U.S. NUCLEAR AT A TIPPING POINT
The U.S. nuclear sector is at a “tipping point,” the Department of Energy’s top nuclear official Ed McGinnis told the House Energy Subcommittee Feb. 5. “The United States is still unequivocally the leader in the design development of advanced reactors, bar none,” McGinnis said. “We’re challenged in deployment.”
A new idea being explored is combining small modular reactors with wind and solar. “We don’t use the word game-changer lightly,” McGinnis said.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s Victor McCree told lawmakers that the estimated 42-month process that began last month for NuScale’s small modular light-water reactor design certification is “progressing on the established schedule.”
Five non-light-water reactor developers are also interested in beginning regulatory interactions with the NRC, McCree said. That includes pre-application efforts regarding Oklo’s compact fast reactor design. More pre-application reviews are expected during the next two fiscal years, with one or more advanced reactor application reviews beginning in the next two to four years, McCree said.
Nuclear Energy Institute President Maria Korsnick said Congress should still set deadlines for NRC to review new fuel types and advanced reactor designs.
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