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Constellation Energy extends licenses for two nuclear reactors by 20 years

Constellation Energy announced on Tuesday that the U.S. nuclear regulator had approved a?20-year renewal of licenses for its Clinton clean energy center and?Dresden?clean energy center.

The U.S. power company will invest over $370 million in relicensing the nuclear plants, to increase efficiency and reliability.

The company stated that the approvals would allow Clinton to "operate until 2047" and Dresden reactors through 2049 and 2051.

After decades of stagnation in the U.S., nuclear power has experienced a surge. This is due to data centers that are used for artificial intelligence and electrification.

In May, President Donald Trump signed executive orders directing U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to reduce regulations and expedite new licenses for power plants?and reactors.

Constellation Energy's Chief Generation Officer Bryan Hanson said, "These license extension will allow Clinton and Dresden stay online for another two decades. This will preserve more than 2,200 jobs that support families and $8.1 billion in federal, local and state tax dollars."

The Big Tech company struck its first nuclear power plant deal in June, when it signed a contract with Meta that would keep one of the utility's Illinois reactors operational for 20 years. (Reporting from Katha Kalia, Bengaluru).

(source: Reuters)