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Trump will sign an order to boost nuclear energy as early as Friday, according to sources

Four sources said that U.S. president Donald Trump would sign executive orders on Friday to help jumpstart the nuclear industry. These orders will ease the approval process for new reactors, and strengthen the fuel supply chain.

Trump, on his first official day in office, declared an emergency energy situation due to the rise in demand for power that has been seen in the last two decades.

Chris Wright, energy secretary, said that the race to develop the power sources and data centres needed for AI was "Manhattan Project 2", in reference to the massive U.S. project during World War II, to develop atomic weapons.

According to a draft summary, Trump will use the Cold War Defense Production Act in order to declare a state of emergency due to the U.S.'s dependence on Russia and China regarding enriched uranium and nuclear fuel processing.

The summary directs agencies to allow and site new nuclear installations and directs Departments of Energy and Defense (DoD) to identify federal lands and sites for nuclear deployment and streamline processes to get these built.

The Energy Department is also encouraged to use direct loans and loan guarantees to expand the reactor build-out. In his first term, Trump used the Loan Programs Office to support a nuclear power plant in Georgia.

The LPO now has hundreds billions in funding thanks to legislation passed by former president Joe Biden's Administration, but has been hard hit by job cuts under Trump's second presidency.

The White House didn't immediately respond to our request for comment. It is not uncommon for the exact wording and text of executive orders to be changed. There is also no guarantee that certain elements will remain intact or unchanged during the final stages.

China is the country that has grown the fastest when it comes to nuclear energy. The United States, which was the first nation to develop nuclear power, also has the largest nuclear power capacity.

According to one source, officials from the nuclear energy institute and Constellation, the utility with the largest U.S. capacity of reactors, were invited Friday afternoon to a signing ceremony. Constellation and NEI didn't immediately respond to comments.

The Trump administration is debating draft executive orders that would boost nuclear energy. These proposed measures included giving the administration greater power to approve reactors, and reforming the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), a five-person panel that approves reactors.

The Democrats like nuclear power because it emits virtually no carbon dioxide. Republicans prefer it because of its reliability compared to solar and wind energy, which are intermittent. This problem can be solved with battery storage.

The United States has no permanent disposal facility for radioactive waste produced by nuclear power. (Reporting and editing by Alistair Bell; Timothy Gardner)

(source: Reuters)