Oregon bill would create new feasibility study

February 25, 2026, 9:26AMNuclear News

Historical photo of Trojan nuclear power plant, ca. 1974. (Photo: DOE)

As concerns over growing energy needs persist, yet another state is reconsidering nuclear power. A piece of legislation is currently progressing through Oregon’s legislature that would direct the Oregon Department of Energy (ODOE) to conduct a study to assess the feasibility of deploying new power reactors in the state.

INL opens molten salt testing facility

February 25, 2026, 8:12AMNuclear News
Glove boxes at MSTEC. (Photo: INL)

Idaho National Laboratory has announced that the National Reactor Innovation Center’s Molten Salt Thermophysical Examination Capability (MSTEC) facility will begin operations in March 2026.

Providing testing capabilities for molten salts, including fuel salts, MSTEC extends INL’s abilities to advance molten salt reactor technology and provide data needed for safe reactor deployment.

California bill looks to craft advanced nuclear exception to moratorium

February 24, 2026, 4:28PMNuclear News
Caption: California Assembly Member Lisa Calderon. (Photo: Office of Lisa Calderon)

Proposed legislation in California could exempt certain reactor designs from the state’s long-standing moratorium on new nuclear generation, effectively ending the moratorium.

California Assembly Member Lisa Calderon (D., 56th Dist.) filed A.B. 2647 with the California State Assembly last week.

If the bill progresses and becomes state law, it could pave the way to increasing the number of nuclear reactors in the state in the future. Currently, Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant houses the only operational commercial nuclear reactors in California.

Wheeler River mining project gets go-ahead

February 24, 2026, 10:56AMNuclear News
Site of the Wheeler River project in northern Saskatchewan. (Photo: Denison Mines)

Canada’s first in situ recovery (ISR) uranium mining operation has been granted final regulatory approval. Toronto-based Denison Mines Corp. announced last week that the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission has approved the environmental assessment and issued the license to construct a mine and mill for the company’s Wheeler River uranium project, located in northern Saskatchewan’s Athabasca basin. This project, which includes the Phoenix uranium deposit, previously received the necessary provincial approvals.

Beyond the classroom: How a corporate-university partnership benefits the community

February 23, 2026, 3:40PMNuclear News
Representatives from GVH meet students at one of the annual Fall Career and Internship Fairs at the UNCW’s Burney Center. (Photo: Jeff Janowski/UNCW)

For the past several years, the University of North Carolina–Wilmington has hosted volunteer instructors from Wilmington-­based GE Vernova Hitachi Nuclear Energy who teach engineering courses and engage with students. This guest instructor program has grown under the guidance of Amy Craig Reamer, associate professor of practice and director of engineering in the UNCW College of Science and Engineering’s Department of Computer Science. Under her oversight, an informal but strong public-­private partnership has been established to the benefit of UNCW students and the wider Wilmington community.

TRISO pebble life cycle studied in new ORNL, Kairos Power partnership

February 23, 2026, 11:55AMNuclear News
TRISO fuel pebbles. (Photo: Kairos Power)

A new strategic partnership is providing Kairos Power with the expertise and specialized facilities of Oak Ridge National Laboratory to help accelerate the development of the California-based company’s Hermes. This partnership is the fourth between ORNL and Kairos Power since 2020, and it is focused in part on the manufacture and management of TRISO fuel pebbles for the fluoride salt–cooled, high-temperature demonstration reactor now under construction in Oak Ridge, Tenn.

INL teams with Nvidia in Prometheus project to accelerate nuclear deployment

February 23, 2026, 7:21AMNuclear News
(Image: Nvidia)

Idaho National Laboratory and computer chip maker Nvidia have announced a public-private partnership to advance nuclear energy deployment through artificial intelligence. According to INL, the collaboration aims to cut reactor development times in half and reduce operational costs by 50 percent by using AI to design, license, manufacture, construct, and operate reactors with human-in-the-loop workflows.

Gov. Evers announces siting study for new Wisconsin nuclear

February 20, 2026, 12:37PMNuclear News

Gov. Tony Evers delivering his 2026 State of the State address. (Photo: Tony Evers/YouTube @Governor Tony Evers)

During his State of the State address on February 17, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers announced the launch of a new nuclear siting study that will be undertaken by a partnership between the Public Service Commission (PSC) of Wisconsin and the Department of Nuclear Engineering and Engineering Physics at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

State Department adds Hungary to Central European nations making U.S. nuclear agreements

February 20, 2026, 10:39AMNuclear News
Prime Minister Viktor Orban welcomes Secretary of State Marco Rubio to Hungary. (Photo: @PM_ViktorOrban/X)

The U.S. nuclear industry took a further step to solidify its influence in Central Europe on February 16, when U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán signed the U.S.-Hungary Civil Nuclear Intergovernmental Agreement, potentially setting the stage for decades of cooperation in civilian nuclear energy between the two countries. This new agreement comes one month after the signing of a similar agreement between the U.S. Department of Energy and the government of Slovakia.

NRC board to hear challenges to Dow’s Long Mott application

February 20, 2026, 7:15AMNuclear News
Concept art for the Long Mott Generating Station in Texas. (Image: X-energy)

A Nuclear Regulatory Commission Atomic Safety and Licensing Board (ASLB) will hear arguments on February 26 on challenges to a construction permit application from Long Mott Energy (LME) for a multiunit reactor facility at Dow Chemical Company’s Seadrift site in Calhoun, Texas. LME is a wholly owned subsidiary of Dow.

Gov. Pritzker issues EO to boost nuclear energy in Illinois

February 19, 2026, 3:49PMNuclear News
Gov. J. B. Pritzker delivers his 2026 State of the State address in Springfield on February 18. (Photo: @GovPritzker/X)

Illinois Gov. J. B. Pritzker issued a new executive order (EO) on February 18 directing both the Illinois Power Agency and the Illinois Commerce Commission to issue a notice of intent (NOI) to potential developers of new nuclear power plants.

The signing of that EO took place on the same day Pritzker delivered his 2026 State of the State address, in which he set a goal of building at least 2 gigawatts of new nuclear capacity in the state.

New tripartite agreement aims for nuclear advancements in Africa

February 19, 2026, 10:33AMNuclear News
(From left) NEA director general William D. Magwood IV, AU commissioner for infrastructure and energy Lerato Dorothy Mataboge, and AFCONE chair Gaspard Liyoko Mboyo at the MOU signing. (Photo: OECD Nuclear Energy Agency)

On February 13 at the African Union (AU) Summit held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the AU, the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency, and the African Commission on Nuclear Energy (AFCONE) signed a memorandum of understanding to cooperate on the support of nuclear science and technology development across Africa.

Credit agreement advances Westinghouse-Poland partnership

February 19, 2026, 8:22AMNuclear News
The future site of Poland's first nuclear power plant in Pomerania. In February, PEJ completed the first stage of preparatory work on the site. (Photo: PEJ)

Westinghouse Electric Company’s plans to deploy its AP1000 reactor in Poland have taken an important step forward with a credit agreement between the Export-Import Bank of the United States (EXIM) and Polskie Elektrownie Jądrowe (PEJ). The agreement represents the first phase of financing to support the initial engineering and environmental site work needed before construction can begin on Poland’s first nuclear power plant, at the Lubiatowo-Kopalino site in the Choczewo municipality of Pomerania.

INL researchers use LEDs to shed light on next-gen reactors

February 18, 2026, 3:33PMNuclear News
INL’s Tony Crawford designed and developed the MACS/ViBRANT systems. (Photo: INL)

At Idaho National Laboratory, researchers have built a bridge between computer models and the lab’s Microreactor Applications Research Validation and Evaluation (MARVEL) microreactor.

Tony Crawford, an INL researcher and MARVEL’s reactivity control system lead, designed a phone booth–sized surrogate nuclear reactor called ViBRANT, or Visual Benign Reactor as Analog for Nuclear Testing, which uses light instead of neutrons to show a “nuclear” reaction.

Fusion roundup: Helion sets temperature record; Inertia raises $450M

February 18, 2026, 2:13PMNuclear News
Helion Energy’s 7th-generation prototype, Polaris. (Photo: Helion Energy)

Two start-ups working to commercialize fusion energy made headlines last week. Helion Energy announced that its Polaris prototype fusion energy machine recently demonstrated measurable deuterium-tritium fusion and achieved a plasma temperature of 150 million degrees Celsius (MºC). Newcomer Inertia Enterprises announced that it has raised $450 million in its Series A fundraising round.

Ward250 reactor rides cargo to Utah

February 18, 2026, 9:42AMNuclear News

Valar's Ward250 microreactor being loaded, without fuel, onto a C-17 aircraft. (Photo: Valar Atomics)

A public-private partnership between the Departments of Defense and Energy and Valar Atomics marked a milestone over the weekend when Valar’s Ward250 microreactor was transported (without fuel) from California to Utah using three C-17 aircraft. The reactor will now trek from Hill Air Force Base to the Utah San Rafael Energy Lab (URSEL) for testing and evaluation.

A formal press conference at Hill Air Force Base included Energy Secretary Chris Wright, Undersecretary of Defense Michael Duffey, Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, and Valar Atomics CEO Isaiah Taylor.

During his remarks, Wright discussed the significance of the day, and said “a 5‑megawatt Valar Atomics nuclear reactor was just flown from L.A. to this air force base here in Utah—an incredible 5‑megawatt reactor that powers 5,000 homes, flown in the back of a plane.” The ability to transport microreactors like the Ward250 bolsters claims that the technology could be deployed to remote locations, military installations, or to support natural disaster relief missions.

NSI argues for direct disposal as quickest path to nuclear scaling

February 18, 2026, 6:06AMNuclear News

The Nuclear Scaling Initiative, a collaborative effort launched in 2024 to spur new nuclear energy development, announced a new campaign promoting the direct disposal of spent nuclear fuel as the safest, most secure, and least expensive pathway for managing U.S. nuclear waste.

NRC grants license for TRISO-X fuel manufacturing using HALEU

February 17, 2026, 3:14PMNuclear News
Work started on X-energy’s advanced fuel fabrication facility in Oak Ridge, Tenn., in November 2025. (Photo: X-energy)

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has granted X-energy subsidiary TRISO-X a special nuclear material license for high-assay low-enriched uranium fuel fabrication. The license applies to TRISO-X’s first two planned commercial facilities, known as TX-1 and TX-2, for an initial 40-year period. The facilities are set to be the first new nuclear fuel fabrication plants licensed by the NRC in more than 50 years.