Creekstone Energy taps EnergySolutions to study nuclear-powered data center

December 17, 2025, 7:01AMNuclear News

Utah-based Creekstone Energy has signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with EnergySolutions to study the feasibility of building at least 2 gigawatts of advanced nuclear capacity to power a 25-acre data center Creekstone is planning in Delta, Utah.

According to Creekstone, the non-binding MOU encompasses the exploration of multiple nuclear technologies, which include large-scale and small modular reactors, of different designs. Neither company would be obligated to pursue a specific project, technology, or investment under the agreement.

The project: Creekstone is developing the data center, called the Utah Creekstone Gigasite, as an advanced multisource energy and data-infrastructure platform, designed to meet the expanding U.S. demand for artificial intelligence and data centers. Creekstone said its goal is to provide approximately 10 GW of non-nuclear generation at the Gigasite through a diversified portfolio of power and infrastructure technologies.

“Evaluating the role that next-generation nuclear could play in our broader energy portfolio is an important step in refining the long-term strategy for the Gigasite,” said Ray Conley, CEO of Creekstone Energy.

According to Creekstone, while nuclear could provide a potential pathway to strengthen long-term reliability, resilience, and capacity of the data center, it is not being considered as a replacement for other technologies.

The agreement: Under the MOU, Creekstone and EnergySolutions will undertake a “Phase 1” evaluation effort focused on:

  • Developing a nuclear program roadmap, with timelines and gating decisions tied to feasibility, regulatory progress, and commercial conditions.
  • Establishing a timeline for commercial operation in the 2030–2035 timeframe.
  • Assessing a wide range of reactor technologies, without limitation to any single design, to determine which options may merit further study for site-scale loads.
  • Evaluating site readiness and integration requirements within Creekstone’s multisource energy strategy, including transmission, cooling, and infrastructure interfaces.
  • Examining regulatory pathways and early-stage licensing considerations to understand requirements for any future project.
  • Identifying commercial structures, delivery models, and key risks to inform next steps.

Quotables: “Nuclear has the potential to complement our multisource approach and support the growth of large-scale AI and digital-infrastructure development,” said Conley. “EnergySolutions’ technical and regulatory expertise gives us confidence that this evaluation will be thorough, professional, and grounded in real-world conditions.”

Pierre Oneid, executive vice president for strategic initiatives & partnerships at EnergySolutions, added, “Creekstone is approaching this the right way, grounding every step in thorough analysis, clear options, and a disciplined process. Our role is to help them fully understand the nuclear pathways available and what it would take to make any of those options viable for a site of this scale.”


Related Articles

NextEra expands data center plans

December 10, 2025, 3:01PMNuclear News

In a flurry of announcements this week, NextEra Energy confirmed new deals across the energy sector with Symmetry, Meta, Basin Electric, WPPI Energy, and Google. These deals are primarily...

New York signs up for more nuclear

October 31, 2025, 7:00AMNuclear News

New York is going after nuclear in a big way. The New York Power Authority is releasing its first solicitations for plans to develop advanced nuclear reactors in the state’s upstate...