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US will provide up to 800 million dollars to support small reactors

The U.S. Department of Energy announced on Tuesday that it would provide up to $850 million in support of the development of small modular nuclear reactors by Tennessee Valley Authority and Holtec.

The Trump administration and nuclear firms believe SMRs can help provide electricity in the U.S., where demand for power is increasing for the first time since two decades due to artificial intelligence mining, electric vehicles and cryptocurrency mining.

SMRs are said to save money because they will be manufactured in factories. There are no such reactors under construction in America, and there is some doubt about their ability to provide as much power as larger reactors. Nuclear power produces radioactive waste that is long-lasting and for which no permanent storage facility exists.

The Energy Department announced that TVA, a U.S.-owned utility, would receive up to 400 million dollars in federal cost-shared funds for the development of a GE Vernova Hitachi BWRX-300 on the Clinch River Site in Tennessee, and other projects.

Holtec plans to build up to two SMRs on its Palisades site in Michigan. Holtec hopes to reopen its 800-megawatt Palisades nuclear reactor, which closed in 2022. It had been operating for over 50 years. The plant received a $1.52billion loan guarantee under former president Joe Biden’s administration. To date, the Energy Department’s loan office disbursed over $490m of that financing.

Energy Department anticipates that SMRs will be developed in the early 2030s. These awards will allow us to deploy these reactors quickly, Energy Secretary Chris Wright stated in a recent press release.

(source: Reuters)