FUTURE OF NUCLEAR JOBS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
ClearPath and the Department of Energy co-sponsored a discussion Thursday highlighting nuclear industry jobs - from engineers, geologists, machinists, welders, security officers to computer scientists.
“It supports an entire R&D infrastructure and community,” said Bo Feng, principal nuclear engineer at Argonne National Laboratory, at the latest Atomic Wings briefing on Capitol Hill.
The nuclear industry will add 23,000 jobs over the next five years, on top of the 100,000 direct, long-term jobs and 475,000 secondary jobs currently in the sector, Nuclear Energy Institute senior director Carol Berrigan said.

Chris Colbert, chief strategy officer for small modular reactor developer NuScale Power, said his company could hire several thousands of workers to manufacture supply equipment, as well as constructing and operating plants for jobs that could exceed in income and availability for those workers who may be retired from current fossil fuel operations. “We are continuing to hire,” he said.
Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-Fla.) also highlighted nuclear power as part of “a sensible, realistic and effective policy vision to address climate change.” Nuclear’s zero-emission power represents more than 12% of Florida’s power generation, with the state’s three plants employing more than 1,600 skilled workers, he said. “We could create even more jobs all over the country,” especially if licensing and other requirements were better streamlined, he said.
RELATED VIEW
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Global Energy Institute has a great new video out as part of its Energy Innovates series highlighting NuScale’s small modular reactor effort.
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