FluxPoint is led by founder and CEO Mike Chilton, a nuclear fuel industry veteran with more than three decades of experience, including executive leadership roles with GE Hitachi Global Nuclear Fuels and AES Corporation. Chilton said domestic fuel availability has become a limiting factor for current and future reactors, underscoring the strategic importance of restoring U.S.-based conversion capacity.
Debottlenecking: FluxPoint’s announcement comes amid growing federal and industry efforts to onshore critical nuclear fuel infrastructure and enhance U.S. energy security. Uranium conversion has been seen as a key bottleneck in the nuclear fuel supply chain, with the United States heavily reliant on foreign-controlled facilities.
Currently, Solstice Advanced Material’s Metropolis Works facility (formerly Honeywell Metropolis Works) in Illinois is the only UF6 conversion facility in the United States. In February, driven by a backlog of over $2 billion in orders from long-term customers, Solstice announced it was investing in “debottlenecking projects” at Metropolis Works following its restart in 2023.
Risks and challenges: FluxPoint faces several challenges common to large‑scale nuclear fuel infrastructure projects, including lengthy regulatory and permitting processes, significant capital requirements, and long development timelines.
The company must also secure long‑term customer commitments in a market historically reliant on foreign conversion providers while rebuilding specialized technical and workforce capabilities that have atrophied in the United States over decades of limited domestic investment.
FluxPoint is not the only newcomer eyeing the conversion market. United States Uranium Refining & Conversion Corp., a wholly owned subsidiary of the mining company Uranium Energy Corp., announced in March that it plans to begin pre-application engagement with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission as it conducts engineering and design activities with Fluor for a planned uranium conversion facility.