Lodi News-Sentinel

Tech billionair­es rally around nuclear as energy crisis looms

- Lizette Chapman

In recent weeks, some of Silicon Valley’s most famous technologi­sts have hailed a historical­ly polarizing energy source — nuclear power — as a solution to both cutting carbon emissions and weaning the world off now-controvers­ial Russian gas.

Billionair­e entreprene­ur Elon Musk wrote on Twitter that nuclear is “critical” to national security, while the risk of radiation is overplayed. And venture capitalist Marc Andreessen called for “1,000 new state-of-the-art nuclear power plants in the U.S. and Europe, right now.”

The war galvanized a sentiment which has been building in recent years in the startup world, where billionair­es including Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos and Peter Thiel have opened their wallets to back next-generation nuclear companies. None of the advanced reactor startups has yet produced an operating commercial product, but some believe that the combinatio­n of tech advances and a new urgency around ditching fossil fuels could be a catalyst for the sector — which has mostly languished in regulatory purgatory since the 1970s.

“We wouldn’t be having a conversati­on about innovation in nuclear power today without the investment and thinking of the leaders of Silicon Valley,” said Josh Freed, who specialize­s in climate and energy at public policy think tank Third Way in Washington.

Last year, venture investors plowed a record $3.4 billion into nuclear startups — more than in every year over the past decade combined, according to research firm PitchBook. That number reflects very early-stage startups as well as more mature companies like Commonweal­th Fusion Systems and Helion Energy Inc., both of which raised funding rounds of $500 million or more in 2021. In the previous decade there was an average of fewer than 10 deals a year. Last year the number jumped to 28.

The VC funding follows a decades-long dry spell for nuclear power. After it was developed in the 1950s, worries over safety and waste storage, along with accidents at Three Mile Island, Chernobyl and Fukushima hardened public opinion against the technology. Meanwhile, high costs made it less attractive than natural gas and other alternativ­es, as did regulatory hurdles. The Watts Bar Nuclear Plant, greenlit in 1973, was the last nuclear project to be approved in the U.S. It suffered from significan­t delays and cost increases and only began operating in 2016.

But as concerns over climate change grow, nuclear power’s advantages have become clearer. Like solar, nuclear power has no carbon emissions; unlike solar, it can reliably produce energy 24 hours a day. It’s also a path toward energy independen­ce. The war in Ukraine drove gas prices in the U.S. to an all-time high earlier this month. While building more nuclear reactors won’t alleviate the current pain — even the new, smaller designs will take years to license and build — supporters say it could help head off the next crisis.

Recent innovation­s in nuclear fission, the decades-old technology that captures energy released when atoms are split, include better methods for storing nuclear waste and cooling systems, which mean new reactors can be smaller and more efficient. Meanwhile, venture-backed startups that focus on nuclear fusion, the technology that captures energy created when atoms are merged, are progressin­g past the science project stage and toward commercial­ization faster than previously anticipate­d.

Fusion, a kind of holy grail for energy, has never successful­ly produced more power than was required to actually create the nuclear reaction. But some startups believe they are getting closer to flipping the equation. “Silicon Valley has been the foundation of the entire private fusion industry,” said Christofer Mowry, chief executive officer of Vancouver-based General Fusion, which is backed by Bezos and others. Mowry, who also serves on the board of the nonprofit industry group Fusion Industry Associatio­n, said venture investment has helped dozens of fusion startups mature to the point that government­s are starting to engage. In an example earlier this month, the U.S. Congress approved record funding for a public-private partnershi­p program to build new fusion devices.

David Kirtley, a former implemente­r of fusion programs for the U.S. Department of Energy, started a fusion startup called Helion in 2013. The following year, he joined the Silicon Valley startup incubator Y Combinator, where he said he learned to “reprogram” his thinking to be more ambitious. At YC, “they didn’t talk about one-year timelines,” Kirtley said. “Everything was next month and next week.”

Helion has raised more than $570 million from investors including former YC President Sam Altman, Thiel’s Mithril Capital and Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz. Altman, who serves as Helion’s chairman and is a significan­t shareholde­r, said he believes fusion is the cleanest, cheapest form of energy that will someday transform the world. “All my conversati­ons with them were about how they could go faster,” Altman said.

Helion aims to demonstrat­e net electricit­y from fusion, meaning the system creates more power than it consumes, in 2024 and create a commercial system by the end of the decade. “I wish we would have joined Y Combinator five years earlier,” Kirtley said. “We could be even farther along.”

Nuclear fission startups could have a more immediate impact. TerraPower, founded and bankrolled by Bill Gates, uses advanced cooling materials including molten-chloride and liquid-sodium to build smaller, cheaper and more efficient reactors than convention­al ones that use water for cooling. TerraPower plans to build two reactors in cooperatio­n with the Energy Department, with its first commercial reactor to be located in Wyoming. TerraPower said late last year it will apply for a constructi­on permit with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 2023 and expects to begin operations in 2028.

 ?? TERRAPOWER/TNS ?? A rendering of the Natrium reactor and energy storage system.
TERRAPOWER/TNS A rendering of the Natrium reactor and energy storage system.

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