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US nuclear regulator plans to make changes in accordance with Trump's nuclear goals

The U.S. Nuclear Power Regulator said on Wednesday that it was undergoing a restructuring in order to meet President Donald Trump's goals of speeding up the licensing of nuclear reactors.

In a press release, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced that it would appoint leaders to oversee the reactor safety program. The staff will also develop a new management plan and organizational chart within 60 days. The NRC stated that it will try to implement the plan by the end of September.

Trump is looking to quadruple the U.S. nuclear capacity?to 400 gigawatts?by 2050, as electricity demand increases for the first decade due to data centers for AI and cryptocurrency. In May last year, Trump ordered the NRC?to cut back on regulations and to fast-track new reactor licenses. He wanted to reduce a multi-year licensing process to just 18 months.

In a press release, NRC Chairman Ho Nieh stated that "we are in one of the most significant periods in NRC's recent history and this reorganization allows us to respond more efficiently and quickly with our decisions."

The chairman stated that the reorganization is aimed at accelerating safe nuclear technology deployment and improving consistency of safety programs implemented by regional offices.

NRC announced that the agency would reorganize itself around three business lines: new reactors, reactors in operation, and nuclear waste and materials.

Seth Cohen, the chief counsel for nuclear policies at the Department of Energy told the American Nuclear Society in November that the NRC's staff would "almost certain" increase to meet the licensing requirements.

A spokesperson responded that the NRC was still in the process of reorganizing itself.

Trump's efforts to accelerate reactor approvals come despite criticism from Ernest Moniz. Ernest Moniz is a nuclear scientist and former Department of Energy secretary who said that reorganizing the NRC and reducing its independence could lead to a hasty deployment of advanced, high-tech reactors with security and safety flaws. (Reporting and editing by Nia William and Bill Berkrot; Reporting by Timothy Gardner)

(source: Reuters)