Article 57M8T NuScale’s small nuclear reactor is first to get US safety approval

NuScale’s small nuclear reactor is first to get US safety approval

by
Scott K. Johnson
from Ars Technica - All content on (#57M8T)
NuScale-Power-Module-800x613.jpg

Enlarge / NuScale's reactor-in-a-can. (credit: NuScale)

One hope buoying nuclear energy advocates has been the promise of small modular reactor" designs. By dividing a nuclear facility into an array of smaller reactors, they can largely be manufactured in a factory and then dropped into place, saving us from having to build a complex, possibly one-of-a-kind behemoth on site. That could be a big deal for nuclear's persistent financial problems, while also enabling some design features that further improve safety.

On Friday, the first small modular reactor received a design certification from the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, meaning that it meets safety requirements and could be chosen by future projects seeking licensing and approval.

The design comes from NuScale, a company birthed from research at Oregon State University that has received some substantial Department of Energy funding. It's a 76-foot-tall, 15-foot-wide steel cylinder (23 meters by 5 meters) capable of producing 50 megawatts of electricity. (The company also has a 60-megawatt iteration teed up.) They envision a plant employing up to 12 of these reactors in a large pool like those used in current nuclear plants.

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