget's Church, Calder Bridge
Cold Fell,

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Wikipedia: St Bridget's Church, Calder BridgeContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 54.4407 ° E -3.479 °
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St Bridget's

Cold Fell
CA20 1DL
England, United Kingdom
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St Bridget's Church, Beckermet
St Bridget's Church, Beckermet
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Moorside nuclear power station

Moorside nuclear power station is proposed for a site near Sellafield, in Cumbria, England. The original plan by NuGeneration, a British subsidiary of Toshiba-owned Westinghouse Electric Company, had the station coming online from 2024 with 3.4 GW of new nuclear capacity, from three AP1000 reactors. Work up to 2018 would include acquiring the site licence, the development consent order, and other required permits and permissions to start work. Site preparation was to take two years, up to 2020. Following the Chapter 11 bankruptcy of Westinghouse in March 2017, the project was put under review. From December 2017 to July 2018 Kepco was named as preferred bidder. Kepco were thought to prefer their own APR-1400 reactor design for the site, a design which had not yet gone through generic design assessment with the UK's Office for Nuclear Regulation. On 8 November 2018, it was announced that Toshiba's plans for the new nuclear power station had been scrapped and its subsidiary company, NuGen, would be wound up. The Moorside site was handed back to the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority, and the government issued a statement reaffirming its commitment to new nuclear. In July 2020, a EDF-led Moorside consortium announced a proposal for two EPR reactors yielding 3,200 MWe of new nuclear capacity. A second Rolls-Royce-led UK SMR consortium plans a low-carbon power station around a small light-water reactor and the possibility of a link with renewable technologies, storage systems and hydrogen production named Moorside clean energy hub.