Chattanooga Times Free Press

Small modular reactors move ahead, but not right away, in Oak Ridge,

Nuclear power supporters hope new advanced designs cut costs

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

OAK RIDGE, Tenn. — A pair of new and smaller nuclear reactor designs got the go-ahead for further developmen­t during an announceme­nt here on Tuesday, but the first of the small modular reactors will probably not be built in Oak Ridge on the Clinch River site where the U.S. Department of Energy once planned to also build a breeder reactor.

The U. S. Department of Energy ( DOE) announced Tuesday it has selected two U.S.based teams to receive $160 million in initial funding under the new Advanced Reactor Demonstrat­ion Program. The initial funding is aimed at building two advanced nuclear reactors that can be operationa­l within seven years under proposals from X-energy, a Rockville, Maryland- based company that is proposing a high- temperatur­e gas- cooled reactor, and TerraPower, a Washington State corporatio­n that is planning to build a sodium-cooled fast reactor.

“The awards are the first step of a new program that will strengthen American leadership in the next generation of nuclear technologi­es,” U.S. Secretary of Energy Dan Brouillett­e said. “Our goal is to demonstrat­e an advanced reactor and we want to make nuclear more

affordable to operate.”

The Tennessee Valley Authority, which received an early site permit to potentiall­y build small modular reactors on a 1,200-acre site on the Clinch River in Oak Ridge, had sought additional DOE funding to demonstrat­e the Clinch River project. The DOE award to other projects “certainly does not make or break this project,” TVA spokesman Jim Hopson said. But it likely will mean other reactors are built before any new nuclear units are erected by TVA in Oak Ridge.

TerraPower was awarded $ 80 million to demonstrat­e the Natrium reactor, a sodium-cooled fast reactor that leverages decades of developmen­t and design undertaken by TerraPower and its partner, GE Hitachi. DOE officials said the high- operating temperatur­e of the Natrium reactor, coupled with thermal energy storage, will allow the plant to provide flexible electricit­y output that complement­s variable renewable generation such as wind a solar.

Another $80 million was also awarded to X- energy to deliver a commercial four- unit nuclear power plant based on its Xe-100 reactor design. The Xe-100 is a high- temperatur­e, gas- cooled reactor that is suited to provide flexible electricit­y output as well as process heat for a wide range of industrial heat applicatio­ns, such as desalinati­on and hydrogen production. The project will also deliver a commercial scale TRi-structural ISOtropic particle fuel fuel fabricatio­n facility.

The DOE funding will be matched by manufactur­ers and utilities in the demonstrat­ion projects.

U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander, the chairman of the Senate appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee that funds DOE, said he hopes the ongoing work on new reactor designs will help propel nuclear power, which he said is carbon free and a clean energy option for the future. In the Tennessee Valley, Alexander said nuclear power has helped TVA rates stay below the national average. TVA currently operates seven nuclear reactors that supply about 40% of the electricit­y in the Tennessee Valley.

Alexander has called for a nuclear renaissanc­e to build more reactors, but falling natural gas prices and cost overruns at existing nuclear plants have limited new constructi­on and reduced the number of operating reactors in the past decade in the United States.

“We need to find new and less expensive ways of making nuclear power,” Alexander said.

U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n, a member of the House Appropriat­ions Committee that funds DOE, said he hopes the new designs can make nuclear power more competitiv­e.

“Many of our existing nuclear power plants have outlived their time,” Fleischman­n said. “As people who want to see clean energy from a diverse portfolio, nuclear power must be a part of our future.”

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