DOE Announces New Funding Opportunity to Support Advanced Nuclear Reactor Power Plants
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For Immediate Release: October 20, 2017
For Immediate Release: October 20, 2017
DOE Announces New Funding Opportunity to Support Advanced Nuclear Reactor Power Plants
ARPA-E Provides up to $20 Million in Funding for Technologies to Enable Lower Cost, Safer Advanced Nuclear Plant Designs
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today,
the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced up to $20 million in
funding for projects as part of a new Advanced Research Projects
Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) program: Modeling-Enhanced Innovations
Trailblazing Nuclear Energy Reinvigoration (MEITNER). MEITNER projects
seek to identify and develop innovative technologies that can enable
designs for lower cost, safer, advanced nuclear reactors. The ARPA-E
team developed this funding opportunity in close coordination with DOE’s
Office of Nuclear Energy.
Nuclear power generates
nearly 20 percent of U.S. electricity, offering a reliable source of
power that complements the country’s diverse portfolio of fossil-fuel
and renewable generation sources. Existing nuclear power plants,
however, face comparatively high operational and maintenance costs.
Today, there is a compelling opportunity to leverage design, new
manufacturing processes, and technologies to increase the
competitiveness of nuclear power. The MEITNER program seeks
transformative technologies to allow advanced reactor designs that
achieve lower construction cost and autonomous operations while also
improving safety.
“When ARPA-E examined the
challenges facing nuclear energy, we found an important opportunity to
support the advanced reactor design community with early-stage
technologies that could enable the development of safer and less
expensive plants,” said ARPA-E Acting Director Eric Rohlfing. “MEITNER
projects are developing technologies that will accelerate fabrication
and testing, making construction cheaper, while integrating high levels
of automation and built-in safety measures across the plant to reduce
operational costs. Close coordination with the Office of Nuclear Energy
in this endeavor, including utilization of the knowledge and resources
developed by that office, will be critical to ensuring a successful,
forward-looking program.”
This funding opportunity
encourages collaboration across all disciplines for its projects,
calling on scientists, engineers, and practitioners from different
organizations, scientific fields, and technology sectors to form diverse
and experienced project teams. These interdisciplinary and
cross-organizational collaborations facilitate scientific and
technological discoveries that a single group alone would not be able to
achieve.
A summary of the MEITNER program can be found HERE. Additional information, including the full FOA, is available on ARPA-E’s online application portal, ARPA-E eXCHANGE.
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