logo
Kairos Power's reactor plans for Oak Ridge and beyond

Kairos Power's reactor plans for Oak Ridge and beyond

Yahoo28-02-2025
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first of two stories on Kairos Power's plans for building test reactors in Oak Ridge this decade and nuclear power plants next decade using two technologies based on Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) innovations.
Three construction permits from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for three proposed advanced nuclear reactors that will be cooled with molten salt instead of the water used in conventional reactors. A partnership with Google, which wants nuclear power as a reliable source of electricity for its power-hungry data centers to be used to test artificial intelligence chatbots and other models.
A completed excavation of an Oak Ridge site for the new reactors that will use uranium fuel, located where a gaseous diffusion plant once produced enriched uranium for nuclear power plants.
Those were some of Kairos Power's achievements in the past year or so, starting in December 2023 when the first construction permit was granted to the company based in Alameda, California.
An update on Kairos Power's progress in 2024 and timelines over the next decade for its advanced Generation IV nuclear reactor projects in Oak Ridge and elsewhere was provided by company officials during a recent Zoom call with a volunteer reporter for The Oak Ridger.
Edward Blandford, Kairos Power's co-founder and chief technology officer, and Ashley Lewis, senior marketing communications manager, were on the call from California.
On Dec. 12, 2023, the NRC voted to issue a construction permit to Kairos Power for the Hermes Low-Power Demonstration Reactor. Kairos Power said that its first test reactor will show the company's capability to deliver nuclear heat as part of its quest to provide safe, affordable, carbon-free nuclear power to meet growing demands for electricity and to delay climate change.
The 35-megawatt-thermal (35 MWt) high-temperature nuclear reactor, which will be cooled by a molten fluoride salt, was the first U.S. non-water-cooled reactor to receive a construction permit in more than 50 years. The company calls its concept the Kairos Power fluoride-salt-cooled, high-temperature reactor (KP-FHR) technology.
In September 2023, the NRC accepted for review Kairos Power's construction permit applications for the Hermes 2 Demonstration Plant, which were submitted in July 2023. The demonstration plant would consist of two FHRs with power generation systems for producing steam to generate electricity that can be fed to the grid. On Nov. 21, 2024, Kairos Power received two construction permits from the NRC for the two 35-megawatt (35-MWt) reactors to be housed in the Hermes 2 Demonstration Plant in Oak Ridge. The heat from the reactors is carried by the molten salt coolant to the steam generation system.
All three reactors will be built on the K-33 site, where a gaseous diffusion plant for enriching uranium was built in 1954, operated until 1985 and decommissioned and demolished in 2011. The site, known by many people as the "K-25 Site," is part of the Heritage Center industrial park, located in the East Tennessee Technology Park in Oak Ridge.
In 2024, the K-33 site was excavated by a Kairos Power contractor, Barnard Construction Co. Inc., of Bozeman, Montana. Blandford, who lives in Oakland, California, said he spent part of the year in Oak Ridge, overseeing the excavation and working with other partners to 'repurpose the brownfield site.'
Blandford is responsible for all engineering and technology development functions at Kairos Power. These include hardware demonstrations, fuel and salt supply infrastructure, manufacturing, supply chain and procurement, environmental health and safety, construction management and engineering operations.
Asked about the excavation, Blandford said that the contractor, along with the environmental remediation support of Los Alamos Technical Associates (LATA), had to remove considerable amounts of underground concrete and electrical duct banks left over from the historic gaseous diffusion plant. Duct banks that protect underground electrical wires, footer pedestals and foundation footings below the surface soil were removed by Barnard staff.
'The concrete and other material, such as lead and asbestos, must be managed appropriately,' Blandford said. 'We are coordinating with the Department of Energy to ensure proper removal of material from the Hermes footprint. That's a process we're working through now.'
A Kairos Power video provides 'excavation by the numbers' information on the work at the K-33 site: 4,900 cubic yards of topsoil, stripped and stockpiled on the site; 182 remnant concrete footers removed from the Hermes reactor footprint; 2,119 feet of remnant electrical duct banks removed; 52,900 cubic yards of soil, excavated and stockpiled onsite; 7,901 tons of densely, graded aggregate placed, and 17,000-plus staff hours completed by Kairos Power and its contractors.
In July 2024, Barnard and Kairos Power began collaborating on the excavation and preparation of the K-33 site for the 2025 pouring of concrete for the foundations and construction of two buildings. They are Kairos Power's third non-nuclear, molten salt Engineering Test Unit (ETU 3.0), which should be complete by late 2025 or early 2026, and the structure for the Hermes 1 Demonstration Reactor, which will follow it.
Kairos Power has projected that the Hermes 2 Demonstration Plant housing two reactors and a shared turbine will be built and ready to operate 'toward the end of the decade,' Lewis said.
Results from the non-nuclear Engineering Test Unit series will inform the construction and operation of the Hermes reactors.
Engineering Test Unit 1.0 in Albuquerque, New Mexico, demonstrated the largest FLiBe salt system ever built after the unit was loaded with 14 tons of lithium fluoride (LiF) and beryllium fluoride (BeF2), the salt coolant that the Hermes reactors will use to remove heat from TRISO fuel pebbles. In February 2024, ETU 1.0 completed its pumped salt operations using surrogate non-nuclear fuel pebbles.
In a Jan. 30 news release, Kairos Power announced it had completed the design, fabrication and installation of the first internally produced reactor vessel for ETU 2.0, which is being completed in Albuquerque.
'It is the first reactor vessel to be fabricated in-house at Kairos Power's Manufacturing Development Campus in Albuquerque,' the news release stated. 'With ETU 2.0, the company is ramping up output of ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers) U-stamped pressure vessels, advancing the production of specialized reactor components and gaining proficiency in modular construction methods.'
ETU 3.0 and Hermes reactors will be built in Oak Ridge using modular construction techniques piloted at Kairos Power's Manufacturing Development Campus in Albuquerque. The reactor modules will be fabricated in Albuquerque and shipped to Oak Ridge for on-site assembly.
This year, Blandford said, the next phase of construction involves putting in 51 drilled concrete piers on the K-33 site. Each pier of this deep foundation system consists of a large-diameter concrete cylinder formed by pouring fresh concrete and installing reinforcing steel into a drilled shaTft. Each pier will support an above-ground structure by transferring its weight to more stable soil or rock.
Blandford said the drilled piers being currently built are for the non-nuclear ETU 3.0 building. The experience that the Barnard-Kairos team gains from that construction will help them put in the drilled piers for the Hermes 1 reactor later this year.
This article originally appeared on Oakridger: Kairos Power's reactor plans for Oak Ridge and beyond
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NRC Eyes New Accident Tolerant Nuclear Fuels For Commercial Use
NRC Eyes New Accident Tolerant Nuclear Fuels For Commercial Use

Forbes

time2 days ago

  • Forbes

NRC Eyes New Accident Tolerant Nuclear Fuels For Commercial Use

Part of a nuclear reactor fuel rod element. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has completed a study of advanced, better performing accident tolerant fuels being developed by three U.S. companies as it prepares to handle licensing demand for new commercial nuclear power reactors. Accident tolerant fuels may offer important technological advances to increase the safety of U.S. nuclear power plants. ATFs are being studied to determine their potential to perform better in normal operations and during transportation as well as in nuclear power plant accidents. The NRC's Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research recently released the report prepared by the U.S. Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. The Richland, Wash.-based PNNL is providing technical assistance about the proposed nuclear fuel and new fuel cladding designs that may replace current nuclear fuel rods made with zirconium-based alloys. The 91-page highly technical report is called 'Spent Fuel Storage and Transportation of Accident Tolerant Fuel Concepts' and outlines the latest information on fuel material properties and performance associated with storing and transporting spent nuclear fuel. The federal government is evaluating the performance of nuclear power systems containing ATF. The NRC says the same performance requirements are being sought with irradiated ATF fuel as mandated for conventional zirconium alloy cladded uranium dioxide fuel. The new report explores the current activities of the following companies in their developments with ATFs and fuel cladding designs: The DOE is working on its Advanced Fuels Campaign with teams of researchers seeking new nuclear power plant fuels at five of its national laboratories. The federal collaborations are centered at the PNNL, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Idaho National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Advanced Fuels Campaign national laboratories are located in many regions of the U.S. According to DOE, ATFs offer several advantages over conventional nuclear energy fuel. ATFs are being developed to improve nuclear reactor safety 'by maintaining structural integrity and reactor cooling for a longer duration during severe accident conditions,' DOE says. ATFs The main objective of the Advanced Fuels Campaign is to develop and use ATFs to significantly increase nuclear power performance and safety. Researchers lower a test train into the Advanced Test Reactor at Idaho National Laboratory. The NRC report also discussed whether its current regulations would apply to ATF storage and transportation. While it advised companies applying for licenses to provide justification data to support their applications, the NRC noted the federal government's current regulatory framework for storing and transporting spent nuclear fuel would generally cover apply to ATFs. These findings would appear to pave the way for greater interest by companies in turning to nuclear power to meet their energy demands.

Better Nuclear Energy Stock: NuScale Power vs. Oklo
Better Nuclear Energy Stock: NuScale Power vs. Oklo

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Better Nuclear Energy Stock: NuScale Power vs. Oklo

Key Points NuScale's small modular reactors are challenging traditional nuclear plants. Oklo's microreactors are well-suited for smaller remote deployments. But only one of these companies is generating meaningful revenue. 10 stocks we like better than NuScale Power › Over the past few years, the explosive growth of the artificial intelligence (AI) market drove many investors toward chipmakers like Nvidia and software giants like Microsoft. However, that secular trend is also stirring up strong tailwinds for nuclear power companies that are addressing the soaring energy needs of those big cloud and AI data centers. Two smaller nuclear energy companies often associated with the AI market are NuScale Power (NYSE: SMR) and Oklo (NYSE: OKLO). Let's see why these two companies could benefit from the AI boom -- and which stock is the better buy right now. The differences between NuScale and Oklo NuScale and Oklo both produce smaller and scalable nuclear reactors. NuScale develops small modular reactors (SMRs), which each generate up to 77 megawatts of electricity (MWe). It chains together those modules in flexible configurations that are easier to deploy than traditional nuclear reactors. Its VOYGR-6 configuration connects six of its 77 MWe modules to generate 462 MWe, while its top-tier VOYGR-12 configuration connects 12 modules to generate 924 MWe. NuScale is the only company that holds Standard Design Approvals from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for its SMRs. The NRC approved its 50 MWe design in January of 2023 and its 77 MWe design this May. Its 77 MWe design takes up 1% of the space of a traditional nuclear reactor but generates the same amount of power. Oklo's flagship product, the Aurora, is a much smaller microreactor that only generates 1.5 MWe of power. These tiny microreactors can be chained together in bigger deployments that generate 15 to 100 MWe, and that flexibility makes them well-suited for remote and off-grid deployments. Oklo's microreactors run on metallic uranium fuel pellets -- which are denser, more thermal resistant, and cheaper to make than the standard uranium dioxide fuel pellets used by NuScale and other reactor makers. Its fabricated metallic pellets are also easier to reprocess and recycle in a closed loop that can operate for about a decade without being refueled. NuScale's SMRs need to be refueled every two years, but their modular design allows them to be fueled in stages so the entire plant doesn't go offline. Which company is growing faster? The density, scalability, and power efficiency of SMRs and microreactors are attracting a lot of attention from energy companies and power-hungry data center operators. However, both of these companies could struggle with growing pains over the next few years. In 2023, NuScale suffered a major setback when its soaring expenses forced it to cancel its plan to build six nuclear reactors in Idaho. Today, it generates most of its revenue in Romania, where it serves as a subcontractor for Fluor's planned construction of a 462 MWe plant. That project is still in the front-end engineering and design phase, but it's expected to receive a final investment decision in 2026. The NRC's recent approval of its 77 MWe design also opens the door for NuScale's stateside comeback. It has already been holding active discussions with five hyperscale data center operators in the U.S. to support that return. In 2024, NuScale's revenue rose 62% to $37 million, but its net loss more than doubled to $137 million. In 2025, analysts expect its revenue to rise 34% to $50 million as it narrows its net loss to $69 million. That growth could be driven by the final investment decision in Romania, which would pave the way toward the construction of its first plants, and new domestic data center contracts. But with a market capitalization of $6.7 billion, NuScale already looks richly valued at 135 times this year's sales. Oklo isn't expected to generate any revenue until it deploys its first reactors in Idaho in late 2027 or early 2028. Analysts expect it to rack up net losses of $66 million in 2025 and $78 million in 2026. Yet its market value sits at $10.2 billion -- which is more than 762 times the $13 million in revenue it's expected to generate in 2027. The shares probably trades at that frothy valuation because Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, previously served as its CEO and chairman. Altman remains one of the company's top investors. The better buy: NuScale The SMRs from NuScale might not be as forward-thinking as Oklo's microreactors, but they're well-suited for building big nuclear plants that could replace older fossil fuel plants. They can also be used to directly power data centers and factories. Microreactors are ideal for small deployments in remote areas, but they're not economical for larger-scale power plants. NuScale is still a speculative investment, but it's on firmer ground than Oklo -- which still looks grossly overvalued and hasn't generated a dollar of meaningful revenue yet. That's why I expect NuScale's stock to remain a better play on nuclear power than Oklo for the foreseeable future. Should you invest $1,000 in NuScale Power right now? Before you buy stock in NuScale Power, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and NuScale Power wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $634,627!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,046,799!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,037% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 182% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of July 21, 2025 Leo Sun has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Microsoft and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends NuScale Power and recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Better Nuclear Energy Stock: NuScale Power vs. Oklo was originally published by The Motley Fool

Palisades Nuclear Plant in Michigan moves one step closer to reopening
Palisades Nuclear Plant in Michigan moves one step closer to reopening

CBS News

time3 days ago

  • CBS News

Palisades Nuclear Plant in Michigan moves one step closer to reopening

The Palisades Nuclear Power Plant in West Michigan continues on track to be the first commercial nuclear power plant in the U.S. to reopen after a shutdown, with one of the National Regulatory Commission approval steps now complete. Holtec International acquired the 800-megawatt Palisades plant along the Lake Michigan shoreline in Covert in 2022, with initial plans to dismantle it. But those plans changed, and there are confirmed customers for the electricity from the plant. A federal loan from the U.S. Department of Energy closed last fall, and three rounds of funding disbursements from that allocation have since been issued to Holetc. New fuel is expected to be delivered in late July or early August, the company said in an April 7 announcement. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission issued a notice July 17 that it planned to issue a "no significant hazards consideration determination" and approve the operating license and technical specifications to support the restart of power options at Palisades. That step took place on Thursday, the agency announced. "While these NRC approvals will allow Holtec to load fuel, there are still several licensing actions under NRC review and additional requirements that need to be met before the plant can start up," the press release said. Palisades, which is a pressurized water reactor, first went into operation in 1971 and shut down in 2022. Many of the government documents on Palisades' operations and restart plans can be found on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission site.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store