For the first time in more than 50 years the US granted permission for a new type of nuclear reactor, a sign regulators are becoming more open to different approaches to producing power from splitting the atom.
California start-up Kairos Power received a construction permit from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to build its Hermes demonstration reactor in Tennessee, US. While commercial reactors in use today are cooled by water, the Kairos technology uses molten fluoride salt as a coolant.
There’s growing global interest in accelerating deployment of nuclear power as a key part of the fight to rein in climate change, but that effort has been hampered by a regulatory process that has been slow to approve new designs.
“It’s possible to license things that are different with the NRC,” Mike Laufer, the Kaiross CEO, said in an interview on Wednesday. The regulatory process “doesn’t have to be a roadblock”.
Kairos is among many companies seeking to commercialise designs that can be built in factories and installed on site, an approach that’s expected to be faster and cheaper than the large conventional reactors widely used today.
Kairos plans to begin construction next year on its $100 million (R1.8 billion) project and expects the system to be complete by the end of 2026.
The goal is to demonstrate the viability of its design and the molten salt technology. Molten salts remain liquid at high temperatures and low pressure, a potential safety advantage over water-cooled systems.
Laufer said the last time the NRC approved a design that wasn't water-cooled was in 1968.
Hermes won’t generate electricity but is expected to pave the way for the Hermes 2 project, which would use two of the same reactors to produce a combined total of about 28 megawatts of electricity.
The company’s long-term goal is a commercial project that would use two larger reactors and would have more than 100 megawatts of capacity, though Laufer said it was too soon to say when Kairos might be able to pursue efforts beyond the initial Hermes plant. Big conventional reactors in use today typically have about 1 000MW of capacity.
“We’re developing a technology that will be highly scalable,” Laufer said. “Affordability is really about being able to scale up.”
BLOOMBERG