These Nuclear Reactors Can Benefit Idaho, Power Americaβs Ambitions
Originally published in the Idaho Statesman.
Americaβs most pressing ambitions β re-industrialization, artificial intelligence leadership, cleaner energy and thriving small businesses β are colliding with a hard reality: The nation lacks the power and energy grid infrastructure required to deliver them.
To compound the issue, local communities often oppose new data centers because, among other reasons, consumers fear that their own energy bills may rise. Nevertheless, by supporting new technologies, including a new generation of small modular reactors, or SMRs, policymakers can address Americaβs power needs in ways that benefit consumers.
During his State of the Union address, President Trump announced a βnew Rate Payer Protection Pledgeβ to ensure that the tech companies, rather than consumers, bear the costs of new data centers. The pledge builds on an earlier bipartisan plan that encourages technology companies to build their own power plants. Google, Meta, Microsoft, xAI, Oracle, OpenAI, and Amazon signed the pledge in early March to βBYOPβ β Bring Your Own Power β to the data center party.
As part of a comprehensive energy strategy, SMRs offer a practical path to expanding power capacity, pairing reliable power with comfortable safety margins. SMRs are compact, standardized nuclear plants built with factory-produced components that reduce construction time, lower costs and improve safety compared with traditional large- scale reactors. Unlike conventional nuclear plants that require massive, decade-long construction projects, SMRs can be prefabricated and deployed incrementally, making them ideally suited to todayβs energy, AI and grid demands.
Idahoβs Role in SMR Development
SMRsβ potential provides another reason to watch the Idaho National Laboratory and its National Reactor Innovation Center. Last May, the White House issued four executive orders that significantly expanded the Department of Energyβs authority to regulate new advanced reactors and could encompass a prototype reactor for powering a data center.
One of these Orders directs DOE to approve at least three new reactors. DOE subsequently accepted 11 applicants into its reactor pilot program.
In fact, the need for data centers to provide their own power is a problem tailor-made for the NRIC, whose mission is to βbridge the gap between concept, demonstration, and commercialization of advanced nuclear technology.β NRIC recently announced its Nuclear Energy Launch Pad in response to this high private sector interest. The Launch Pad initiative is the new vehicle to test and operate these trailblazing technologies in partnership with private nuclear technology developers, with an eye toward eventual commercial deployment and proof of DOEβs plans to expand the private sectorβs ability to obtain DOE Authorization.
In conjunction with the Launch Pad, the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission should continue to pursue regulatory reforms that could significantly speed the growth of all nuclear power, including SMRs. One of the recent executive orders directed the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to modernize its regulations. Proposed revised regulations, which should prioritize safety, speed, and cost, are expected soon.
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