CONGRESS APPROVES MAJOR ADVANCED NUCLEAR PACKAGE
Lawmakers this week added to one of the most productive Congresses for advanced nuclear power.
House lawmakers Friday afternoon approved the bipartisan Nuclear Energy Innovation and Modernization Act (NEIMA), which would develop a framework to quicken licensing of advanced nuclear reactors. The Senate passed the bill Thursday.
NEIMA would direct the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to develop a common-sense licensing pathway for advanced reactor concepts that promotes safety without being overly prescriptive. This is part of a broader effort to “rightsize” the NRC to match its workload.
Original sponsors include Senate Environment and Public Works Chairman John Barrasso, former EPW Chairman Jim Inhofe, Republicans Mike Crapo, Deb Fischer and Shelley Moore Capito and Democrats Sheldon Whitehouse and Joe Manchin.
The final version sent to President Trump also includes language from the bipartisan Nuclear Utilization of Keynote Energy (NUKE) Act led by Reps. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.), Mike Doyle (D-Pa.), Bob Latta (R-Ohio) and Gene Green (D-Texas) to update NRC’s fee structure, expedite licensing and examine other potential benefits to the nuclear industry.
"It’s heartening to again see Congress step up to the plate in a big bipartisan way to bolster advanced nuclear technologies that are a major part of the future of U.S. and global clean and reliable power,” ClearPath Action Executive Director Rich Powell said. "Bringing any new energy technology into the marketplace is daunting, and that’s doubly-true for heavily regulated industries like nuclear. By allowing companies a pathway to licensing with clearer expectations and benchmarks in line with other heavily regulated produces like drugs and aircraft, NEIMA will unlock even greater private-sector innovation towards a reinvigorated nuclear sector."
STAY TUNED FOR MORE IN 2019
In a New York Times op-ed, Chairman Barrasso laid out three main arguments: “The first is, the climate is changing and we, collectively, have a responsibility to do something about it. Second, the United States and the world will continue to rely on affordable and abundant fossil fuels, including coal, to power our economies for decades to come. And third, innovation, not new taxes or punishing global agreements, is the ultimate solution.”
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