Houston Chronicle

Perry: Plans forging ahead on advanced nuclear reactors

- By James Osborne STAFF WRITER james.osborne@chron.com twitter.com/osborneja

WASHINGTON — Energy Secretary Rick Perry is advancing plans to shift the United States toward the next generation of nuclear reactors.

The Energy Department announced this week it has launched a new test facility at the Idaho National Laboratory where private companies can work on advanced nuclear technologi­es, to avoid the high costs and waste and safety concerns facing traditiona­l nuclear power plants.

“(The National Reactor Innovation Center) will enable the demonstrat­ion and deployment of advanced reactors that will define the future of nuclear energy,” Perry said.

With climate change concerns growing, some Republican­s and Democrats are arguing for the need for more nuclear reactors to feed the nation’s electricit­y demand. But despite nuclear plants’ absence of carbon emissions, the high cost of constructi­on, questions around what to do with the spent nuclear rods and the possibilit­y of meltdown have stymied efforts.

A new generation of firms, including Microsoft founder Bill Gates’ Terra Power, are working on developing smaller, less expensive reactors that do not carry a risk of meltdown.

“The U.S. is on the verge of commercial­izing groundbrea­king nuclear innovation, and we must keep advancing the public-private partnershi­ps needed to traverse the dreaded valley of death that all too often stifles progress,” said Rich Powell, executive director of ClearPath, a nonprofit advocating for clean energy.

The new Idaho facility is budgeted at $5 million under next year’s federal budget, which remains under negotiatio­n in Congress.

On Thursday another advanced nuclear developer, Oregon-based NuScale Power, announced it was building three virtual nuclear control rooms at Texas A&M University, Oregon State University and the University of Idaho, with funding from the Energy Department.

NuScale CEO John Hopkins said the simulators would “help ensure that we educate future generation­s about the important role nuclear power and small modular reactor technology will play in attaining a safe, clean and secure energy future for our country.”

 ?? Keith Riddler / Associated Press ?? The Energy Department announced this week it has launched a new test facility at the Idaho National Laboratory.
Keith Riddler / Associated Press The Energy Department announced this week it has launched a new test facility at the Idaho National Laboratory.

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