WASHINGTON, Aug 12 (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of
Energy said on Tuesday it has made an initial selection of 11
projects for a pilot program seeking to develop high-tech test
nuclear reactors and get at least three of them to begin
operating in less than a year.
WHY IT'S IMPORTANT
As artificial intelligence and data centers boost power
demand, the U.S. is aiming to develop small nuclear reactors
which developers say will be cheaper to build per Megawatt of
output than today's large reactors because the parts could be
replicated in factories.
The department's move comes after President Donald Trump
issued executive orders in May seeking to speed permitting of
nuclear reactors and reform the Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
an independent agency. The orders allow the Energy Department
to authorize the test reactors, without the NRC.
KEY QUOTE
"President Trump's Reactor Pilot Program is a call to
action," said James Danly, deputy energy secretary. "These
companies aim to all safely achieve criticality by Independence
Day, and DOE will do everything we can to support their
efforts."
COMPANIES SELECTED
The department selected the following companies: Aalo
Atomics., Antares Nuclear, Atomic Alchemy, Deep Fission Inc.,
Last Energy., Oklo ( OKLO ) , Natura Resources LLC, Radiant
Energy, Terrestrial Energy, and Valar Atomics.
The department said each company will be responsible for all
costs associated with designing, manufacturing, constructing,
and decommissioning their test reactors.
HURDLES
Small modular and so-called "advanced" nuclear reactors have
been talked about in the U.S. for years, but the only ones
operating are in China and Russia. Hurdles include getting
permits for plants that generate electricity for the grid,
developing commercial levels of a new fuel some of the reactors
plan to use called high-assay low-enriched uranium, and
developing factories for the reactors when none of the plants
are yet operating.