Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire

Major Energy and Environmental News and Commentary affecting the Nuclear Industry.

Friday, March 17, 2017

Bechtel pulls out of mini-nuclear development | News | Construction News

Bechtel pulls out of mini-nuclear development | News | Construction News

Celebrating the homecoming of Ernest Moniz

Celebrating the homecoming of Ernest Moniz

Fresh from three years as U.S. Energy Secretary, Moniz returns to his roots at MIT.


After more than three and a half years of service as the 13th U.S. Secretary of Energy, nuclear physicist Ernest J. Moniz has returned to his roots at MIT, the place where he served most of his professional career.
Nominated to the cabinet by President Barack Obama in March 2013 and confirmed by the Senate on May 16 in a unanimous vote — a rare occurrence in a polarized political atmosphere — Moniz left the office on Jan. 20, 2017, with the arrival of the Trump administration.
Now, he intends to build upon that experience by working on policy proposals for climate solutions through clean energy innovation, and in the area of nuclear security. In addition to serving in a part-time appointment at MIT as professor of physics post-tenure and special advisor to the president, and as a nonresident senior fellow at Harvard University’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, he also intends to do additional work in clean energy through a nonprofit organization of his own.
“Over the last few years, the United States and the world saw what we at MIT have known for decades: that Ernie Moniz is a brilliant scientist, a gifted leader, and a tireless advocate for positive change,” says MIT President L. Rafael Reif.  “I am thrilled that the Institute will again benefit from his wisdom and experience as we continue our critical work to identify practical ways to achieve a sustainable energy future and address climate change. All of MIT is delighted to welcome him home.”
At the Department of Energy, Moniz led the implementation of President Obama’s commitment to an “all of the above” energy strategy, including the establishment of new programs to foster research on clean, renewable forms of energy and next-generation nuclear power. He also played a crucial role in the negotiations that led to a ground-breaking treaty with Iran to limit that country’s development of nuclear materials. He was often called the best-prepared of energy secretaries by members of both political parties.
“One of the things we really accomplished” during his term at the DOE, Moniz says, “was placing innovation at the center of climate solutions.” Finding ways to push that emphasis forward — encompassing innovation in policy and economic arenas as well as in technology — will continue to be a major focus of his work in coming years, he says. This emphasis echoes the “Mission Innovation” initiative that was adopted, with the help of a strong push by the Obama administration, at the Paris COP 21 climate conference in 2015.
The other area Moniz will be focusing on, nuclear security, also builds on the work he did at the DOE, both in his latest stint as secretary and earlier as undersecretary during the Clinton administration, when nuclear security, including controlling nuclear weapons materials after the collapse of the Soviet Union, was a major focus of his responsibilities. Most recently, Moniz served as one of the two lead negotiators, along with Secretary of State John Kerry, in hammering out the details of the nuclear agreement that has significantly delayed Iran’s ability to develop nuclear weapons and provided unique verification measures.
The part Moniz played in the Iran agreement negotiations and implementation over the course of two years, in which his Iranian counterpart was an MIT alumnus — a factor that helped to facilitate the negotiations — was “a really novel role,” unlike anything previously undertaken by a cabinet member, he says. The fact that the negotiating team for an international treaty included two cabinet members on each side (including Kerry and himself) was “unprecedented,” he says.
“It was a good time to be Secretary of Energy,” he says, “because the president showed successful global personal leadership in both these areas” of climate change and nuclear security. The Paris climate agreement — the most sweeping, global agreement on the subject to date — “would not have happened without [Obama’s] leadership,” Moniz says.
Continuing that progress, he says, will require not just more research but better communications. He’s concerned that momentum for dealing with this issue, which grew during the previous administration, could prove insufficient, especially in a changed political atmosphere. “We could be slowed down in our needed response to the climate risks if we don’t do a better job of bringing everyone along,” he says. That work, he emphasizes, “is not on a one-year timescale. It’s more like two or three decades. We must — we will — head toward really significant carbon emissions reduction, well beyond those of the Paris targets.”
And while opponents of measures to combat climate change claim that any such action will damage the U.S. economy, Moniz says it’s clear that “ultimately, this will be a net good for the economy.” However, in order to offset impacts on certain sectors of the workforce, he says, it’s paramount that “a focus will be on workers, at national, regional, and state levels.”
What’s needed, he says, is a concentration on “how we can most aggressively march toward the low-carbon future that we need.” Toward that end, he intends to convene a varied group of specialists at MIT, Harvard, and elsewhere, including economists and political scientists as well as scientists and engineers. “It’s got to be a broad-based, multidisciplinary group,” he says. Together, these experts will work toward developing a set of concrete policy proposals over the next few years, keyed to the needs of specific areas. “A regional focus is the only way to eventually get there,” he says, because both the problems and the opportunities of addressing climate change vary so much by location.
While researchers have clear ideas as to the kinds of carbon-free energy sources and policies needed to forestall the most devastating impacts of a changing climate, he says, “the question is how we get there, through a focused effort looking at jobs and centers for innovation.”
“Few have served with greater distinction to this country,” Institute Professor John Deutch, a chemist who specializes in energy research and who has also served in government positions in Washington, says of Moniz. About his return to the campus, Deutch advises, “Welcome him back and enjoy his wit and wisdom, as I certainly shall.”
Before this service in Washington, Moniz was the founding director of the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI), which was established in 2006 by then-MIT President Susan Hockfield. Under his leadership, MITEI supported almost 800 research projects at the Institute, had 23 industry and public partners supporting research and analysis, and engaged 25 percent of the MIT faculty in its projects and programs.
Moniz received a BS in physics from Boston College, a PhD in theoretical physics from Stanford University, and eight honorary doctorates. He is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Humboldt Foundation, the American Physical Society, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He was awarded the Grand Cross of the Order of Makarios III and of Prince Henry the Navigator, and the Distinguished Public Service Medal of the Department of Defense.
“Ernie’s career is the blueprint for how science can be used as an essential tool to inform policy,” says Maria Zuber, MIT’s vice president for research. “It’s great to have him back and challenging all of us to develop and enhance this important skill.”

http://news.mit.edu/2017/us-energy-secretary-ernest-moniz-returns-0317 

The Other 10,000 Year Project: Long-Term Thinking and Nuclear Waste

The Other 10,000 Year Project: Long-Term Thinking and Nuclear Waste


http://blog.longnow.org/02017/03/16/the-other-10000-year-project-long-term-thinking-and-nuclear-waste/

Stability of ailing Westinghouse parent Toshiba is vital: US- Nikkei Asian Review

Stability of ailing Westinghouse parent Toshiba is vital: US- Nikkei Asian Review

IAEA reviews operational safety at Olkiluoto

IAEA reviews operational safety at Olkiluoto

Nuclear heating touted as cleaner - China - Chinadaily.com.cn

Nuclear heating touted as cleaner - China - Chinadaily.com.cn

PENNSYLVANIA: Lawmakers launch nuclear energy caucus -- Friday, March 17, 2017 -- www.eenews.net

PENNSYLVANIA: Lawmakers launch nuclear energy caucus -- Friday, March 17, 2017 -- www.eenews.net

Trump Administration Would Resurrect Yucca Mountain And Nuclear Energy

Trump Administration Would Resurrect Yucca Mountain And Nuclear Energy

Svinicki promises continued improvement at NRC

Svinicki promises continued improvement at NRC

UAE News - أخبار الإمارات - View of Armageddon: US government declassifies early nuclear test footage

UAE News - أخبار الإمارات - View of Armageddon: US government declassifies early nuclear test footage

Court orders TEPCO, state to pay evacuees of nuclear disaster:The Asahi Shimbun

Court orders TEPCO, state to pay evacuees of nuclear disaster:The Asahi Shimbun

Japan court blames government for nuclear accident | Canindia News

Japan court blames government for nuclear accident | Canindia News

Toshiba Needs to Contain Its Nuclear Problems - WSJ

Toshiba Needs to Contain Its Nuclear Problems - WSJ

Never-before-seen videos show nuclear weapons being secretly detonated in the Nevada desert | ViralNewsChart via Business Insider

Never-before-seen videos show nuclear weapons being secretly detonated in the Nevada desert | ViralNewsChart via Business Insider

Gov't, TEPCO found liable for Fukushima nuclear disaster for 1st time - The Mainichi

Gov't, TEPCO found liable for Fukushima nuclear disaster for 1st time - The Mainichi

UPDATE2: Gov t, TEPCO found liable in Fukushima nuclear disaster for 1st time

UPDATE2: Gov t, TEPCO found liable in Fukushima nuclear disaster for 1st time

U.S. state secretary says all options on table for Korean Peninsula nuke issue

 U.S. state secretary says all options on table for Korean Peninsula nuke issue

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2017-03/17/c_136136921.htm

Japan court rules government liable for Fukushima disaster

Japan court rules government liable for Fukushima disaster Tokyo (AFP) March 17, 2017 - A Japanese court on Friday ruled for the first time that the government bears responsibility for the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster and ordered it and the plant operator to pay damages, officials and news reports said. A massive tsunami triggered by a 9.0-magnitude earthquake smashed into the Fukushima Daiichi power plant on Japan's northeastern coast on March 11, 2011. The water overwh ... morehttp://www.terradaily.com/reports/Japan_court_rules_government_liable_for_Fukushima_disaster_999.html

The Energy Collective Daily: French Election 2017: Where the Candidates Stand on Energy and Climate Change

French Election 2017: Where the Candidates Stand on Energy and Climate Change | The Energy Collective Daily

Link to The Energy Collective

Natural gas threatens future of nuclear energy

Natural gas threatens future of nuclear energy
Nuclear power, the glamorous, high-tech power of the future, may be losing the energy race to humble natural gas, as abundant U.S. shale gas ...http://news.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/natural-gas-threatens-future-of-nuclear-energy/

China needs to accelerate nuclear power development to meet 2020 target: ex-official

China needs to accelerate nuclear power development to meet 2020 target: ex-official
Former chairman of China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC), Sun Qin, is seen during an interview in Beijing, China, March 14, 2017. Picture ...http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-nuclear-idUSKBN16O0EA

Bulletin of Atomic Scientists Nuclear Roundup March 17, 2017


Nuclear Roundup
March 17, 2017
A compilation of quality nuclear policy news published on the Web, around the world.

United States

Trump budget request up for DOE sites like Hanford; PNNL a mixed bag.
http://www.tri-cityherald.com/news/local/hanford

America’s Nuclear Weapons Infrastructure is Crumbling

http://foreignpolicy.com/2017/03/17/americas-nuclear-weapons-infrastructure-is-crumbling/

Trump budget: An extra billion dollars for nuclear weapons

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/politics/presidential/Trump-budget-an-extra-billion-dollars-for-nuclear-weapons.html

The Nuclear Danger Posed by Trump Has Only Grown

http://www.nationalmemo.com/nuclear-danger-posed-trump-grown/

Dem rep: US needs plan to deal with potential Russian nuke

http://thehill.com/policy/international/russia/324437-dem-rep-warns-of-nuclear-war-with-russia

RUSSIA COULD ANNIHILATE U.S. WITH NUCLEAR WEAPONS, TRUMP NOMINEE WARNS

http://www.newsweek.com/russia-us-nuclear-weapons-trump-nominee-569054

As MOX Funding Hopes Rise, Owner Dings Contractor Over Performance

http://www.enr.com/articles/41673-as-mox-funding-hopes-rise-owner-dings-contractor-over-performance

Commissioner Baran Notes Progress in Right-Sizing NRC

https://www.nei.org/News-Media/News/News-Archives/Commissioner-Baran-Notes-Progress-in-Right-Sizing

International

Rex Tillerson Rejects Talks With North Korea on Nuclear Program

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/17/world/asia/rex-tillerson-north-korea-nuclear.html?_r=0

Russia’s Nuclear Menacing Shouldn’t Go Unanswered

https://www.wsj.com/articles/russias-nuclear-menacing-shouldnt-go-unanswered-1489705232

NSG Membership and Pakistan

http://nation.com.pk/columns/17-Mar-2017/nsg-membership-and-pakistan

Fukushima: Japan court finds government liable for nuclear disaster

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-39303178

After weathering nature’s worst, Fukushima nuclear evacuees ostracized by society

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/03/17/national/social-issues

General Interest

New START is a Winner

http://allthingsnuclear.org/syoung/new-start-is-a-winner

Plutonium gets another oxidation state added to its arsenal

https://www.chemistryworld.com/news/plutonium-gets-another-oxidation-state-added-to-its-arsenal/3006982.article

Send Jodi Lieberman items of interest for the Nuclear Roundup at brodnica67@gmail.com. Receive this message as a forward? Subscribe to the Nuclear Roundup here. 
Click here to sign up for future Bulletin mailings. To unsubscribe from the Nuclear Roundup, please reply to this email with "No Roundup".  
Share this message on Social Media:

The Indy Explains: The fight over Yucca Mountain

The Indy Explains: The fight over Yucca Mountain
Courtesy Nuclear Regulatory Commission via Flickr Creative Commons. Yucca Mountain has become synonymous with the fight over where to store ...https://thenevadaindependent.com/article/indy-explains-fight-yucca-mountain
 
 

Another step toward getting the nuclear waste off the beach at San Onofre?

The San Diego Union-Tribune - ‎7 hours ago‎
Trump's proposed budget calls for $120 million to store nuclear waste, including bringing back Yucca Mountain. The Trump administration's ”skinny budget” found some money for nuclear waste. And that may reflect a sense of momentum on Capitol Hill to ...

Draft Budget Nuclear Waste Plans Anger Nevada

OilPrice.com - ‎4 hours ago‎
A stipulation in the draft “skinny budget” released by the Trump administration has put the government at odds with the state of Nevada as it envisages a $120-million allocation to be spent on restarting ”licensing activities for the Yucca Mountain ...

Site officially back on the table — and Nev. members fume

E&E News - ‎8 hours ago‎
Nevada Sens. Dean Heller (R) and Catherine Cortez Masto (D) blasted President Trump's budget proposal with respect to the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste site. Photos courtesy of Wikipedia. A key House appropriator said yesterday the Trump ...

The Indy Explains: The fight over Yucca Mountain

The Nevada Independent - ‎10 hours ago‎
If you live in Nevada, chances are you've heard about Yucca Mountain — and probably more than once. The name surfaces every election season as politicians vow to protect the Silver State from a controversial nuclear waste dump. The political hot ...

Nevadans in congress and Governor Sandoval speak about nuke dump funding

KRNV My News 4 - ‎11 hours ago‎
CARSON CITY, Nev. (News 4 & Fox 11) — Nevada's congressional delegation is nearly united decrying President Donald Trump's request for Congress to allocate $120 million to restart the licensing process for a national nuclear waste dump in the desert ...

Re: Town hall meeting held regarding nuclear waste burial [Village News, 3/9/17]

Fallbrook / Bonsall Villlage News - ‎7 hours ago‎
Your article about the town hall meeting regarding nuclear waste at San Onofre repeats one of the erroneous statements made at the meeting by the Public Watchdog group that storage of the waste will begin on January 13, 2018. At the present time nearly ...

Trump asks for $120M for Yucca

Nevada Appeal - ‎17 hours ago‎
FILE - This April 9, 2015, file photo shows the south portal of the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump near Mercury, Nev. Nevada's congression... AP | AP. FILE - In this April 13, 2006, file photo, Pete Vavricka conducts an underground train ...

White House Proposes Reviving Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Site

Voice of America - ‎19 hours ago‎
FILE - This photo shows the south portal of the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump near Mercury, Nevada, April 9, 2015. Share. Share on Facebook · Share on Twitter · Share on Google+ · Email to a Friend. Print. WASHINGTON —. The White ... 

Nevada delegation vows to stop Trump plan to fund nuclear waste dumping at Yucca Mountain

News3LV - ‎18 hours ago‎
LAS VEGAS (KSNV NEWS3LV) — President Trump's budget proposal includes $120 million in nuclear waste funding, part of which could be used toward the licensing of Yucca Mountain as a storage site in Nevada. A bipartisan coalition of Nevada ...

Yucca Mountain placement in Trump budget draws ire from congressional delegation, Nevada leaders

The Nevada Independent - ‎18 hours ago‎
A recently-released summary of the White House's fiscal 2018 budget plan calls for $120 million to restart licensing activities for the long-stalled nuclear waste dump in Nye County, about 90 miles outside of Las Vegas. Most of Nevada's congressional ...

The Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump, a political hot potato, is back

CNBC - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
A "no trespassing" sign outside the proposed nuclear waste dump site of Yucca Mountain in Nevada. The White House's budget blueprint released Thursday seeks to revive spending for a hotly contested facility in Nevada that would store the nation's ...

Trump proposes restarting Yucca Mountain licensing in fiscal 2018

Platts - ‎22 hours ago‎
President Donald Trump unveiled Thursday a budget proposal for fiscal 2018 Thursday that would provide the US Department of Energy $120 million for the management of utility spent nuclear fuel, including restarting DOE's licensing activities associated ...

Nevadans in Congress nearly united against nuke dump funding

SFGate - ‎22 hours ago‎
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Nevada's congressional delegation was close to united Thursday against President Donald Trump's request for Congress to allocate $120 million to restart a licensing process for a national nuclear waste dump in the desert outside Las ...

Trump's Budget Revives Yucca Mountain After Harry Reid And Obama Killed It

Daily Caller - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
repository and initiate a robust interim storage program,” according to a budget summary. “These investments would accelerate progress on fulfilling the Federal Government's obligations to address nuclear waste, enhance national security, and reduce ...

GOP senator slams Trump's Yucca Mountain proposal

The Hill - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
Sen. Dean Heller · Dean HellerOvernight Energy: Trump's budget aims for a 31 percent cut for EPA GOP senator slams Trump's Yucca Mountain proposal Vulnerable GOP senator criticizes healthcare plan MORE (R-Nev.) is slamming President Trump's ...

Commentary: Laxalt comments on Yucca revival

Elko Daily Free Press - ‎21 hours ago‎
In the coming years, I will continue to battle the poster-child for federal overreach – a battle over an unwanted nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain in our beloved Nevada. My Solicitor General's Office, senior staff and outside experts, working ...

Nevada lawmakers asked to fund fight against nuke waste site

Post Register - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
FILE - This April 9, 2015, file photo shows the south portal of the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump near Mercury, Nev. Nevada lawmakers are being asked to commit about $3.75 million over the next two years to fund the fight against a federal ...

Texas sues Energy's Rick Perry over Yucca Mountain

Washington Examiner - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Wednesday sued energy secretary and two-term Texas Gov. Rick Perry for not moving ahead with the Yucca Mountain waste repository site in Nevada, one day before the White House issued its budget blueprint ...

White House Considering Revival of Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Site

TheStreet.com - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
The Yucca Mountain project has been stalled for years due to lawsuits and local opposition. Giovanni Bruno. Follow. Mar 16, 2017 4:33 PM EDT. The White House's 2018 budget for the Department of Energy includes a $120 million plan for nuclear waste ...

Texas' Lawsuit Over Radioactive Waste Could Bring That Same Waste to Texas

KUT - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
John Ward, operations project task manager at Waste Control Specialists' facility near Andrews, Texas, walks over to inspect concrete canisters that will house drums of nuclear waste. David Bowser for Texas Tribune. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is ...

Nuclear Industry Hopeful Congress Will Resolve Spent Nuclear Fuel Impasse

POWER magazine - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
Maria Korsnick, president and CEO of the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI), told POWER on March 9 that the U.S. nuclear industry is optimistic this Congress will work to resolve the nation's long drawn out spent fuel predicament. Speaking at CERAweek by ...

Texas Sues Federal Agencies to Force Action on Yucca Mountain

POWER magazine - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
Texas has filed a lawsuit in federal court to stop the Department of Energy (DOE) from spending tax dollars on consent-based siting activity, and to force the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and other relevant federal agencies to complete licensing ...

'We will not be a nuclear waste dump': Vulnerable GOP senator slams Trump's Nevada nuke waste plan

Raw Story - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
Sen. Dean Heller (R-NV) got a nasty surprise this week when he discovered that President Donald Trump's proposed budget would revive the Yucca Mountain storage facility for nuclear power plant waste in his home state. Heller, by far the most vulnerable ...

Nevada lawmakers speaking out against plan to revive Yucca Mountain

KTNV Las Vegas - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
The 2018 budget plan for the U.S. Department of Energy includes $120 million to restart licensing for the proposed dump. Yucca Mountain has been studied since the 1970s as a potential repository for the nation's radioactive waste. President Obama ...

Trump Administration Would Resurrect Yucca Mountain And Nuclear Energy

Forbes - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
Recall Yucca Mountain, the site that was intended to be the permanent burial for the nation's 70,000 tons of radioactive nuclear waste? It has laid practically lifeless since 2010, although it may now get a new lease on life given that the Trump ...

White House proposes reviving Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump

Wisconsin Gazette - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
The White House's fiscal 2018 budget plan for the U.S. Department of Energy includes $120 million to restart licensing for the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump in Nevada, a project stalled for years by lawsuits and local opposition. The move ...
 
 

Nuclear Regulatory Commission gives early OK to new reactor

Nuclear Regulatory Commission gives early OK to new reactor
In a March 7 letter, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or NRC, gave notice to NuScale Power that its design certification application for the ...http://www.aikenstandard.com/news/nuclear-regulatory-commission-gives-early-ok-to-new-reactor/article_efdddea4-0a7a-11e7-86a8-1b8a57bf95dd.html
 
 

Nuclear Regulatory Commission gives early OK to new reactor

Aiken Standard - ‎16 hours ago‎
A rendering from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission breaks down components of a new reactor developed by NuScale Power. prev. next. Another hurdle has been cleared in the effort to approve small modular nuclear reactors. In a March 7 letter, the ...

First small modular reactor design in US moves closer to production

The Augusta Chronicle - ‎20 hours ago‎
Designs for a first-of-its-kind nuclear power reactor that cannot melt down are one step closer to production after the Nuclear Regulatory Commission deemed the plans worthy of a full review. The NRC accepted designs for the first American small ...

Fluor's NuScale Power small modular nuclear reactor design to get NRC review

Electric Light & Power - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
NuScale Power, in which Fluor Corp. is the majority investor, has received notice that its design certification application has been accepted for review by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. By accepting the completed application for review, the ...

NRC Accepts NuScale Small Modular Reactor Design Certification Application

POWER magazine - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has accepted NuScale Power's small modular reactor (SMR) design certification application and will provide a design review schedule soon. The NRC's acceptance marks a major milestone for the first SMR design ...

NuScale's Small Modular Nuclear Reactor Keeps Moving Forward

Forbes - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
NuScale Power is a company with a mission – to build the first small modular nuclear reactor in America. As of now, they are certainly on track. In January, NuScale submitted the first design certification application for any SMR in the United States ...

NuScale Power's SMR Design Accepted for NRC Review

Power Engineering Magazine - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
Fluor Corp. announced NuScale Power, a company that has Fluor as its majority investor, was notified its design certification application for small modular nuclear reactor technology was accepted for review by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

NRC Accepts NuScale SMR Design For Review

Nuclear Street - Nuclear Power Plant News, Jobs, and Careers (press release) (blog) - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission will proceed with a technical review of NuScale Power's small modular reactor (SMR) design, the company said on Thursday. NuScale design NuScale said it had received notice that is design had been accepted for ...

NRC Accepts NuScale Power's Small Modular Nuclear Reactor Tech for Review

ExecutiveBiz (blog) - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has accepted for review Nuclear Power's design certification application for a company-made commercial nuclear power generation technology. NuScale, which Fluor holds a majority stake in, filed an application in ...

Regulatory commission accepts SMR application

Post Register - ‎Mar 15, 2017‎
The U.S. National Regulatory Commission likely will spend 40 months reviewing the application, a NuScale spokesman said. The reactor is slated for construction at the U.S. Department of Energy's desert site, south of the U.S. Highway 20 and 26 junction ...

Fluor's (NYSE:FLR) NuScale Power design certification application has been accepted for review by NRC

Benchmark Monitor - ‎Mar 16, 2017‎
Fluor Corporation (NYSE:FLR) announced that NuScale Power (NuScale), in which Fluor is the majority investor, has received notice that its design certification application has been accepted for review by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).