Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire

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

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Technogarchy Goes to Washington

Technogarchy Goes to Washington

Japan Commits To Maximum Use Of Nuclear Power | Neutron Bytes

Japan Commits To Maximum Use Of Nuclear Power | Neutron Bytes

Legal: Amending India's Nuclear Liability Law | Energy Intelligence

Legal: Amending India's Nuclear Liability Law | Energy Intelligence

Colorado Utility Looking at Adding Nuclear Power to Fleet

Colorado Utility Looking at Adding Nuclear Power to Fleet

Nuke Plant Renewal Rules Ignore Climate Risks, DC Circ. Told - Law360

Nuke Plant Renewal Rules Ignore Climate Risks, DC Circ. Told - Law360

Lawsuit by Texas, Utah could change small reactor regulation - Competitive Enterprise Institute

Lawsuit by Texas, Utah could change small reactor regulation - Competitive Enterprise Institute

United States: White House Threatens NRC's Independence | Energy Intelligence

United States: White House Threatens NRC's Independence | Energy Intelligence

Nuclear Reactor Review Rule Ignores Critical Risks, Suit Says

Nuclear Reactor Review Rule Ignores Critical Risks, Suit Says

US plans new nuclear laser gun to shoot fusion fuel with precision

US plans new nuclear laser gun to shoot fusion fuel with precision

Floating nuclear power plants to be mass produced for US coastline

Floating nuclear power plants to be mass produced for US coastline

Ghostly Glow of Nuclear Power Station Detected in Water 150 Miles Away : ScienceAlert

Ghostly Glow of Nuclear Power Station Detected in Water 150 Miles Away : ScienceAlert

Small modular reactors could help Indiana shift to 24/7 carbon-free electricity with economic benefits, study says - News

Small modular reactors could help Indiana shift to 24/7 carbon-free electricity with economic benefits, study says - News

MIT simulations to boost nuclear power for world’s largest reactor

MIT simulations to boost nuclear power for world’s largest reactor

USDA makes profound announcement that could alter the future of our food system: 'We've got to build'

USDA makes profound announcement that could alter the future of our food system: 'We've got to build'

European partnerships for fast reactor development - World Nuclear News

European partnerships for fast reactor development - World Nuclear News

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Texas partnership evaluates SMR use for water desalination - World Nuclear News

Texas partnership evaluates SMR use for water desalination - World Nuclear News

Iran says Israel, US 'cannot do a damn thing' against Tehran | Reuters

Iran says Israel, US 'cannot do a damn thing' against Tehran | Reuters

US intelligence agencies believe Israel is likely to strike Iranian nuclear facilities this year | CNN Politics

US intelligence agencies believe Israel is likely to strike Iranian nuclear facilities this year | CNN Politics

What would happen if a Russian nuke detonated over your city | Responsible Statecraft

What would happen if a Russian nuke detonated over your city | Responsible Statecraft Not for the faint hearted, Ted Postol describes the effects of a single 800-kiloton nuclear detonation at a height of about one mile above an American city: At ranges yet nearer to the detonation, heating effects will be so intense, that human flesh would burn explosively into carbon, and asphalt on the streets would melt and, in some cases, vaporize. At that point, the resulting fires over an area of between 100 and 150 square miles on Earth would efficiently heat large volumes of air near and above the ground. The energy released by this mass fire would be 15 to 50 times greater than the energy produced by the nuclear detonation. The rising hot air would reach wind speeds of 300 miles per hour and be so intense they would knock airplanes above the fire zone from the sky. This “chimney effect” would pull cool air from outside the fire zone towards the center of the fire at speeds of hundreds of miles per hour. These superheated ground-winds of more than hurricane force would further intensify the fire....

Trump Administration Moves to Fast-Track Hundreds of Fossil Fuel Projects - The New York Times

Trump Administration Moves to Fast-Track Hundreds of Fossil Fuel Projects - The New York Times

Transformer supply bottleneck threatens power system stability as load grows | Utility Dive

Transformer supply bottleneck threatens power system stability as load grows | Utility Dive

Trump moves to claw back almost 50 years of NEPA regs - E&E News by POLITICO

Trump moves to claw back almost 50 years of NEPA regs - E&E News by POLITICO

US Council set up to advise President Trump on energy dominance - World Nuclear News

US Council set up to advise President Trump on energy dominance - World Nuclear News

AEP expects electric sales to jump 8.6% annually over 3 years | Utility Dive

AEP expects electric sales to jump 8.6% annually over 3 years | Utility Dive

IAEA: Chernobyl drone strike latest threat to nuclear safety in Ukraine -- ANS / Nuclear Newswire

IAEA: Chernobyl drone strike latest threat to nuclear safety in Ukraine -- ANS / Nuclear Newswire

[SocialMedia] FInancial Times - UK - Round up of fund raising by SMR firms - Guest Post

FINANCIAL TIMES, London, UK Https://www.ft.com/content/2d84198e-7eeb-4154-bbf2-9a469b0cc700 [firewall] Big Tech’s AI ambitions deliver funding boost to nuclear reactor race Developers of advanced microreactors have raised at least $1.5bn over the past year as demand soars Oklo is one of three SMR developers listed in New York which have raised more than $700mn in the past year Jamie Smyth in New York Developers of small modular nuclear reactors have raised at least $1.5bn in funding over the past year, tapping into a surge of investor interest linked to power supply deals agreed with Big Tech. They have also secured pledges of billions of dollars of support from governments, amid a global race to launch new technologies considered critical to powering the artificial intelligence revolution. The largest fundraising of $700mn was closed this month by X-energy, a US developer that added Jane Street and other institutional investors to a register that included technology giant Amazon, Ken Griffin, founder and chief executive of Citadel and chemical company Dow. Paris-based developer Newcleo raised $151mn in September and US-based developers Blue Energy and Last Energy raised $45mn and $40mn respectively last year. Nano Nuclear Energy, a developer of microreactors which listed in May, raised $134mn capital in 2024. Three SMR developers listed in New York, Oklo, NuScale and Nano Nuclear, raised more than $700mn through share sales and other financing mechanisms over the past 12 months, according to a Financial Times analysis of public records and data from PitchBook and BloombergNEF. Westinghouse, Rolls-Royce, Holtec International, GE Hitachi and Bill Gates’ TerraPower are also among a host of companies investing in about 60 SMR projects globally, according to World Nuclear Association data. Amazon’s purchase of a stake in X-energy and Google’s signature of a power supply deal with SMR developer Kairos Power, which both occurred in October, have shaken up a funding market that soured in 2023 due to high interest rates and inflation. Improving investor sentiment has fuelled a surge in the share prices of Oklo and NuScale, which have seen their combined market capitalisation jump by almost $8bn following the deals. It has encouraged some early stage venture capital, providing more options for SMR developers. Core Power, a UK-based company which designs reactors for the shipping industry, told the Financial Times it is close to finalising a $500mn fundraising round from strategic investors. Holtec International, one of four shortlisted bidders in a UK government competition for SMR developers, said it is exploring funding options. “There has been a dramatic change in the capital markets for companies like ours,” said Clay Sell, chief executive of X-energy, adding the recent deals demonstrated how the technology industry now fully appreciates the role nuclear will play in providing reliable, clean power. Surging power demand in the US caused, in part, by the rollout of AI data centres is causing the technology sector to underwrite part of the capital costs of deploying nuclear energy. Last year Microsoft signed a 20-year power deal with Constellation Energy to reopen the Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania, citing its value as a source of emissions-free energy that would not dent climate targets. But there are only a handful of nuclear plants that can be restarted in the US and building standard-sized reactors is considered risky due to a recent history of lengthy delays and cost overruns. Instead, the technology industry is focusing on SMRs, which are new types of advanced nuclear reactors that have a power capacity of 300MW of less, or about a third of the size of standard facilities. Oklo, which is chaired by Open AI’s Sam Altman, signed a non-binding agreement with Switch Inc, a large privately held data centre operator, to build reactors with a total capacity of up to 12 gigawatts — enough in total to power all 7.6mn households in New York state. Meta is evaluating proposals from SMR developers for a tender to supply up to 4 gigawatts of capacity to support its data centre roll out in the early 2030s. But analysts warn developers still face technical, regulatory and even funding risks despite the improved sentiment. NuScale is the only SMR developer with a design approved by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission. TerraPower filed its construction permit application to the NRC last year and has begun preparatory construction work on a site in Wyoming but most companies have not started the process. Developers want technology companies to finalise the dozens of non-binding memorandums of understanding they have signed to provide them with financial certainty. “To see more SMR projects announced and move forward we need to see binding agreements, rather than MOUs,” said Marc Bianchi, analyst at TD Cowen, an investment bank. Government funding is critically important for developers due to the risks associated with a first-of-a kind technology and a history of delays and budget overruns that have blighted nuclear projects, say investors. “We have to have federal dollars. I just can’t underscore that enough,” Google’s head of energy market development, Caroline Golin, told a Nuclear Energy Institute conference in New York last week. In the US, the Biden administration kick-started the industry by pledging billions of dollars in grants to X-energy, TerraPower and other developers. It also offered production tax credits of up to 50 per cent to support the deployment of SMRs in the inflation reduction act. President Trump wants to repeal the IRA and has frozen billions of dollars of loans to the clean energy sector, prompting industry concerns over funding. But the new secretary at the Department of Energy, Chris Wright, sat on the board of Oklo until his confirmation and the Republican party are strong supporters of nuclear energy, providing executives with hope that Washington’s support remains firm. “We remain confident,” said Sell from X-energy. “The president has talked extensively about the role nuclear should play in this energy dominance strategy, which we strongly support.”