- The US will probably maintain about 100 gigawatts of nuclear energy capacity for the next 10 years, despite closing some reactors. A few new reactors should replace the old ones, but the pipeline of operational reactors looks a bit empty in 20 years or so -- unless licenses are renewed quickly and new reactors aren't delayed so much. [url]
- After just 19 years and almost 4.5 billion dollars, a "new" nuclear power plant (a first since 1996) in Tennessee could be generating power before the start of 2016. This is a Generation II nuclear plant design, even though there are Gen III plants being built. Gen IV designs are planned to exist in the 2030s, but by then, we'll all have Mr. Fusion reactors in our cars, right? [url]
- The US and China are collaborating on developing molten salt nuclear reactors that could be commercially ready by 2030. China currently relies heavily on coal power plants, but in the not too distant future, the country could be producing much cleaner energy with more nuclear reactors. [url]
- The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission hasn't approved a new nuclear reactor in decades -- and offers a highly bureaucratic process for regulating any new reactor designs. Nuclear energy startups are targeting China to avoid the regulatory barriers in the US, but the current low price of natural gas is also making the economics of nuclear power a bit difficult to justify. [url]
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