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Meta seeks nuclear power designers for reactors to begin in early 2030s

Meta said on Tuesday it is looking for proposals from nuclear power designers to aid fulfill its expert system and environment goals, becoming the most recent big tech business to take interest in atomic power amidst an anticipated boom in electricity need.

The company wants to include 1 to 4 gigawatts of new U.S. nuclear generation capability starting in the early 2030s, it stated in a release. A typical U.S. nuclear plant has a capacity of about 1 gigawatt.

At Meta, our company believe atomic energy will play a critical role in the transition to a cleaner, more dependable, and diversified electric grid, the business said in a release.

U.S. data center power usage is expected to approximately triple in between 2023 and 2030 and will require about 47 gigawatts of new generation capability, according to Goldman Sachs approximates.

But it will be tough to swiftly satisfy skyrocketing power demand with nuclear reactors, as business face an overburdened U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, prospective uranium fuel supply obstacles and regional opposition.

Microsoft and Constellation Energy announced a deal in September to reboot an unit at the 3 Mile Island plant in Pennsylvania in what would be the first-ever reboot for an information center.

That statement followed a similar arrangement in March in which Amazon.com, bought a nuclear-powered information center from Talen Energy.

Meta said it is seeking designers with proficiency in community engagement, advancement and permitting, and would think about either small modular reactors, an emerging part of the service that is not yet commercial, or bigger atomic power plants comparable to today's fleet of U.S. nuclear plants.

Meta said it will take submissions from developers that desire to take part in the ask for propositions till Jan. 3, 2025.

The business said it was using the request-for-proposal process due to the fact that, compared to renewable resource tasks like solar and wind, nuclear is more capital-intensive, takes longer to develop, and undergoes more regulatory requirements.

An RFP process will allow us to approach these jobs thoroughly and thoughtfully with these considerations in mind, it stated.

(source: Reuters)