Oklo secures DOE PDSA approval

June 12, 2026, 2:14PMNuclear News
Concept art of Oklo’s Aurora Powerhouse. (Image: Oklo)

On Thursday, Oklo announced that the Department of Energy’s Idaho Operations Office had approved the preliminary documented safety analysis (PDSA) for the company’s first deployment of its Aurora Powerhouse, which is currently under construction at Idaho National Laboratory.

It is the most recent in a long series of announcements from the 10 companies participating in the Reactor Pilot Program, which has a fast-approaching criticality deadline of July 4.

Hatch SLR approved by NRC in under 12 months

June 12, 2026, 12:52PMNuclear News
Hatch nuclear power plant in Georgia. (Photo: Southern Nuclear)

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has renewed the operating licenses of Hatch-1 and-2 in under 12 months, the agency announced Friday.

Southern Nuclear’s application was accepted by the NRC in June 2025. The Baxley, Ga., facility’s two boiling water reactors are the second and third units to receive subsequent license renewals under the NRC’s new, streamlined process for renewing operating licenses in 12 months or less. Previously completed SLR proceedings took, on average, about two-and-a-half years.

NRC to conduct environmental review of Orano’s Project Ike enrichment facility

June 12, 2026, 9:31AMNuclear News
Concept art of Orano’s planned Project Ike facility in Oak Ridge, Tenn. (Image: Orano)

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is to prepare an environmental impact statement in its review of Orano Enrichment’s license application to build and operate a new uranium enrichment facility near Oak Ridge, Tenn., and is asking the public for comments on the scope of its environmental review.

NRC Chairman Nieh speaks at Energy Summit

June 12, 2026, 7:12AMNuclear News
NRC Chairman Ho Nieh at the Politico Energy Summit. (Photo: Politico)

The digital publication Politico held its Energy Summit on Wednesday, gathering several prominent speakers to discuss the U.S. energy agenda, including nuclear power’s role. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Ho Nieh was among those who took the stage.

While he had only about 20 minutes to speak at the gathering, which was also broadcast virtually, Nieh broached several topics with Politico reporter Kelsey Tamborrino, including small modular reactors, licensing, the agency’s recruitment and retention efforts, and the NRC’s status and operations as an independent regulator.

Energy subcommittee discusses nuclear reform bills, draft legislation

June 11, 2026, 9:43AMNuclear News
The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Subcommittee on Energy on June 9, 2026. (Photo: House Energy and Commerce Committee)

The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Subcommittee on Energy turned its attention to nuclear permitting reform at a June 9 hearing—looking at a total of six proposals.

DOE approves Xcimer’s laser fusion power plant design

June 10, 2026, 4:37PMNuclear News
A view of Xcimer’s Phoenix prototype fusion system at the company’s facility in Denver. (Photo: Xcimer)

The Department of Energy has approved Xcimer Energy's Athena fusion power plant preconceptual technical design. With this milestone achieved, the Denver, Colo.-based company is now moving forward with its plans to develop economical laser inertial confinement fusion using two beamlines, gas laser technology, and a molten salt fusion chamber.

The National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory demonstrated net energy gain from inertial confinement fusion in 2022 using solid-state glass lasers and 192 beamlines.

DOE’s latest fusion strategy aims for commercial energy by the 2030s

June 10, 2026, 1:20PMNuclear News

The Department of Energy has released what it is calling a “finalized” national strategy to accelerate the development and commercialization of fusion energy, with the goal of scaling up the private fusion sector by the mid-2030s.

Released on June 9, the Fusion Science and Technology (FS&T) Roadmap builds on an earlier road map document the DOE released in October 2025, which itself echoed plans issued by the DOE’s Office of Fusion Energy Sciences in 2023 and 2024.

According to the DOE, this finalized road map brings together fusion science, technology, infrastructure, workforce development, and commercialization priorities into a single national strategy, outlining how the DOE, industry, universities, and national laboratories will work together to accelerate the path toward U.S. commercial fusion energy.

NRC making changes to mandatory hearings timeline

June 10, 2026, 9:42AMNuclear News

Mandatory hearings conducted as part of a Nuclear Regulatory Commission reactor licensing review will be held much sooner in the process, the agency announced Tuesday.

A provision states that uncontested hearings must be held at some point after 30 days of an application being docketed. Historically, the NRC has conducted these toward the end of its review of applications for construction permits, early site permits, and combined licenses. The change announced this week would have hearings be held sooner, about 30 days after an application is docketed.

Ground broken at ORNL for Advanced Testbed and Operations Learning Laboratory

June 10, 2026, 7:07AMNuclear News
From left, Moe Khaleel, ORNL associate laboratory director; NNSA Administrator Brandon Williams; U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischmann; ORNL Director Stephen Streiffer; and William Wheeler, ORNL site office manager at the ATOLL ground-breaking ceremony.

On June 3, Brandon Williams, administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration, was at Oak Ridge National Laboratory to break ground on the Advanced Testbed and Operations Learning Laboratory (ATOLL).

The planned 21,000-square-foot facility, which is scheduled to be completed in mid-2028, will play an important role in the development of workforce expertise and capabilities aimed at monitoring foreign weapons-grade uranium production activities.

MIT Maritime Consortium wins ABS approval

June 9, 2026, 5:01PMNuclear News
From left, Sangmin Park, senior vice president of HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering; Jacopo Buongiorno, Battelle Energy Alliance professor of nuclear science and engineering at MIT; Joshua Divin, ABS senior vice president for marine business development; and Nikolas Vaporis, chief technical officer of Capital Ship Management Corp. display the AIP. (Photo: ABS)

Maritime classification and certification organization the American Bureau of Shipping has granted its approval in principle (AIP) for the integration of a nuclear reactor into a cargo vessel propulsion system, as developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Maritime Consortium. This is the first AIP to be granted to a technology developed through the consortium, which includes founding members MIT, HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering, and Capital Maritime Group.

NRC issues preliminary EA/FONSI for Crane restart

June 9, 2026, 12:45PMNuclear News
Constellation's Crane nuclear power plant. (Photo: Constellation)

On June 1, the planned restart of Crane nuclear power plant (formerly Three Mile Island-1) received a boost when the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved Constellation’s waiver request to transfer certain rights to the Middletown, Pa., plant.

Spent fuel recycling and conditioning topic of U.S.-Japan meeting

June 8, 2026, 3:32PMNuclear News
Participants in the 13th U.S.-Japan Technical Meeting of the Civil Nuclear Energy Research and Development Working Group included, from left, officials from the JAEA; the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology; DOE-EM; and the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry. (Photo: DOE)

Officials with the Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management discussed spent nuclear fuel recycling and conditioning with counterparts from Japan during the 13th U.S.-Japan Technical Meeting of the Civil Nuclear Energy Research and Development Working Group, held recently in Santa Fe, N.M.

ANS panel discussion looks at nuclear’s place in maritime, energy, medicine, space

June 8, 2026, 1:10PMNuclear News
Speaking at the ANS Annual Conference executive session on “How Nuclear Technologies will Shape the Future Energy Economy” were (from left) Craig Piercy, Stephen Carmel, Rian Bahran, Ross Radel, Greg Schulze, Harsh Desai, and Kirt Marlow.

The applications of nuclear energy extend beyond providing power to the electrical grid. Advanced nuclear technologies may soon have new applications in oil and gas facilities, in hospitals and clinics, on the open seas, and on the moon.

A June 1 executive session, “How Nuclear Technologies will Shape the Future Energy Economy,” at the American Nuclear Society’s Annual Conference allowed experts have an open discussion on the future of nuclear advancements in multiple sectors.

MARVEL team shares lessons learned through microreactor development

June 8, 2026, 9:39AMNuclear News
The MARVEL reactor upper plenum getting welded. (Photo: INL)

On June 1 at the American Nuclear Society’s Annual Conference in Denver, Colo., a team from Idaho National Laboratory presented a session titled “Lessons Learned from MARVEL Reactor Fabrication.” The presentation highlighted challenges that arose as they moved from design to manufacturing and assembly, with a focus on reactor part fabrication, Stirling engine implementation, and reactivity control system development.

INL reports findings on unusual quantum behavior of plutonium

June 8, 2026, 7:11AMNuclear News
Quantum physics research at Idaho National Laboratory. (Photo: INL)

Scientists at Idaho National Laboratory have discovered that plutonium hexaboride (PuB6) displays a type of unusual quantum property called a topological Kondo insulating state. Materials with this property are neither typical electricity conductors nor regular insulators. Rather, they have exterior surfaces that strongly conduct electricity and interiors that block electricity.

Antares achieves zero-power criticality at INL

June 5, 2026, 12:32PMNuclear News

Leveraging more than $140 million in private capital fundraising, over 322,000 square feet of operational manufacturing space, and multifaceted partnerships with the Departments of Energy and Defense, reactor start-up Antares has become the first company involved in the Reactor Pilot Program to achieve zero-power fueled criticality—a full month ahead of the July 4 deadline set by President Trump’s Executive Order 14301.

This milestone, announced yesterday, was achieved with the company’s Mark-0, a forerunner to the R1, which is the company’s flagship design. The R1 is a sodium heat-pipe-cooled, TRISO-fueled microreactor. The Mark 0 is distinct from the R1 in that it is configured for zero-power criticality testing and as such is equipped with neither power conversion nor heat removal systems.

For Antares, this development represents a key validation of its reactor physics, control systems, and supply chain.

DOE selects two companies to demo automated SNF canister monitoring tech

June 5, 2026, 9:30AMNuclear News
The ISFSI at SONGS. (Photo: Southern California Edison)

Two companies specializing in ultrasonic nondestructive testing and structural health monitoring are to advance to the final phase of a selection process to demonstrate acoustic emission technologies for the automated monitoring of spent nuclear fuel dry storage canisters.