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.


Blue Castle project to be revived as SMR facility

June 1, 2026, 12:09PMNuclear News
Concept art of the Holtec SMR-300 facility. (Image: Holtec International)

The dormant Blue Castle nuclear power plant project in Utah has resurfaced, only this time as a proposed small modular reactor facility.

Blue Castle Holdings and Fulcrum Point Holdings—founded by the owner of Hi Tech Solutions, a company behind a separate Utah nuclear project—announced last week a joint venture to advance the Blue Castle project in Green River, Utah, the origins of which trace back almost 20 years.

ITER begins operations at its magnet cold test facility

June 1, 2026, 9:45AMNuclear News
ITER’s TF07 in the cryostat of the magnet cold test facility, prior to the lid being closed. (Photo: ITER)

The ITER Organization has announced that its magnet cold test facility is now in operational mode, allowing the preinstallation testing of superconducting magnets at the fusion reactor’s low operating temperature of 4 Kelvin (−269°C; −452°F) and full current of 68 kiloampere (kA).

Kazakhstan partners with Russia for new nuclear power plant

June 1, 2026, 7:27AMNuclear News
President Putin and President Tokayev at the signing of new nuclear collaborations. (Photo: Kremlin)

Today, there are 34 countries with operational nuclear power plants—but there are dozens more working on building a nuclear plant of their own. While progress on these projects inevitably ebbs and flows, broadly, momentum seems to be building on the international stage.

That growing momentum manifested last week in Kazakhstan’s announcement that it has officially partnered with Russia on a new nuclear power plant project. Prior to these new agreements, Russia, which borders Kazakhstan to the north, was already engaged in extensive preliminary work on the project.

Launching into tomorrow: NRIC guides new era of research and deployment

June 1, 2026, 7:18AMNuclear NewsLucas Geiger
A sign along U.S. Route 20 on Idaho National Laboratory land marking the boundary of NRIC’s new Nuclear Energy Launch Pad INL. (Photo: NRIC)

In June 2025, the Department of Energy announced the Reactor Pilot Program, an authorization pathway that allowed reactor developers to partner with the DOE to get first-of-a-kind (FOAK) reactors built and tested. Soon after, the DOE rolled out a complementary Fuel Line Pilot Program, which aimed to fast-track fuel projects. In all, 20 projects were accepted into the new programs.

DOME: Legacy built, future ready

June 1, 2026, 7:18AMNuclear News
Unless otherwise noted, all photos are courtesy of Idaho National Laboratory.

In 2019, a familiar landmark at Idaho National Laboratory was scheduled for demolition. Though striking for both its physical presence and its significance to nuclear history, the containment dome that once housed Experimental Breeder Reactor-II sat unused—that is, until INL realized its potential as a reactor testing facility.

Breaking ground on a new approach to construction

June 1, 2026, 7:17AMNuclear NewsRafael Guerrero
A depiction of Hermes 2. (Image: Kairos Power)

The drive to Kairos Power’s reactor demonstration site in Oak Ridge, Tenn., is not only scenic—it’s historic. Nearly 85 years ago, roughly 30,000 construction workers transformed orchards and farmland into a key Manhattan Project site. Depending on your route, you may pass by one of the three gatehouses that were once military checkpoints controlling access to Atomic Energy Commission production facilities.

North American construction is back—smaller and faster—at OPG’s Darlington

June 1, 2026, 7:15AMNuclear NewsSusan Gallier
The basemat is suspended from a heavy crawler crane before being lowered to the bottom of an excavated and prepared 35-meter-deep reactor shaft. (Photo: OPG)

“The nuclear renaissance is real here,” said Ontario Power Generation’s Subo Sinnathamby on May 8, one year to the day after OPG secured a final investment decision to build the first of four planned BWRX-300 reactors at its Darlington nuclear power plant, and shortly after the new reactor’s foundation was lifted into place. “We got our license to construct in April and our [final investment decision] in May, and we’ve been off to the races since.”

Deploying nuclear power: Financing, risk, and execution in the current market environment

May 29, 2026, 3:09PMNuclear NewsRyan Nielson

Nielson

The renewed global interest in nuclear power is often framed as a policy story driven by decarbonization goals, energy security concerns, and surging electricity demand from digital infrastructure and electrification. While these forces are real and durable, they materially understate the challenge at hand. The practical constraint on nuclear deployment today is not strategic will, but execution. Specifically, the challenge lies in how nuclear projects are financed, how risk is allocated, and how investors assess credibility in a sector defined by long timelines and asymmetric downside risk.

LLNL researchers characterize hydrogen-uranium corrosion

May 29, 2026, 1:58PMNuclear News
As hydrogen reacts with uranium, blisters form in the uranium surface (a), then the blisters burst open (b), and uranium hydride powder is released. This interaction results in surface degradation (c) that can impact the durability and safety characteristics of the uranium metal. (Image: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)

A team of scientists from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory has observed, imaged, and characterized the early stages of hydrogen-uranium corrosion for the first time, the lab announced recently.

Curio to begin early talks with NRC on licensing NuCycle recycling facility

May 29, 2026, 11:51AMNuclear News
Concept art of Curio’s proposed NuCycle spent nuclear fuel recycling production facility. (Images: Curio)

Washington, D.C.-based Curio announced yesterday that it has submitted a letter of intent to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to establish a docket for preapplication engagement activities and ultimately the submittal and review of a license application to operate a spent nuclear fuel recycling production facility.

Once a docket is established, Curio will develop a license application to meet all applicable regulations for a nuclear fuel recycling facility under 10 CFR Part 70.

Kenyan nuclear authority addresses power plant protests

May 29, 2026, 9:17AMNuclear News

Nuclear officials in Kenya want to engage with residents in Siaya County and keep them informed as the country moves toward building its first nuclear power plant.

The state-run Nuclear Power and Energy Agency said on May 23 it will conduct a “robust, transparent, and multilayered educational campaign to address all anxieties regarding safety, livelihoods, and land,” and that no infrastructure would be built without “broad, informed consent of the community.”

The bedrock of nuclear

May 29, 2026, 7:09AMNuclear NewsHash Hashemian

Hash Hashemian
president@ans.org

Kindergarten classrooms, the control rooms of newly completed reactors, and the meeting rooms of ANS local sections all have one thing in common: they are only made useful once they are filled with hardworking and passionate people.

In March, I had the privilege of engaging with some of the people in these spaces: the students, regulators, lawmakers, and fellow scientists from across several states who are working to build up the nuclear industry every day. These interactions served as yet another reminder that people serve as the bedrock of our work to push nuclear energy forward.

The month began here in my home city of Oak Ridge, where I welcomed a group of kindergartners from Woodland Elementary School to tour both the headquarters of AMS and the Roane State Community College Nuclear Technology Lab.

DOE selects five companies to negotiate receipt of surplus U.S. plutonium

May 28, 2026, 12:29PMNuclear News
Flibe Energy is one of five companies selected by the DOE for advanced negotiations under the Surplus Plutonium Utilization Program. (Image: Flibe)

Nuclear start-ups Oklo and Flibe Energy both announced this week that they have been selected by the Department of Energy for advanced negotiations under the department’s Surplus Plutonium Utilization Program, which aims to make surplus U.S. plutonium available to the nuclear industry for advanced reactor fuels.

According to multiple reports, three other companies—Exodys Energy, Shine Technologies, and Standard Nuclear—have also been selected for advanced negotiations under the program, which is being led by the DOE’s Office of Nuclear Energy.

NN Asks: How can nuclear energy support the rising energy demand from data centers?

May 28, 2026, 9:33AMNuclear NewsNicolas Stauff

Nicolas Stauff

Data centers power our digital lives—along with many aspects of our economy and the rapid expansion of artificial intelligence. Electricity demand is rising rapidly, with the domestic data center load projected to increase from 4 percent to 9 percent of U.S. electricity consumption by 2030. This surge is already reshaping utility planning, grid interconnection queues, and the market for reliable power nationwide.

Nuclear energy is well matched to data center needs, because it provides reliable, 24/7 electricity with stable long-term costs. Modern hyperscale data center campuses can require hundreds of megawatts for IT equipment and cooling, and many applications demand maximum uptime. At the same time, leading hyperscalers have aggressive decarbonization commitments that limit reliance on fossil generation. Data centers also require fiber connectivity, a skilled workforce, and local acceptance—yet they can deliver meaningful tax base and employment impacts, especially when coupled with a major energy project.

U.S. Navy to power Norfolk base using aircraft carrier

May 27, 2026, 3:13PMNuclear News
The USS Gerald R. Ford. (Photo: USS Gerald R. Ford-CVN 78)

Later this year, the U.S. Navy will test the power-generating capabilities of one of its crown jewels, the nuclear-powered USS Gerald R. Ford—aiming to demonstrate its ability to provide electricity to installations on shore.

U.S.-Japan collaboration turns out “Super Engineers”

May 27, 2026, 12:26PMUpdated May 27, 2026, 12:23PMNuclear News
Super Engineer Project founder and leader Tadashi Narabayashi (fourth from left) and his Super Engineers tour Clinton nuclear power plant in 2017. (Photo: Thanataon Pornphatdetaudom)

Before the Fukushima Daiichi accident in March 2011, nuclear power from 54 reactors provided about 30 percent of Japan’s electricity. In the wake of the disaster, Japan shut down every one of its reactors.

Recently, the country has been restarting its nuclear power plants. Among its current fleet of 33 operable reactors, fewer than half have been restarted. Nuclear power is currently providing about 8.5 percent of Japan’s electricity (with natural gas and coal accounting for more than 60 percent).

The Japanese government’s present energy plan, announced last year, calls for nuclear power to meet 20 percent of the country’s electricity needs by 2040. While the government views nuclear as a crucial asset toward meeting its goal of net zero emissions by 2050, public support for nuclear energy also continues to increase. A 2012 Pew Research poll—conducted one year after the Fukushima Daiichi disaster—indicated that 70 percent of the public opposed nuclear power. However, a 2022 poll by Nikkei Business Publications suggests that now, more than 50 percent of the public supports nuclear power—if safety can be ensured.

Contributing their expertise to these restarts in recent years are young nuclear industry professionals who were trained a decade ago in a mentorship/training program involving U.S. institutions.

This “Super Engineer Project” was sponsored by Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry and Hokkaido University from 2015 to 2017. METI sponsored the project to improve the Japanese nuclear safety culture by learning from the U.S. safety culture.

Extracting efficiency

May 27, 2026, 9:31AMNuclear NewsCraig Piercy

Craig Piercy
cpiercy@ans.org

May is a month when we pause—briefly—to recognize something that too often goes unsaid: the extraordinary performance of the existing U.S. nuclear fleet. Capacity factors remain above 90 percent (with a median of 91.29 for the three-year period 2023–2025—see Nuclear News, May 2026, p. 24), an impressive figure delivered at a scale unmatched anywhere else on the globe. That level of sustained output is not an accident of design; it is a daily achievement. It reflects the discipline, professionalism, and pride of the men and women who operate and maintain these facilities, often without fanfare.

In this issue, you will also read about the important work researchers at our national laboratories are doing to extract even greater efficiency from the plants we already have. That effort deserves more attention, because it points to a fundamental truth: the fastest, most reliable way to expand nuclear generation in the United States is not solely through new builds—it is by maximizing the assets already on the grid.

Study points to need for standardization in helium generation rate calculations

May 27, 2026, 8:04AMNuclear News

Researchers from the University of Michigan and Oak Ridge National Laboratory have found that predictions of helium generation rates through neutron transmutation in fission and fusion reactors vary widely and include dependencies on the choice of nuclear data library and calculation method.

NRC announces accelerated review of Oak Ridge enrichment facility

May 26, 2026, 4:04PMNuclear News
Concept art of Orano’s planned Project Ike facility in Oak Ridge, Tenn. (Image: Orano)

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission said it intends to complete its review of Orano Enrichment’s license application to build and operate a new uranium enrichment facility near Oak Ridge, Tenn., in 12 months. Orano submitted its application for the multibillion-dollar facility, named Project Ike, in March.