
A 3D-printed section of a microreactor core prototype from Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
(Image credit – Senate Appropriations Committee)
In the new Congress, lawmakers are poised to continue their ongoing efforts to bolster the U.S. nuclear industry by promoting technological innovation. In the latter half of 2018, proponents of the industry in both the House and Senate secured the enactment of two new laws that aim to promote the development and commercialization of “advanced” reactor designs: the Nuclear Energy Innovation Capabilities Act
Advanced reactors have attracted interest from both established players in the nuclear industry and new entrepreneurial ventures. They employ novel design features, such as non-traditional fuels and coolants, that depart significantly from the large light water reactors the industry has operated for decades. Many advanced reactors could be built on smaller scales and at lower cost. Other design features promise improvements in operational safety and more manageable waste output.
Due in large part to the prohibitive expense of building them, only two commercial light water reactors have been brought into operation in the U.S. in the last quarter-century, and only two others are expected to be finished in the near future. Meanwhile, many existing nuclear plants have been, or are scheduled to be, shut down. Proponents of nuclear power believe advanced reactors provide a route to a new era of economic viability. They urge investment in such reactors now to prevent other nations, notably China and Russia, from dominating the field in the years ahead.
The Nuclear Energy Innovation Capabilities Act directs DOE to take several steps to assist industrial players in developing advanced reactor designs. Its most consequential provision instructs the department to prepare to build a Versatile Test Reactor, a user facility that could test fuels and materials intended for use in certain kinds of advanced reactors by irradiating them with high-energy neutrons. Idaho National Laboratory has already contracted
The act also directs the department to establish a National Reactor Innovation Center at which DOE and industry experts can test and validate reactor concepts. It directs the department to maintain a high-performance computational program for modeling and simulation aiding advanced reactor development. Finally, it instructs DOE to establish a cost-sharing program to assist companies in applying for licenses for advanced reactors.
Complementing these efforts, the Nuclear Energy Innovation and Modernization Act sets milestone deadlines for Nuclear Regulatory Commission to develop procedures and requirements that will ease the licensing process for a wide variety of advanced reactor designs. NRC has already begun this process
There were also other bills related to advanced reactors introduced during the last Congress that did not become law. The most far-reaching was the Nuclear Energy Leadership Act,
A 3D-printed section of a microreactor core prototype from Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
(Image credit – Senate Appropriations Committee)
Although no new advanced reactor legislation has yet been introduced in the new Congress, discussion of the subject has already begun, with the Senate Energy and Water Development Appropriations Subcommittee holding a hearing
Subcommittee Chair Lamar Alexander (R-TN), a longstanding proponent of nuclear energy, opened the meeting by declaring,
This hearing is to discuss perhaps the most promising way to assure a nuclear industry for America’s future, and that is to accelerate the development of advanced reactors. And specifically, to deal with the single biggest obstacle facing this development, which is one word — cost.
Oak Ridge Director Thomas Zacharia testified
Christina Back, vice president for nuclear technology and materials at General Atomics, made the case that DOE can play a catalyzing role in commercializing new reactor designs. She urged the committee to consider providing DOE with funds to support R&D on a “small number” of technology concepts that promise to further improve advanced reactor designs, citing high uranium-density fuels that would improve efficiency as an example. Under her proposal, each concept would receive between $10 million and $30 million per year over five years, with grantees also required to pitch in funds, arguing that exploring concepts is necessary before companies can commit to a particular pilot plant design.
Other committee members who attended the hearing were less enthusiastic than Alexander about new technologies. Subcommittee Ranking Member Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) said she supports R&D but pointed to the need to address the industry’s ongoing challenges with matters such as safety and waste disposal. “If I’m going to help launch anything with my little vote, I want to know it’s safe and it’s practical and it’s going to work and it’s cost effective,” she said.
While Congress considers further ways to promote advanced reactors, DOE is taking some steps on its own initiative. Edward McGinnis, the top administration official at the DOE Office of Nuclear Energy, reviewed several of these efforts in his testimony
HALEU is uranium enriched so that the highly fissile uranium-235 isotope comprises between 5 and 20 percent of its weight. While most uranium fuel for nuclear reactors is enriched to less than 5 percent uranium-235, some advanced reactor designs require HALEU fuel to operate.
The Nuclear Energy Leadership Act as well as a standalone bill
The latter move has drawn criticism from Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chair John Barrasso (R-WY), who suggested in a letter
In its notice of intent to award