Robotic scanning technology saving millions at Idaho, DOE says

April 21, 2025, 7:57AMNuclear News
An ICP worker supervises an evaluation of ultrasonic testing technology recently at the INL Site’s Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Project. (Photo: DOE)

New ultrasonic testing equipment being used by the Department of Energy’s Idaho Cleanup Project (ICP) to confirm the integrity of thousands of legacy waste drums is saving taxpayers tens of millions of dollars, the DOE’s Office of Environmental Management announced.

The technology allows ICP personnel to inspect the thickness transuranic waste drums held in storage at the DOE’s Idaho National Laboratory Site, ensuring they meet Department of Transportation minimum thickness requirements to be shipped for disposal at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in New Mexico. According to DOE-EM, if drums meet the DOT thickness requirements, they can be loaded directly into shipping casks without the need for an expensive overpack container, leading to a minimum cost savings of $26 million.

BWXT acquires Oak Ridge site as NNSA pursues unobligated enriched uranium

April 18, 2025, 1:00PMNuclear News

BWX Technologies Inc. has purchased about 97 acres of land in an Oak Ridge, Tenn., industrial park where the company expects to build a uranium enrichment facility using a technology called DUECE, or, Domestic Uranium Enrichment Centrifuge Experiment. DUECE was developed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory to provide enriched uranium for the Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration, and BWXT is several months into a yearlong engineering study to evaluate options for deploying a centrifuge pilot plant using DUECE.

Legacy waste removed from Oak Ridge after 50 years

April 18, 2025, 7:23AMNuclear News
OREM team members with the transport cask used to ship the legacy waste out of state for permanent disposal. (Photo: DOE)

Oak Ridge National Laboratory has successfully removed legacy radioactive waste stored for more than five decades, marking a significant cleanup milestone. The Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management (OREM) and cleanup contractor UCOR processed and shipped highly radioactive source material, including radium-226 and boron, out of state for permanent disposal.

Judge temporarily blocks DOE’s move to slash university research funding

April 17, 2025, 3:26PMNuclear News

A group of universities led by the American Association of Universities (AAU) acted swiftly to oppose a policy action by the Department of Energy that would cut the funds it pays to universities for the indirect costs of research under DOE grants. The group filed suit Monday, April 14, challenging a what it termed a “flagrantly unlawful action” that could “devastate scientific research at America’s universities.”

By Wednesday, the U.S. District Court judge hearing the case issued a temporary restraining order effective nationwide, preventing the DOE from implementing the policy or terminating any existing grants.

Mizzou announces contract signing for NextGen MURR project

April 16, 2025, 12:11PMNuclear News
A reactor operator retrieves a sample can from the MURR, as seen from above. (Photo: University of Missouri)

The University of Missouri announced today that it has signed a $10 million contract for the initial design phase of the $1 billion-plus state-of-the-art NextGen MURR research reactor project.

UIUC and NANO Nuclear reboot plans for a FOAK research reactor

April 15, 2025, 9:30AMNuclear News
Concept art of NANO Nuclear’s KRONOS MMR research reactor that UIUC plans to operate on its campus in Champaign, Ill. (Image: NANO Nuclear)

Plans to bring a university research reactor like no other to the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) were punctuated last fall by the news that Ultra Safe Nuclear, the developer of the gas-cooled reactor technology selected for the Illinois Microreactor Project, had declared bankruptcy.

New GE Hitachi “blocks” could cut costs in nuclear deployment

April 14, 2025, 3:02PMNuclear News
DPSC blocks undergo testing at Purdue University’s Bowen Laboratory. (Photo: Idaho National Laboratory)

Researchers at GE Hitachi Nuclear recently completed a successful test on potential new building blocks made of steel-concrete composite.

U.S. advances microreactor program for military sites

April 14, 2025, 9:30AMNuclear News

The Defense Innovation Unit announced April 10 next steps in the Advanced Nuclear Power for Installations (ANPI) program, launched in 2024 to deploy microreactor nuclear systems for increased power reliability at select military locations.

Roger Jarrell named DOE-EM deputy assistant secretary

April 14, 2025, 7:06AMNuclear News

Jarrell

Roger Jarrell will lead the Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management as the new principal deputy assistant secretary. Jarrell, who served in the office during the first Trump administration, was named DOE-EM senior advisor in January. Prior to that, he served as the general counsel and previously was the government and stakeholder interface at DOE cleanup contractor UCOR, of Oak Ridge, Tenn.

Jarrell takes over the assistant secretary position, listed on DOE-EM’s organizational chart as EM-2, from Dae Chung, a long-serving DOE-EM executive who was tapped by the Trump administration in March to lead the office as acting principal deputy assistant secretary following the departure of Candice Robertson, who had led the office since June 2024.

Will Palisades be the “comeback kid”?

April 11, 2025, 3:03PMNuclear News
Palisades nuclear power plant on Lake Michigan, at night. (Photo: Holtec)

Mike Mlynarek believes in this expression: “In the end it will be OK; and if it’s not OK, it’s not the end.”

As the site vice president at Palisades nuclear power plant in Covert Township, Mich., Mlynarek is overseeing one of the most exciting projects in the United States nuclear power industry. If all goes according to plan, Holtec’s Palisades plant will be splitting atoms once again by the end of 2025 and become the first U.S. nuclear facility to restart after being slated for decommissioning.

Higher enriched nuclear fuel being tested at Vogtle

April 11, 2025, 12:07PMNuclear News
Industry's first lead test assemblies with U-235 enriched up to 6 percent were loaded into Vogtle-2. (Photo: Southern Nuclear)

Southern Nuclear recently loaded nuclear fuel with uranium-235 enriched up to 6 percent—higher than the usual 3–5 percent enrichment—into Vogtle-2 to test it through irradiation.

Trump’s pick for NNSA administrator testifies before Senate committee

April 10, 2025, 3:00PMNuclear News

Brandon Williams appeared before the U.S. Senate’s Committee on Armed Services this week to answer questions on how he would lead the Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration, if confirmed for the job.

President Donald Trump announced Williams as his pick for the NNSA role in January. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said he was personally involved in the selection of Williams for the role, telling the Exchange Monitor in January, “He’s a smart, passionate guy [who] wants to defend our country.”

DOE commits to supplying HALEU to five advanced nuclear companies

April 10, 2025, 9:30AMNuclear News

The Department of Energy has announced its first round of conditional commitments to provide high-assay low-enriched uranium to five U.S. nuclear developers. According to the DOE, the delivery of HALEU will support the commercialization of advanced nuclear technologies, aiming to deliver secure, affordable, and reliable energy to Americans.

Ontario Power Generation issued license to build an SMR at Darlington

April 9, 2025, 12:01PMNuclear News

The Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission has announced its approval for Ontario Power Generation to construct a General Electric Hitachi BWRX-300 small modular reactor at its Darlington site in Clarington, Ontario.

IAEA donates ambulance, medical equipment for Ukraine’s nuclear workforce

April 7, 2025, 12:26PMNuclear News
During a November 2024 mission, the IAEA delivered two new ambulances to Ukraine at the Chernobyl site. Varash Hospital director Tetiana Latyshenko is at left, with Liliana Salaru, IAEA senior medical officer, at right. (Photo: IAEA)

The United Nations' nuclear watchdog delivered emergency medical supplies to Ukraine last week as part of ongoing aid to the country since its conflict with Russia began in 2022.

Industry Update—April 2025

April 4, 2025, 9:31AMNuclear News

Here is a recap of industry happenings from the recent past:

ADVANCED REACTOR MARKETPLACE

Texas universities evaluating SMRs for water desalination

Natura Resources has signed a memorandum of understanding with two Texas universities—Texas Tech University and Abilene Christian University—to evaluate the integration of the company’s molten salt small modular reactor technology with water desalination systems. The collaboration includes Texas Tech’s Texas Produced Water Consortium, which was established by the Texas legislature in 2021 to explore the potential benefits of using treated produced water for purposes outside of the oil and gas industry of the Permian Basin. Produced water is salty or brackish hydrocarbon-containing water that is produced as a byproduct of oil and gas extraction. The stated goal of the new collaboration is to develop “a sustainable solution for water scarcity by purifying produced water from oil and gas operations, making it available for agricultural and other beneficial uses.” Abilene Christian University is planning to host the first deployment of Natura Resources’ Natura MSR-1, a 1-MWt molten salt research reactor.

NEA visit to Mongolia focuses on nuclear energy development

April 4, 2025, 7:01AMNuclear News
William D. Magwood IV (left) meets with government officials during a visit to Mongolia. (Photo: NEA)

Nuclear Energy Agency Director General William D. Magwood IV visited Mongolia recently for a series of meetings with government representatives and to participate in discussions on nuclear energy development in the country.

First astatine-labeled compound shipped in the U.S.

April 3, 2025, 3:04PMNuclear News
At-211 undergoes purification and a series of quality checks. (Photo: Don Hamlin/University of Washington)

The Department of Energy’s National Isotope Development Center (NIDC) on March 31 announced the successful long-distance shipment in the United States of a biologically active compound labeled with the medical radioisotope astatine-211 (At-211). Because previous shipments have included only the “bare” isotope, the NIDC has described the development as “unleashing medical innovation.”