Nuclear News

Published since 1959, Nuclear News is recognized worldwide as the flagship trade publication for the nuclear community. News reports cover plant operations, maintenance and security; policy and legislation; international developments; waste management and fuel; and business and contract award news.


Maine Maritime Academy to offer nuclear engineering technology major

May 19, 2026, 12:13PMNuclear News
The waterfront at Maine Maritime Academy. (Photo: Maine Maritime Academy)

The Maine Maritime Academy (MMA) is set to become the first maritime academy in the United States to offer a major in nuclear engineering technology. The college characterized it as “an important step in addressing workforce needs and advancing clean energy solutions” in a LinkedIn post announcing the major.

ORNL completes challenging molten salt property measurements

May 19, 2026, 9:30AMNuclear News
Ryan Chesser, an R&D associate in the Nuclear and Extreme Environment Measurements Group, inspects a fresh uranium salt sample before installing it in ORNL’s experimental equipment. (Photo: Carlos Jones, ORNL/DOE)

Oak Ridge National Laboratory announced the completion of a set of experiments measuring the viscosity and thermal conductivity of several uranium-bearing molten salts, filling in gaps that could help with the development of molten salt reactors.

WM2026: Leveraging advanced technology and innovation

May 19, 2026, 7:17AMNuclear News

The noticeable exuberance within the nuclear community as a whole appears to have spilled over into the waste management sphere as well, judging from the 2026 Waste Management Conference, held March 8–12 in Phoenix, Ariz., and sponsored by Waste Management Symposia.

The theme of this year’s conference was “Efficient and Innovative Nuclear Materials and Technology Solutions,” and many of the scheduled panels and technical sessions revolved around how nuclear growth and technological advancements are affecting the back end of the fuel cycle, as well as how the cleanup of legacy sites is enabling new nuclear development.

Savannah River marks the closure of another legacy waste tank

May 18, 2026, 11:53AMNuclear News
DOE Assistant Secretary Tim Walsh (right, holding medallion) and Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary Joel Bradburne (right, back row) joined senior managers from the DOE’s Savannah River Operations Office and Savannah River Mission Completion and other personnel who contributed to the milestone to commemorate Tank 14 reaching preliminary cease waste removal. (Photo: DOE)

The Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management has received concurrence from regulators that Tank 14 at the Savannah River Site has reached preliminary cease waste removal (PCWR) status after radioactive liquid waste was successfully removed from the tank. PCWR is a regulatory milestone in the closure of SRS’s old-style waste tanks, which were built in the 1950s to store waste generated by the chemical separations of plutonium and uranium.

NEA head gives talk about growing global interest in nuclear energy

May 18, 2026, 9:32AMNuclear News
OECD NEA Director General Magwood gave a talk as part of the President's Distinguished Lecture series at University of Missouri on May 13.

The University of Missouri’s President’s Distinguished Lecture Series featured a talk by William D. Magwood IV, director general of the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency and a former NRC commissioner, on May 13 at the Columbia campus’s Bond Life Sciences Center. Magwood speech was titled “The Next Nuclear Energy Era: Opportunities and Challenges.”

Getting back to yes: A local perspective on decommissioning, restart, and responsibility

May 15, 2026, 3:01PMNuclear NewsCharlie Nichols and Mike Lukan
Duane Arnold nuclear power plant. (Photo: NextEra Energy Duane Arnold)

For 45 years, Duane Arnold Energy Center operated in Linn County, Ia., near the town of Palo and just northwest of Cedar Rapids. The facility, owned by NextEra Energy, was the only nuclear power plant in the state.

In August 2020, a historic derecho swept across eastern Iowa with winds approaching 140 miles per hour. Damage to the plant’s cooling towers accelerated a shutdown that had already been planned, and the facility entered decommissioning soon after, with its fuel removed in October of that year. Iowa’s only nuclear plant had gone off line.

Today the national energy landscape looks very different than it did just six short years ago. Electricity demand is rising rapidly as data centers, artificial intelligence infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, and electrification expand across the country. Reliable, carbon-free baseload power has become increasingly valuable. In that context, Linn County has approved the rezoning necessary to support the recommissioning and restart of Duane Arnold and is actively supporting NextEra’s efforts to secure the remaining state and federal approvals.

DOE selects companies for $94M in light water SMR deployment awards

May 15, 2026, 7:09AMNuclear News

Eight companies will collectively receive more than $94 million in cost-share funding to expedite the near-term deployment of small light water modular reactors, the Department of Energy announced Thursday.

AtkinsRéalis partners with First American Nuclear

May 14, 2026, 2:57PMNuclear News
A depiction of a potential First American Nuclear “energy park.” (Image: FANCO)

Indianapolis-based reactor development start-up First American Nuclear (FANCO) announced on May 13 that it has entered into a strategic alliance with Montreal-based nuclear engineering company AtkinsRéalis.

Together, the companies now plan to jointly develop, test, and license FANCO’s EAGL-1 reactor design. For FANCO, the agreement comes as a chance to bring in a partner with decades of experience in nuclear project development. For AtkinsRéalis, the partnership provides the opportunity to establish a presence in Indiana.

Utah State University expands INL collaboration with SUPER agreement

May 14, 2026, 11:59AMNuclear News
USU President Brad Mortensen (left) and INL Deputy Lab Director Todd Combs sign a memorandum of understanding on May 11. (Photo: USU/Taylor Emerson)

Utah State University and Battelle Energy Alliance, an Idaho National Laboratory contractor, have signed a memorandum of understanding, committing to a Strategic Understanding for Premier Education and Research (SUPER) agreement, which formalizes and expands the university’s collaboration with INL.

NRC commissioners talk attrition, recruitment, retention at Senate hearing

May 14, 2026, 9:38AMNuclear News
NRC Chairman Ho Nieh. (Photo: U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee)

Last month, all five commissioners of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission went before the U.S. House Committee on Energy & Commerce’s Energy Subcommittee to discuss the agency’s fiscal year 2027 budget and share priorities and activities key to the agency.

On Wednesday, the five took the NRC’s $892.3 million budget request for FY 2027 to the U.S. Senate’s Environment and Public Works Committee, where the focus shifted more toward the attrition of NRC employees and attempts to recruit and retain.

Oak Ridge hails demolition of two enrichment buildings in single year

May 14, 2026, 7:05AMNuclear News
Oak Ridge crews discuss isolating electricity to get the Beta-1 building to the “cold and dark” stage before deactivation can safely begin. (Photo: DOE)

The Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management announced that its Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management (OREM) is setting a new benchmark in cleanup progress at the Tennessee nuclear site—conducting demolition of two former Manhattan Project–era uranium enrichment facilities in a single year.

South Korea looks to Southern and NuScale

May 13, 2026, 3:52PMNuclear News
Employees from KHNP and Southern Nuclear after the signing of the companies’ MOU. (Photo: KHNP)

This week, the United States and South Korea have taken two steps toward deepening their nuclear partnership through two notable announcements. First, the majority-state owned Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power signed a memorandum of understanding with Birmingham, Ala.–based Southern Nuclear.

FERC decision on Crane restart coming in June or July, Constellation execs say

May 13, 2026, 7:19AMNuclear News
An aerial photo of Three Mile Island. (Photo: Constellation)

In a first quarter earnings call Monday, executives at Constellation said they should know in June or July the status of a request to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to transfer capacity interconnection rights from the company’s Eddystone gas- and-oil-powered plant in Pennsylvania to Crane nuclear power plant (formerly Three Mile Island-1).

ADP on track to complete major D&D work at Crystal River-3 this summer

May 12, 2026, 3:12PMNuclear News
General site conditions of Crystal River-3 as of August 2025. (Photo: ADP)

Advanced Decommissioning Partners, a joint venture of NorthStar Group Services and Orano USA, is set to complete major decommissioning activities at Crystal River-3 nuclear power plant in Florida this summer, according to the license termination plan (LTP) the company submitted to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Transportation Department seeks to develop SMRs for commercial shipping

May 12, 2026, 2:25PMNuclear News

The Department of Transportation has announced an initiative to develop small modular reactors for commercial shipping. The U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD) has launched a request for information (RFI) seeking industry input on the development of “a U.S.-built scalable, repeatable, commercially viable, system-centric, small modular reactor and their deployment within the marine transportation system.”

Reports look into the economics of keeping Diablo Canyon open

May 12, 2026, 12:08PMNuclear News
Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant. (Photo: PG&E)

Originally scheduled for shutdown in 2025, Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant was given at least a few more years of life when in 2022, California lawmakers approved an extension of operations into 2030. The Avila Beach, Calif., plant already has the OK from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to operate into 2044 and 2045 after the two reactors’ operating licenses were renewed and extended for another 20 years, but state lawmakers still must approve any further extension beyond 2030 if the plant is to remain in operation.