Search Engine - Why are people excited about nuclear power again?
Episode Date: May 8, 2026Nuclear energy was a taboo for decades, but it’s coming back, it’ll power AI data centers for Google and Microsoft. What does new nuclear technology look like, and why do the nuclear optimists bel...ieve this new tech is superior? Meltdowns, reactors that can fit in your backyard, and one podcaster’s heroic attempt to describe nuclear fission. Rachel Slaybaugh Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow (check out her book Atomic Dreams) Adam Stein Search Engine’s episodes on data centers: Colossus 1 & Colossus 2 Support the show!
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Not to freak you out, I know there's a lot going on, but here's a fairly obvious additional problem on the horizon.
The rising cost of electricity.
Our electricity doesn't just come from nowhere.
We have to use resources to generate it.
In the U.S., the electric grid is mostly powered by coal and natural gas.
And lately, for the first time in 20 years, our demand for that electricity has been spiking.
Some of that spike is driven by AI and digital gas.
data centers, they're often the villains of the story, but it's actually not just them.
It's also from a lot of things that everybody actually wants.
More electric vehicles, more induction stoves, more factories that have been electrified,
hooking up to the grid instead of directly burning fossil fuels for power.
The spike in demand isn't just raising the price of electricity.
It's also generating more emissions.
Since even an electric car running on electricity, that electricity is generated in part by burning fossil fuels.
So that's the problem.
And one of the solutions people have started discussing as a way to solve this is actually
nuclear power.
Nuclear power, which in the 1980s and 90s was kind of a taboo, has become much more popular in recent polling.
These days, a majority of Americans, about 60% are in favor of it.
Some of this is being driven by an understanding that nuclear technology itself has gotten safer,
and some of it is just people's fear of climate change outweighing, or at least re-weighing their fear of their fear of
nuclear disaster. In any event, nuclear power seems to be very much on its way.
Today in America, nearly 20% of the electricity we use comes from a reactor somewhere.
Tomorrow, we'll probably be using much more nuclear power.
What's happened here is that a group of people I was not paying attention to, nuclear optimists,
have started to win the national argument. I wanted to hear from these people and learn what they
believe. That's our episode this week, along with just
a history of nuclear itself, how it was discovered, how society lost faith in it, and what
its future might look like here.
I want to start with the person I spoke to named Dr. Rachel Slabaw.
She first encountered nuclear energy back in the early 2000s, when public sentiment towards it
was much more in the basement.
In high school, some Navy guy came and talked to us about nuclear reactors, and I talked to
my high school guidance counselor.
I was like, oh, what about nuclear engineering?
They were like, that's a dead field.
don't do that.
I was like, okay, great.
But in college, I got the opportunity to do a research thing as a freshman.
And it was just, you know, you interview some labs and they interview you and you get matched.
And I ended up working at the research reactor on campus at Penn State.
Wait, sorry, they have a research reactor.
Penn State.
Yeah.
Great school, but also a great party school.
Yep.
They have a nuclear reactor at Penn State?
They do.
I'm sure there are more STEM-oriented listeners who knew all this already.
But Dr. Slabaut explained to me that there's about 25 American college campuses,
mostly big schools like UT Austin and Kansas State,
where undergrad's fuds around with small nuclear reactors, research reactors,
learning how they work.
They're not producing significant energy.
You can't melt down the quad with them if things go wrong,
but they're real reactors.
So you're working on a research reactor at Penn State.
and like what's happening in that room with the research reactor?
Yeah, but I started out in educational outreach,
and so I learned all about nuclear energy,
and I was like, wait, a thing, the size and shape of a coal plant
that doesn't emit air pollution,
it's like, why don't we do more of that?
Well, these other clean electricity sources have more time to scale up.
So for me, I learned about nuclear,
and I was like, this seems like a very obvious environmental choice,
and that's how I got here.
This early time at the reactor would set Rachel on a path.
She'd get her PhD in nuclear engineering.
She'd then become a tenured professor at Berkeley, then to the federal government,
where she'd work for an agency for advanced research projects and energy.
These days, she's a climate investor at a big firm called DCVC,
where she invests in nuclear, among other things,
20 years spent on every side of this, academic, public, private.
I asked Rachel, as is the podcaster's privilege,
to use her expertise to explain nuclear physics,
from the 101 level up.
Starting with this,
all nuclear power plants right now
run on nuclear fission.
What's nuclear fission?
So at the base level, fission
is when a heavy atom
absorbs a neutron.
And so the heavy atom is like
energetically unstable.
And it's so unstable
that adding a neutron
provides enough energy
that it causes that unstable
atom to split into two pieces.
And it splits into two new atoms and releases more neutrons when it splits,
and it releases energy in the form of kinetic energy.
Rachel explained that in a nuclear reactor, atoms are split in a controlled chain reaction.
The heat this reaction generates then turns water into steam.
The steam spins a turbine, and the turbine generates electricity.
To Rachel, the exciting part of all this when she'd learned about it is what happens next,
or actually what doesn't happen.
A nuclear power plant does not emit carbon, just water vapor.
The big environmental downside to this whole process, of course, is nuclear waste, which we'll get into later.
But that brief explanation of nuclear fission, how it works, just that knowledge, once humanity had learned it, was powerful.
It contains the seed of everything that would follow.
Nuclear weapons, nuclear power, the entire atomic age.
Here is the story of how human beings first figured nuclear energy out.
Two scientists worked out on a walk in the snow over Christmas week.
Leis Maitner, who'd fled Nazi Germany that summer,
and her nephew Otto Frisch, who'd come to visit her in Sweden.
On their walk, they were talking about a letter he'd gotten from a colleague
describing the results of a strange experiment.
He'd been bombarding uranium, like the metal, with neutrons,
and noticed that something surprising happened.
When he smashed neutrons into uranium, he'd ended up with another metal, barium, that's much smaller than uranium.
Scientists already knew at the time that uranium was unstable.
What Maitner and Frisch worked out on their walk in the snow was that you could actually split a uranium atom in two.
And that when you did, it would release energy.
Lots of energy.
Maitner and Frisch scratched out these first calculations together out there in the snow.
It was 1938.
And it happened to be in the middle.
of a world war, so that obviously affected the trajectory of this technology.
This is writer Rebecca Tujus Dubrow.
She wrote a book about all this, including the strangeness of how nuclear power
happened to have been discovered at the exact moment when our country was willing to use it
as a weapon.
There was a famous letter that Einstein co-wrote to President Roosevelt.
The letter basically said that this phenomenon had been discovered and that it's
it could be an important source of energy in the future.
And then it mentioned that there was also the possibility
that it could be used to create a really powerful weapon
and that there was reason to believe that Nazi Germany was working toward that.
So that was basically the impetus for the Manhattan Project.
It was spurred partly by fear that Nazi Germany was working on this and would get there first.
We all know how that story ends.
The atomic bomb.
The U.S. killing hundreds of thousands of people in her,
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
But after the war, there's this push in America to use nuclear for something besides a weapon
of war.
So pretty soon after the war, there was a lot of excitement about turning to the civilian uses,
building reactors, and there were a few motives for that, I would say.
One was, interestingly, this sort of desire to redeem the horror of the atomic bomb.
You might think the reaction would have been, wow,
this is really scary, we should just avoid this kind of technology at all costs.
But in fact, it was the opposite.
It was like we should really use this in a constructive way.
At United Nations headquarters in New York,
United States President Eisenhower arrives to make a proposal
for the constructive use of atomic power.
So in the 50s, Eisenhower had an initiative called Adams for Peace.
Fellow delegates gives me great.
pleasure to present to you the President of the United States of America.
So it was in front of the delegates from the United Nations.
At the UN headquarters in New York, he gives this speech where he kind of reviews the dangers
of atomic weapons and the existential threat they pose.
The United States stockpile of atomic weapons, which of course increases daily, exceeds by many times the
the total equivalent of the total of all bombs and all shells that came from every plane and
every gun in every theater war in all of the years of World War II.
But he says, you know, if I just stopped there, that would be a tragedy and we have to
look to the possibilities from this new technology as well.
It is not enough to take this weapon out of the hands of the soldiers. It must be put
into the hands of those who will know how to strip its military case and adapt it to the arts of peace.
And that was kind of the dawn of the nuclear age was what we would now call, I think, techno-optimist,
but a very like sharing, let's use energy to pull people out of poverty, let's make this available everywhere.
So at first, there wasn't a lot of worry.
Generally, the public was on board.
There was all this relief that the war was over and excitement about.
modern prosperity and people were getting all these gadgets and washing machines and dishwashers.
And I think a general feeling of excitement about modernity in the future.
It really was presented quite favorably in the media.
As you can see, we found ourselves deep in the field of nuclear physics.
Of course, we don't pretend to be science.
We're storytellers.
There was a Disney program called Our Friend Vietam.
And here to tell you the story of our friend the atom.
is the author of our book, Dr. Hines-Hobber.
This old TV episode, viewers would have watched on their sets in 1957,
was during the wave of real excitement about our nuclear future.
In the clip, Walt Disney himself appears to explain how we're on the precipice of something wonderful,
an atomic age, then hands off to a German scientist holding a storybook,
here to tell us in Disney terms about what's going to happen next.
As we developed our story of the atom, we made an amazing discovery.
We had a science story, but suddenly we realized that it was almost like a fairy tale.
It starts with a man finding a bottle in the ocean, and a genie pops out and basically says that the atom has all of these incredible powers and it has risks.
But if we can make it our friends, then we'll have all of these wonders in our lives.
That was a very, I think, influential piece of propaganda at the time.
That's crazy to imagine like Disney selling nuclear power.
It's just so weird that they ended up as part of the propaganda of this.
I mean, the government was deeply involved at every level in every stage of this.
It was subsidizing nuclear power plants in various ways, in part by giving them backup insurance in the case of accidents.
So the government was definitely pushing it pretty hard.
Looking back at the numbers from our era of peak nuclear optimism, roughly the 1960s to the mid-70s,
it's just a very different America.
The federal government built the first commercial nuclear power plant in the U.S. in
1957 in Shipping Port, Pennsylvania.
But in the 60s, private investment begins to pour in.
Slowly at first, Oyster Creek powering parts of Jersey, dressed in one in Illinois, Yankee
Roe in Massachusetts.
But it takes off because in the 60s, America's electricity needs were skyrocketing.
Nuclear was part of the solution.
The big cost was building the plants themselves,
but interest rates were low that decade,
great time to finance construction.
By the late 60s, U.S. utilities had ordered over 50 new nuclear reactors.
In the next decade, they would order another 196.
Everyone thought this was just the beginning.
The federal government forecast that by the year 2000,
roughly half our grid would be nuclear powered.
There would be 1,000 nuclear reactors in America.
Of course, that's not what happened.
Here's Rachel.
You know, it's an interesting thing because the turn sort of happened before the accidents.
It was like a little bit happening in combination.
Like there was sort of conservation in the oil shock.
So energy growth really shifted, right?
We were growing and then conservation became more important and we stopped growing in energy as much.
And I'm going to have a pretty U.S. perspective here.
the United States, instead of building like one product, we're going to build over and over again and get really good at.
Every reactor was a little bit different from every other reactor.
So like reactors never got cheap because everyone was a special snowflake.
And so you kind of have these reactors that are just getting more expensive.
And then in the 80s you have super high interest rates.
And so now you can't afford to build one of these projects.
So electricity demand is flattening.
Interest rates are really high.
These projects have gotten out of control and expense.
And so, of course, we're not going to build any nuclear reactors.
So before there's sort of public catastrophes, the problem is the upfront cost of building a reactor is really high.
And so if electricity costs aren't high, and because the reactors themselves hadn't been getting cheaper because people were sort of building a different mousetrap every time, the sort of public energy was against it, not so much because.
because people were scared, but because it's like, there's a really expensive to build and we don't need them.
Yeah.
And then the environmentalist movement in the 70s was kind of anti-energy overall because they felt like having more energy was going to do damage to the environment.
And what was their theory for, like, why did they think more energy was necessarily bad then?
It was really like an environmentalist utopia, like we just want to return to the earth kind of a thing.
So we just don't want it to be too easy for people to develop.
And it was really this idea of like, we should just use less of everything.
So you had higher interest rates on construction,
but really what you had were environmental activists,
who were beginning to change the public's mind.
In the 70s, nuclear sentiment was beginning to soften.
What was really taking off was the idea that you would not want a nuclear power plant in your backyard.
Folk musicians were getting very into this.
There were no nukes concerts.
And then this movie comes out.
A hit nuclear disaster film in 1979 called The China Syndrome.
Clearly people were not that excited about nuclear
if you have this nuclear meltdown disaster movie.
And I haven't watched it for all of my 20 years.
But basically, there's a reactor that melts down
and then they try to cover it up.
But the reason it's called China syndrome is they're like,
ah, this plant is going to keep melting down,
and the reaction's running away,
and it's going to melt all the way through the earth to China.
If the core is exposed, for whatever reason,
the fuel heats beyond core heat tolerance in a matter of minutes.
Nothing can stop it.
And it melts right down through the bottom of the plant,
theoretically to China.
Which is not how nuclear meltdowns work, by the way.
But so they were saying that the radioactive material
would burn through the earth.
Like when you're a kid and your parents say you can take a hold of China?
Yeah.
That seems wrong.
It is not correct.
And then I would say the nail in the coffin was Three Mile Island that happened
like a couple weeks or ten days or something after that movie came out.
For many years, there has been a vigorous debate in this country about the safety of the
nation's 72 nuclear energy power plants.
That debate is likely to be intensified because of what happened early this morning at a
nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania.
March 28th, 1979 in Pennsylvania.
It's the middle of the night and something's gone wrong.
At about 4 o'clock this morning, two water pumps that help cool reactor number two shut down.
Backup systems come online to fix the problem, except now there's some valve that's supposed to close, and it doesn't.
Officials say some 50 to 60,000 gallons of radioactive water escaped into the way.
Coolant is pouring out of the reactor.
The risk, obviously, is overheating, that the nuclear fuel rods could melt.
down. The human operators are getting bad information from their gauges. They mistakenly think the
reactor is getting too much coolant water, so they cut the water back further. With that system down,
there was no way to draw heat out of the cooling water that circulates through the reactor itself.
Again, the fuel rods do start to melt. About half the reactor core will melt before anyone
correctly diagnoses the problem. When fuel rods melt, they release radioactive isotopes
you would not want to ingest. And the molten fuel itself turns into a dangerous sludge
called Corium, Nuclear Lava.
He would not want to be anywhere near it.
This is the point where everyone's in danger.
This is the nightmare scenario.
Except at Three Mile Island, the corium was successfully contained.
It pooled within the vessel that was meant to hold it in the disaster.
Nobody died.
And the radiation that was released was small enough that long-term studies have not found clear evidence of health effects in the people who lived by the plant.
The facts of Three Mile Island offer a story really about the airbag deploying, the seatbelt working.
But that's not how the story of Three Mile Island was metabolized by the American public.
Seven years later, of course, there'd be a real deadly nuclear disaster in the Soviet Union, Chernobyl.
But America had turned on nuclear before that.
And Dr. Slaibar thinks part of the reason really was this movie, the China Syndrome.
People treated it almost like a documentary.
And so, like, you've just watched this movie, and then there is a meltdown.
Like, you would be terrified.
Yeah, and nuclear in particular is like, it's both super complicated, kind of hard to picture outside of most of my nuclear reactor reference are pop culture.
And then when it breaks, it's so visceral.
And so the way it shows up in your imagination and the way it shows up on a graph are just very divergent.
There's a bunch of things here, but if you look at what are the factors that go into human threat.
perception, our threat perception was not designed for big complicated systems, right? It was designed
for, like, hunting animals. And so things that distort the level of threat we perceive for something
is those kinds. So if you think about, okay, it's way more dangerous to drive than fly, but people
are afraid to fly and they're not afraid to drive, it's that same thing, but like even more intense.
And it feels like it has grave consequences. Like one car accident is, you know, a few people.
but a plane crash is a lot of people.
It feels like a big consequence.
And even if the nuclear consequences actually aren't that high,
the news coverage leads us to think something else.
So Three Mile Island is an interesting example
where no one was actually harmed by radiation in Three Mile Island.
Zero.
But it felt so scary and, you know, people were evacuating
and there was a lot of misinformation.
And so the increase of stress-related health
effects in the Harrisburg area went up. So there were real health impacts, but it was because of fear,
not because of radiation. Right. It's so strange that part of solving the energy problem is about
solving a problem of human psychology. Yeah. The problem only got harder to solve a few years later,
of course, with Chernobyl, somewhere around 30 immediate deaths, thousands more expected in the long
term from cancer. Of course, the plan at Chernobyl had insane design problems you would not find
an American nuclear plant.
For instance, the Soviet reactor was a kind of design where if it started to overheat,
the reaction would actually speed up, not slow down, like in an American reactor.
Just a run-down late Soviet experiment.
But for many Americans, this kind of mental composite image formed.
Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, atomic bombs, movies about nuclear death,
nuclear development in America chilled.
Other countries continued to pursue nuclear,
although even that cooled down somewhat after the Fukushima meltdown in Japan in 2011.
A 9.0 earthquake triggered a tsunami, which flooded the reactor seawall.
There was one confirmed death from radiation exposure,
but over 2,200 people died in the hurried evacuation away from the plant.
In the aftermath of that, countries like Germany wound down their nuclear programs.
Other countries kept going, most notably France,
where today 70% of all electricity comes from nuclear.
their carbon footprint per citizen per year is much lower than ours.
Four and a half tons per person to R14.
We just took a different path in America.
Nuclear technology is a place where we stopped advancing for decades.
After the break, our second age of much more cautious atomic optimism.
Welcome back to the show.
During the pandemic was the first time I started to become aware of pro-nuclear sentiment developing on my internet.
I saw more people talking about nuclear.
positively, openly, in a way that seemed sincere,
not just like posters slinging unorthodox takes for clout.
That's when I'd looked at public polling
and learned that America was just much more gung-ho on this
than I'd realized, for my bubble.
I asked Dr. Slaba whether she'd felt public sentiment
turned pro-nuclear in the last decade.
Radically.
And in a way that sort of came...
It kind of came out of nowhere?
Like, your perceptions it came out of nowhere?
or as far as you can tell it really came out of nowhere?
Both.
I think from in the nuclear industry,
it feels like all of a sudden everyone has,
it's like, oh, you finally read the data we've been reading,
is kind of how it feels.
And that's not actually what happened.
Like a whole bunch of things have changed.
Some of it is generational.
Like, there are fewer old greens out there,
like pounding the pavement against nuclear.
Millennials are largely more interested in nuclear
because climate change is really scary
and they can, you know, read the numbers.
And they're like, oh, yeah, this thing makes sense.
And what has really shifted now
is we're back to a world of load growth
and we're like, what are we going to do?
Load growth, meaning like the load on the energy system.
Yeah, yeah, higher electricity demand.
So spiking electricity demand
is making people want to rapidly spin up more nuclear power.
And one way to do that is to actually just take nuclear plants
that were previously shut down and bring them back.
It's called recommissioning.
Recommissioning old plants is both technical,
and politically easier than building new ones,
so you can get more power faster.
Palisades Nuclear Plan in Michigan,
Dwayne Arnold Nuclear Plan in Iowa,
and the famous one you've heard of,
Three Mile Island is also coming back.
What I found interesting is that two of those plants
are being brought online specifically for tech companies.
The power they'll generate has already been sold to Google and to Microsoft.
If you told me in 1995 that Microsoft
would restart Three Mile Island,
to deal with the rising energy demand,
partly caused by teenagers using computers
to cheat on their homework.
I would have had follow-up questions.
Of course, the next generation nuclear
isn't just recommissioning older plants.
People also want to build newer, more high-tech ones.
Advanced reactors.
There's a few different categories these reactors.
Some of them vary unlike the nuclear reactors I was used to.
I'm going to tell you about them.
So some of these advanced reactors fall under a category
called Generation 4 reactors.
Generation 4 reactors are designed to be safer than the reactors we have now.
Some use different coolant.
Some might use a different kind of fuel.
But the most interesting ones have this slightly hard-to-explain quality called inherent safety characteristics.
An inherent safety characteristic is one that removes a failure mode from the equation altogether.
So you're removing a way that something could go wrong.
This is a nuclear policy wonk I spoke to named Dr. Adam's
Stein from the Breakthrough Institute.
He was walking me through this idea of redesigning reactors, so they have fewer parts that
can fail.
You're not adding another safety system to protect something.
You're finding something that could go wrong and just totally removing it from the system.
Some advanced reactors might not have a pump in the system at all.
It could just use physics to make the fluid flow as it gets hotter or colder on different
sides.
So then the pump being removed creates inherent safety
because the pump miller can fail if it doesn't exist in the system.
Reactors with inherent safety designs are not theoretical.
They exist.
Other countries like China and Russia have built them.
I've looked at pictures of these.
They don't always have the iconic nuclear reactor cooling towers.
Instead, they often look like industrial compounds
filled with a handful of boxy buildings.
Some of these Gen 4 reactors are expected to be large reactors.
These will be the size of the nuclear reactors you're used to, producing a gigawatt or more of electricity.
Full-sized plants meant to replace the kind of nuclear power we have now, just safer and more efficient.
No large Gen 4 reactors exist anywhere in the world today.
Russia has a 1.2 gigawatt Gen 4 reactor, expected to come online in the 2030s.
China is also expected to be a player in this market.
But at least in the U.S., Rachel doesn't believe that building reactors at this scale seems very feasible.
The big reactors, it's just they're expensive, and we have not proven we can build them
repeatedly and cost effectively. And because they're so expensive, there just aren't that many
groups with a balance sheet big enough to build one of them. And so they're difficult to finance.
The cost of financing is very high. And generally speaking, like, is America still leading
on the technological development for nuclear or is it happening in other countries? Like,
What does that look like?
I mean, it depends on what you mean.
We are in many, many categories, not just vision, but vision is one of them.
We're leading on like the innovation.
So development of like idea development, inventing the new things.
But mostly China is leading on actually building the new things and deploying the new things.
And why is that?
Some of it is the way that we are structured.
we have a lot more capital for early ideas, and we have a lot less appetite for sort of like first-of-a-kind plants or second-of-a-kind plants.
Things are more expensive here. And this is true largely also in Western Europe, where we're just not very good at building mega-projects of any kind.
Like, you know, the Bay Bridge was triple budget, triple schedule. If you add radiation, that doesn't make it any better.
Right.
And there are other countries that are actually good at megaprojects.
And a lot of that has to do with vertical integration of the construction companies.
They don't have subcontractors.
They have complete designs before they start building things.
They build the same thing over and over again the same way, whereas we have subcontractors who are suing each other while the project is going on.
And it's not only their projects can be more cost effective because they're better at building megaprojects.
They also have a government with a much clearer top-down mandate that just funds the things they want to happen.
In the U.S., where we don't have a government that builds its own big nuclear megaprojects,
some private companies are now aiming at a different approach.
A few nuclear startups have just decided, okay, what if we made nuclear reactors smaller?
Which leads us to our next category, small modular reactors.
Small modular reactors are advanced nuclear power plants
that produce anywhere from 50 to 300 megawatts of electricity.
Enough electricity to power a big town or a small city.
You can see pictures of them online.
They run the gamut.
Some just look like small factory buildings.
Others have swooping solar roofs, Star Wars architecture.
The main thing here, though, is the size and the modular part of it all.
The theory is that by building the same thing over and over again
to the same specifications in a factory setting,
that eventually you can get costs to come down.
There was an understanding that one of the main cost drivers
for the existing reactors
was that you're building almost everything on site.
You were shipping some large components in,
but you're basically constructing it like a Lego set on site.
So shifting to a smaller size allows you to build a lot more
and fully assemble it in a factoring.
setting. The way that most people say this is you're building an airplane instead of an airport.
Meaning small modular reactors are helpful because their design is standardized. So in theory,
you can build them more cheaply at scale in a factory. In Wyoming right now, one relatively small
nuclear project has broken ground. It's actually a project from Bill Gates' nuclear startup.
It's supposed to be online in 2030. These small modular reactors, their size also means we can just
slot them in to replace older non-nuclear power plants that we want to take offline.
Say, a coal-burning plant, we want to decommission.
But there's another challenge people want to try to use nuclear energy for.
What about getting power to extremely remote parts of the world?
Like a tiny Alaskan village.
This brings us to our last category, microreactors.
Microreactors really are quite micro.
Small enough to be easily transported wherever they need to go.
Picture a rectangular box the size of the shipping container you'd see on the back of a truck, but sleeker.
Microreactors are designed for places that do not currently have grid access.
Some of the earliest concepts of microreactors were aimed at powering very small island
or very close to the Arctic Circle communities that currently use small diesel generators
and have supply chain problems with diesel or their diesel.
gums up when it gets extremely cold and they have no power.
So basically anywhere that you would put a diesel generator is where you would use a
microreactor.
I see.
And most of those locations are just like not that easy to get to.
The logistics of diesel fuel are complicated.
Diesel generators are smelly and they make a lot of local air pollution and they're loud.
Diesel generators are not great.
So micro reactors are billed as a clean solution to the problem of powering remote communities.
In theory, a microreactor would fit in my bag.
backyard in Brooklyn and could power my whole neighborhood. In practice, I don't think anybody's
going to let me do that. Nimby's. However, Rachel says there are a lot of other possible use
cases for a microreactor. As EVs expand, and we need EVs charging stations kind of in the
middle of nowhere, you can imagine applications like, oh, it's probably easier to build a microreactor
than transmission. Right. Is there a world where in 25 years, I'm like, I'm going on a camping
trip. I'm going to go to Walmart and buy a nuclear generator for the trip? I think probably not.
I think by then it might be you're going on a camping trip and you have like your EV power station and maybe you plug it into a nuclear charging station somewhere or maybe you have solar panels with you.
So what I should picture is I'm going to plug the same plug into the same things, but more nuclear might be on the other end of the plug.
Yeah.
So that's the dream that Rachel and Adam have, but they're nuclear optimists.
So let's talk about some of the obstacles here.
The big ones, the ones you do a whole other story on, are just cost and speed.
Can we actually make new plants without years and years of expensive delays and cost overruns?
The pessimists say no, that solar plus batteries is already cheaper and getting cheaper still.
The optimists point out that renewables can't provide the round-the-clock firm power data centers need.
But even the optimists concede that for this to work, they'll need to surmount some real obstacles.
A big one, regulation.
Over the past half century, for both understandable reasons, as well as, frankly, political overreaction,
we've added a mountain of regulation and bureaucracy and licensing requirements that make building nuclear in America very hard and very slow.
Particularly if you want to build a reactor that is a novel design, since novel designs need novel regulations to test their safety.
So to license a newer advanced reactor design that generally uses slightly different fuel or slightly different coolant fluids, they needed to seek exemptions and prove to the regulator why this change is acceptable, it's safe, it's necessary, and this made the regulatory process very cumbersome.
Congress has been trying to get the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to speed up its regulatory review for,
many years.
Well, thank you very much.
We have a very big announcement today and has to do with nuclear energy and other things.
And this is all nuclear.
It's a hot industry.
It's a brilliant industry.
You have to do it right.
The recent executive orders from last year said the NRC has to get applications reviewed
within 18 months.
Well, thank you, President Trump.
This is a huge day for the nuclear industry.
Mark this day on your calendar.
This is going to turn the clock back on over 50 years of over-rength.
regulation of the industry. America has always, America has always,
our president, when he's not putting his face on U.S. passports or demolishing parts of the White House or starting wars like a child to have focused on a game of risk,
sometimes he tries to make nuclear regulation work a little faster. If your uncle challenges you to say one nice thing about the administration at Thanksgiving, there you go.
But there's another obstacle besides regulation. It has to do with nuclear fuel. So here's a question I never.
asked myself, where, historically, has the United States gotten much of its enriched uranium
for its existing nuclear power plants? Well, it turns out from a country that we do not have a
totally consistently tranquil working relationship with? Russia. Bill Clinton struck an unusual
deal with Boris Yeltsin back in the day. Nine months ago, President Yeltsin and I met in Vancouver,
and there we laid the foundation for a new partnership.
It was due to drawing down weapons, actually.
Second, President Yeltsin and I agreed that as of May the 30th,
the nuclear missiles of Russia and the United States
will no longer be targeted against any country.
In the Megatons-to-Megawatts project,
we agreed with Russia that we would draw down our nuclear arsenals.
With U.S. assistance, we will continue to
process weapons grade uranium into fuel uranium.
And those would be reprocessed essentially into fuel, which we used in our reactors in the U.S. to make
electricity.
We also signed a contract to purchase $12 billion of highly enriched uranium over the next 20 years.
So the legacy, like, post-Cold War, all the sort of nuclear material that would have gone
into pointing rockets or whatever at each other, we've been basically importing.
that nuclear material from Russia to fuel reactors. That material is used up at this point,
but we did do that for many years, yes. But it seems, it seems slightly crazy that we were
depending on the idea that things would remain good with Russia. Like I understand the idea that
countries specialize, but it seems surprising to me that we were not prepared for the idea
that we would have conflict with a country that we often have conflict with. There had to be some
trust in that deal for it ever to work. The bigger concern was,
drawing down the warheads.
Right, right.
And if that could be achieved, then other supply chain risks were essentially considered to be
worth it at the time.
Of course, 2022, Russia invades Ukraine.
Afterwards, Congress votes for an import ban.
No more enriched uranium from Russia for us.
We lost access to our best uranium connect.
We're rebuilding our domestic enrichment capacity, but these things take time.
The final obstacle we're going to discuss here, one you've probably been.
probably heard of, nuclear waste.
Nuclear waste, the leftover radioactive material from nuclear reactors, is unfortunately
radioactive for hundreds of thousands of years, and during that time, it also generates
heat, which means essentially you need to find a place where you can bury it very deep
underground in a container that can hold it and find a local community that's okay being a home
for all that.
I asked Rachel what her answer is to critics who say that
nuclear waste might be just too big a problem to solve.
Yeah. How do they feel about waste of other energy technologies and how responsible those other
energy technologies need to be for their waste?
Meaning what? Meaning like we're okay with carbon emissions.
We're okay with carbon emissions. We're okay with fly ash ponds, not to hate on wind and solar,
but there are toxic materials in wind and solar panels that are pretty large in volume.
Like, nuclear isn't the only technology that produces waste.
And the reason nuclear is so interesting is the energy density is so high.
An amount of nuclear fuel the size of a gummy bear is the same as three barrels of oil or one ton of coal.
One gummy bear, same amount of electricity as one ton of coal.
So it is a real issue that we do need to be responsible for.
But we're starting with it's just not that much waste.
And the waste isn't like off in the air somewhere where it's hard to capture like we know where it is.
It's controlled.
We're taking care of it today.
And there are a lot of technical solutions.
It is mostly a political problem.
And I do not want to minimize how difficult political problems are to solve.
But the waste can be disposed of or the waste can be recycled.
There are a lot of choices.
And one of the reasons we have not solved.
Nuclear waste is it's a problem with very low urgency.
This is actually the part of the nuclear optimist's argument that lands least strongly for me.
I just, I understand why there are people who can tolerate unsafe smog in the air, but not nuclear waste in the ground, at least not near where they live.
Even if they've been told by very smart people that the containment technology works, I wouldn't live in that neighborhood.
I like poking at a radioactive idea.
I would not want to live near radioactive waste.
But I was also surprised to learn.
There are communities in America
where the voters feel otherwise.
They trust the science more,
or maybe they're willing to tolerate the risk
because they know it's not just nuclear waste storage
they're agreeing to,
but also nuclear jobs and nuclear investment.
And there's now some political momentum
towards allowing those places to decide for themselves,
to become storage sites if that's what they want.
That's where things stand with nuclear right now.
It's safe for.
than we thought it was. The cost and speed of deployment issues are real. The nuclear waste problem
is both a technical and a political one. All those things are real. All of them might not matter much
because of the iron fact we opened our story with. Demand. Any energy source you can think of
that you might want to use instead of nuclear, environmentally friendly or not, is being recruited
for the great data center wars of the mid-2020s. The data centers have already purchased out to 2030
every gas turbine that the world can produce.
The interconnection cues for adding new generators to the grid are overflowing.
The demand is huge.
Renewables can be part of the solution,
but if data centers continue to buy the output of even existing nuclear plants,
then we need to replace that energy for the rest of the market.
And if we can't buy new gas turbines because the data center companies have already purchased
those, then what other option do we have? We have returning to retired plants, such as coal plants,
to the market, which is happening in some cases, or building renewables. But nuclear has to be
part of that equation if we're going to even meet this demand curve. And if we don't meet the
demand curve, then prices are going to keep going up. So we need to build, and we need to build
quickly. Dr. Adam Stein of the Breakthrough Institute. We'll have links to his work and to other guests
in our show notes.
This story we just played you about nuclear,
it's actually part of a very informal series
we're going to return to this year.
Energy year at Search Engine.
Rising electricity costs
in all the weird and interesting ways
people are trying to solve that problem,
we're just really curious to learn
and explore more here.
If you're curious about geothermal,
about solar, about the grid itself,
we're working on some stories for you.
And if you're someone
who we can learn from about these topics,
please shoot us an email, PJVote85 at gmail.com.
Lastly, if you're just confused as to why AI is sucking up so much of our energy supply,
please check out our series Colossus.
We published it just a little while back.
It features the great reporter Shruti Pinnamini.
That's our show this week.
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All right, Armand. Roll the credits.
Search Engine is a presentation of Odyssey.
Who's created by me, PJ Vote, and Trudy Pinnaminani.
Garrett Graham is our senior producer.
Emily Maltaire is our associate producer.
Theme, original composition, and mixing by Armand Bizarrian.
Our production intern is Piper Dumont.
This episode was fact-checked by Madeline LaPlante Duby.
Our executive producer is Leah Rees-Dennis.
Thanks to the rest of the team at Odyssey,
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