Small modular nuclear reactors game changer for clean power

    WORLD  30 January 2023 - 23:02

    According to a report on Oilprice.com, commercial deployment of small modular reactors (SMRs) has moved one step closer. Caliber.Az reprints the article.

    For years, small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs) have been teased as the next big thing in clean energy. They were promised to be the solution to safely and efficiently scaling nuclear energy and the catalyst that would bring the nuclear energy renaissance into full swing. But then they never arrived. 

    Small modular reactors: What is taking so long?” asked an Energy Monitor report released last Fall. While these next-generation reactors have been right around the corner for years, the strict rules and regulations around nuclear energy, and especially new and unproven models of nuclear reactors, present a lengthy and costly process for SMRs to graduate from the research and development phase to deployment and commercialization. There’s a reason that the only two SMRs in the world that are already up and running are in Russia and China, where authoritarianism cuts through all kinds of regulatory red tape. 

    But it looks like the rest of the world could finally be getting ready to launch SMRs debut on the global stage. In the United States, the news broke just last week that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has officially certified the design for what will be the nation’s very first SMR. The certification was published in the Federal Register on Thursday, meaning that companies interested in using the design can start applying now for a license to build. That license serves as “the final determination that the design is acceptable for use so it can't be legally challenged during the licensing process when someone applies to build and operate a nuclear power plant,” according to reporting from CBS News.

    That’s the beauty of SMRs: the small models are designed to be manufactured off-site at a commercial scale, and assembled on site for more efficient nuclear energy deployment. This could fundamentally shift the role of nuclear power in the global energy mix. Contrary to popular belief, nuclear energy has been proven time and again to be safer than most other kinds of energy production. The real problem for the nuclear sector is that building new nuclear reactors is extremely expensive, thanks to all of those very necessary regulatory hurdles that ensure the safety of new builds. SMRs can avoid a lot of that expense through standardization. 

    This is a game changer. Not only would the wide-scale deployment of small modular nuclear reactors revitalize the United States’ declining nuclear industry, it would be a significant step forward in the global fight against catastrophic climate change. A statement from the US Department of Energy this week said that the newly approved design "equips the nation with a new clean power source to help drive down" greenhouse gas emissions. The United States is the second-biggest greenhouse gas emitting country in the world, after China. 

    And the US is just the latest nation to make a major breakthrough in SMR development and deployment. “Roughly 40 serious concepts are in development for the next generation of advanced nuclear reactors worldwide,” CBS reported last Friday. The vast majority of these reactors are still in development, in either the conceptual design phase or the basic and detailed design phases, according to figures from the International Energy Agency.

    Development of small and medium-sized modular reactors around the world. (Source: Towards Safer and More Sustainable Ways for Exploiting Nuclear Power)

    While SMRs present a major step forward for nuclear energy, they are just one part of what is potentially unfolding to be a worldwide reacceptance of nuclear energy. World leaders have been forced to reexamine the myriad benefits of nuclear power thanks to the energy crisis started by the Covid-29 pandemic and kicked into overdrive by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and a resulting energy war between Brussels and the Kremlin. While nuclear power never died in some key economies,  the West is beginning to ramp up production in a big way.The Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act is keeping the momentum building for nuclear power in the US Overseas, Europe has also taken big steps to make nuclear power eligible for funding earmarked for renewable energy. When SMRs hit the stage in earnet, it could be the tipping point toward a new nuclear era.

    Caliber.Az

    Subscribe to our Telegram channel


Read also

Iran not to surrender to West's bullying, sanctions

24 April 2024 - 18:45

Germany's position on Taurus remains unchanged

24 April 2024 - 20:59

Sweden’s plan for worst-case scenario War spreading in Europe

24 April 2024 - 20:40

German business activity increasing in April

24 April 2024 - 20:48

Mark Rutte seeks Türkiye's backing for new job A new pair of hands

24 April 2024 - 16:55

France proposes new EU sanctions to fight Russian disinformation

24 April 2024 - 20:18
ADVERTS
Video
Latest news

    How US F-16 fighter jets stack up to Su-35s sent to Iran?

    25 April 2024 - 03:05

    Belgian brewer whose body produces its own alcohol cleared of drink driving

    25 April 2024 - 01:03

    Milan becomes latest European hotspot to battle overtourism

    No ice cream and pizza after midnight

    24 April 2024 - 23:00

    Germany's position on Taurus remains unchanged

    24 April 2024 - 20:59

    German business activity increasing in April

    24 April 2024 - 20:48

    Baku to host space technology conf for Central Asian region

    24 April 2024 - 20:45

    Sweden’s plan for worst-case scenario

    War spreading in Europe

    24 April 2024 - 20:40

    President’s special rep: Karabakh can be called eco-region of Azerbaijan

    24 April 2024 - 20:32

    Azerbaijani energy minister holds talks with Algerian delegation on advancing bilateral cooperation

    24 April 2024 - 20:28

    China's Xiaomi selling more EVs than expected

    raising hopes it can break even sooner

    24 April 2024 - 20:24

    France proposes new EU sanctions to fight Russian disinformation

    24 April 2024 - 20:18

    European Commission disburses additional $1.6 billion in bridge financing to Ukraine

    24 April 2024 - 20:16

    Serb Member of Presidency of Bosnia & Herzegovina Željka Cvijanović invited to COP29

    24 April 2024 - 20:12

    UK to transfer Paveway IV bombs to Ukraine

    PHOTO

    24 April 2024 - 19:59

    Azerbaijani minister, Uzbek ambassador discuss defence cooperation issues

    PHOTO

    24 April 2024 - 19:48

    State reception commences to honor Kyrgyz President Sadyr Zhaparov

    24 April 2024 - 19:40

    MFA: Azerbaijan continues contributing to peace, security

    24 April 2024 - 19:35

    Kyrgyz president pays tribute to Azerbaijani martyrs

    24 April 2024 - 19:30

    Azerbaijani MPs, assistants to US congressmen discuss relations with Armenia, Russia

    PHOTO

    24 April 2024 - 19:27

    Kyrgyz president pays respect to Great Leader Heydar Aliyev

    24 April 2024 - 19:19

    Turkish president appeals to Armenian Patriarch

    24 April 2024 - 19:15

    Türkiye rejects “one-sided” statements on 1915 events

    24 April 2024 - 19:09

    Air France plane safely evacuated at Heydar Aliyev Int’l Airport

    24 April 2024 - 19:08

    United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations receives report of incident near Djibouti

    24 April 2024 - 19:03

    Azerbaijani, Kyrgyz leaders unveil monument to prominent novelist

    24 April 2024 - 18:55

    US Central Command, Royal Jordanian Air Force conduct humanitarian airdrops into Gaza

    24 April 2024 - 18:51

    Iran not to surrender to West's bullying, sanctions

    24 April 2024 - 18:45

    ADA University rep: Kyrgyzstan to become third country participating in school construction in Karabakh

    24 April 2024 - 18:36

    China’s president visits Belgrade around anniversary of NATO embassy bombing

    24 April 2024 - 18:22

    Best way to avoid war is to “talk less, prepare more”

    Finland’s president says

    24 April 2024 - 18:07

    International experts view restoration activities in Lachin

    24 April 2024 - 18:03

    Jamaica recognizes State of Palestine

    24 April 2024 - 17:53

    "Peoples of South Caucasus should resolve their differences independently"

    Foreign analysts on Caliber.Az

    24 April 2024 - 17:40

    HAMAS holding hostage 30 high-ranking Israeli security forces members

    24 April 2024 - 17:38

    Top 100 fastest-growing FDI destinations

    Baku ranks 3rd

    24 April 2024 - 17:30

    Argentina asks Interpol to arrest Iranian minister over attack

    24 April 2024 - 17:23

    Russia urges Armenia to clarify National Assembly president’s speech

    Following scandalous statements

    24 April 2024 - 17:19

    Three signs US could be heading for recession

    Expert analysis

    24 April 2024 - 17:08

    Mark Rutte seeks Türkiye's backing for new job

    A new pair of hands

    24 April 2024 - 16:55

    Israel gears up for Rafah civilian evacuation ahead of promised assault

    24 April 2024 - 16:49

All news