Power & Operations


AI at work: Southern Nuclear’s adoption of Copilot agents drives fleet forward

December 19, 2025, 3:02PMNuclear NewsLeighton Burkett
Fleet organizational effectiveness director Melissa Moran (left) and fleet performance improvement manager Jake Olivier use the OR/PI AI agent to assist in a review of plant performance metrics. (Photo: Southern Nuclear)

Southern Nuclear is leading the charge in artificial intelligence integration, with employee-developed applications driving efficiencies in maintenance, operations, safety, and performance.

The tools span all roles within the company, with thousands of documented uses throughout the fleet, including improved maintenance efficiency, risk awareness in maintenance activities, and better-informed decision-making. The data-intensive process of preparing for and executing maintenance operations is streamlined by leveraging AI to put the right information at the fingertips for maintenance leaders, planners, schedulers, engineers, and technicians.

Flamanville-3 reaches full power

December 17, 2025, 3:03PMNuclear News
Flamanville-3 (left) in 2023 alongside its predecessor units. (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

France’s state-owned electric utility EDF has announced that Flamanville-3—the country’s first EPR—reached full nuclear thermal power for the first time, generating 1,669 megawatts of gross electrical power. This major milestone is significant in terms of both this project and France’s broader nuclear sector.

What's the most difficult question you've been asked as a maintenance instructor?

December 15, 2025, 3:07PMNuclear NewsBlye Widmar

Blye Widmar

"Where are the prints?!"

This was the final question in an onslaught of verbal feedback, comments, and critiques I received from my students back in 2019. I had two years of instructor experience and was teaching a class that had been meticulously rehearsed in preparation for an accreditation visit. I knew the training material well and transferred that knowledge effectively enough for all the students to pass the class. As we wrapped up, I asked the students how they felt about my first big system-level class, and they did not hold back.

“Why was the exam from memory when we don’t work from memory in the plant?” “Why didn’t we refer to the vendor documents?” “Why didn’t we practice more on the mock-up?” And so on.

Browns Ferry’s reactors receive subsequent license renewals

December 15, 2025, 12:02PMNuclear News
The Browns Ferry nuclear power plant. (Photo: TVA)

The operating licenses for the three boiling water reactors at Browns Ferry nuclear power plant, in Athens, Ala., have each been renewed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for an additional 20 years. The reactors, operated by the Tennessee Valley Authority, are now licensed to operate until December 2053 for Unit 1, June 2054 for Unit 2, and July 2056 for Unit 3.

Blades-in turbine inspections at Quad Cities set new benchmark for Constellation

December 12, 2025, 2:59PMNuclear NewsSteve Myers and Bill Campbell
A low-pressure turbine inspection in progress at Quad Cities-2 in the spring of 2024. The last-stage blades under inspection are at each end of the turbine rotor. (Photo: Constellation)

When Constellation decided to install replacement Alstom low-pressure turbines at three of its boiling water reactor plants more than 15 years ago, one benefit was knowing the new turbines should operate reliably—and without major inspections—for several years.

Modernizing I&C for operations and maintenance, one phase at a time

December 5, 2025, 3:03PMNuclear News
A full-sized glass-top simulator recently installed in Surry’s training building. (Photo: Dominion)

The two reactors at Dominion Energy’s Surry plant are among the oldest in the U.S. nuclear fleet. Yet when the plant celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2023, staff could raise a toast to the future. Surry was one of the first plants to file a subsequent license renewal (SLR) application, and in May 2021, it became official: the plant was licensed to operate for a full 80 years, extending its reactors’ lifespans into 2052 and 2053.

Japan set to restart Kashiwazaki-Kariwa

November 25, 2025, 7:00AMNuclear News
Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant (Credit: Tepco)

Hideyo Hanazumi, governor of Niigata Prefecture in Japan, has approved the restart of two reactors at Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant. The seven-unit facility, operated by Tokyo Electric Power Company, is the largest nuclear power plant in the world. It has been shut down since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami struck the country, severely damaging TEPCO’s Fukushima Daiichi plant.

Can AI deliver nuclear on time and on budget? These companies think so.

November 20, 2025, 12:31PMNuclear News

AI for energy, and energy for AI: that is the new refrain. But can nuclear power plants be deployed at the pace needed for substantial and timely contributions to the energy infrastructure? For Westinghouse, delivering its AP1000 on time and on budget in the United States is a challenge not yet accomplished, while newcomers like Aalo Atomics are turning to AI to speed design, permitting, and construction.

Mike Kramer: Navigating power deals in the new data economy

November 14, 2025, 3:03PMNuclear NewsSusan Gallier
This summer, turbine specialists inspected and restored the Crane Clean Energy Center’s approximately 800-ton main turbine. (Photo: Constellation)

Mike Kramer has a background in finance, not engineering, but a combined 20 years at Exelon and Constellation and a key role in the deals that have Meta and Microsoft buying power from Constellation’s Clinton and Crane sites have made him something of a nuclear expert.

Kramer spoke with Nuclear News staff writer Susan Gallier in late August, just after a visit to Clinton in central Illinois to celebrate a power purchase agreement (PPA) with Meta that closed in June. As Constellation’s vice president for data economy strategy, Kramer was part of the deal-making—not just the celebration.

NRC finishes draft supplemental EIS for Clinch River SMR site

November 7, 2025, 12:00PMNuclear News
Conceptual art of the Clinch River SMR site. (Image: TVA)

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have completed a draft supplemental environmental impact statement for a small modular reactor at the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Clinch River nuclear site in Oak Ridge, Tenn.

NextEra and Google ink a deal to restart Duane Arnold

October 28, 2025, 3:00PMNuclear News
The Duane Arnold nuclear power plant before its shutdown. (Photo: NextEra)

A day anticipated by many across the nuclear community has finally arrived: NextEra Energy has officially announced its plans to restart Iowa’s only nuclear power plant, the Duane Arnold Energy Center.

Santee Cooper opts to reboot Summer reactor project

October 24, 2025, 12:01PMNuclear News
In historic photo, one of two unfinished Westinghouse AP1000 reactors at the Summer construction site. (Photo: SCE&G)

The board of directors of South Carolina’s state-owned utility Santee Cooper voted today to approve the proposal from Brookfield Asset Management to complete two new AP1000 power reactors at the V.C. Summer site in Jenkinsville, S.C.

Holtec announces new fuel arrival ahead of Palisades restart

October 21, 2025, 3:02PMNuclear News
The Palisades nuclear power plant. (Photo: Holtec)

Palisades nuclear power plant has received its first fuel shipment, a key step ahead of its highly anticipated restart by the end of the year.

Located in Covert Township, Mich., Palisades will be the first U.S. nuclear facility to restart after being slated for decommissioning. The Crane Clean Energy Center, formerly Three Mile Island-1, is the next decommissioned nuclear reactor to be resurrected, with an expected restart by 2027.

A focus on clean energy transition

October 14, 2025, 9:30AMANS Nuclear Cafe
Image: Ducker Carlisle

Michigan-based consulting firm Ducker Carlisle has released a report that outlines projected developments and opportunities as well as potential problems in the global shift to cleaner power. Global Energy Transition Outlook predicts that market growth will happen not only in large-scale utility upgrades but also in small- and mid-scale electrification projects.

Optimizing nuclear plant outages: Data analytics tools and methods for enhancing resilience and efficiency

September 26, 2025, 1:54PMNuclear NewsDiego Mandelli, Shawn St. Germain, Congjian Wang, Edward Chen, Norman John Mapes, Svetlana Lawrence, and Ahmad Al Rashdan

Nuclear power plant refueling outages are among the most complex phases in a plant’s operational cycle.1 During these outages, tens of thousands of activities, including maintenance and surveillance, are conducted simultaneously within a short timeframe. Typically lasting three to four weeks, these operations involve large crews of contractors with diverse skill sets performing tasks ranging from testing and surveillance to maintenance. Outages may extend longer if major backfitting or modernization projects are planned. Consequently, plant outages are expensive, incurring significant operational costs, such as contractor labor and equipment, as well as the loss of generation while the plant is off line. This can easily cost a plant operator more than $1 million a day. Therefore, there is a constant need to mitigate the economic impact on plants by reducing the frequency, duration, and risks associated with these outages.2,3

TVA brings down Hartsville’s cooling tower

September 25, 2025, 7:01AMNuclear News
The Hartsville cooling tower. (Photo: Brian Stansberry)

The Tennessee Valley Authority has posted a video of the implosion of a 1970s-era, 540-foot-tall hyperbolic cooling tower at its Hartsville site in Tennessee, which once was to have hosted a nuclear power plant. The tower crashed to the ground at the hands of a demolition crew on September 18 as part of TVA’s actions to get rid of old, obsolete, and unused structures in the Tennessee Valley region and make room for future projects that are expected to add more than 6,200 megawatts of power.