Nuclear at 70: Federal Subsidies and Regulation Did Not Work

From MasterResource

By Robert Bradley Jr. — March 3, 2026

“Nuclear fission is the most complicated, fraught, expensive way to boil water to produce steam to drive electrical turbines.”

What U.S. industry is at once the most subsidized and regulated by the federal government? The answer is commercial nuclear power. As a result, the 73-year-old “Atoms for Peace” program represents the most expensive failure (malinvestment) in US business. potholed with uncompleted projects and massive cost overruns with completed projects. Future decommissioning costs will add to this liability.

But hyperbole rules with this technology, and there is always tomorrow. Forget that competitive viability did not emerge in the 1950s or 1960s, and George W. Bush and Joe Biden both failed at their attempted “nuclear renaissance.” Expect the same to result from today’s interventionist energy policy.

A future post will outline the crash attempt by President Trump and DOE secretary Chris Wright to get new nuclear capacity on track. Regulatory streamlining is not enough; taxpayer largesse (grants and loan guarantees) are required. This in itself is a red flag and violation of Free Market 101.

I recently prepared a White Paper for the American Institute for Economic Research (AIER), Nuclear Power: A Free Market Approach. I began that historical review with ten points, reproduced below.

Ten Points

  1. Commercial nuclear fission dates from the 1950s, a time when electricity was generated by fossil fuels (80 percent) and hydro (20 percent). Today, nuclear supplies 19 percent of US generation and 10 percent globally. Nuclear fusion remains in the laboratory with little prospect of foreseeable commercialization.
  2. Nuclear power is a government-enabled industry. It emerged from wartime R&D and continued under the postwar “Atoms for Peace” subsidy programs. The Price–Anderson Act of 1957, which capped liability payouts from nuclear accidents, was instrumental.
  3. Rate-base treatment under state-level public utility regulation was a de facto insurance policy for utilities to commit to experimental technology. A “bandwagon effect” occurred after Westinghouse and General Electric offered performance (“turnkey”) guarantees for new reactors, but losses ended the program and transferred risk to owners and ratepayers.
  4. Government subsidies incited multiple technical designs and plant-size escalation in the 1960s, all contributing to cost and construction failures in the next decade.
  5. Activist regulation by the Atomic Energy Commission/Nuclear Regulatory Commission contributed to cost overruns and completion delays. Extensions of the Price-Anderson Act (1966, 1975, 1988, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2024) have kept federal regulators in charge.
  6. Orders for new reactors ended in 1979, the year of the Three Mile Island accident. In response, nuclear utilities engaged in collaborative best practices that have proven effective for safety and reliability.
  7. New subsidies in the Energy Policy Act of 2005 resulted in four new reactors. Two were abandoned during construction, and two entered service after multiple delays and major cost overruns (2023, 2024).
  8. New subsidies in the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 were designed to keep existing units in operation and encourage new-generation Small Modular Reactors (SMRs). The Trump administration is expanding this Biden administration program with grants, guarantees, and executive orders.
  9. The quest for competitive commercial nuclear power has been long on promises and short on performance. Technological complexity and government policies have resulted in the worst of all worlds, with today’s situation not unlike that of the 1950s.
  10. A free-market approach to nuclear policy would entail the following: Ending governmental research and development in the field. Abolishing public grants and tax preferences for the industry. Halting foreign-loan guarantees. Repealing the Price-Anderson Act in order to privatize safety and insurance regulation. Lifting all antitrust constraints on industry collaboration. Making waste storage the responsibility of waste owners. Removing the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the US Department of Energy from civilian nuclear policy.

Sorry for the bad news. But the underlying fact is, nuclear fission is the most complicated, fraught, expensive way to boil water to produce steam to drive electrical turbines

I invite any nuclear expert or energy scholar to challenge any of the above points or to reach a different conclusion about imminent competitiveness. After all, I am energy-and-technology neutral, thus not “for” or “against” nuclear fission (or fusion) per se. May the best energies win.

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Sweet Old Bob
March 4, 2026 6:17 am

Under regulated and over subsidized …… wind and solar .

strativarius
March 4, 2026 6:23 am

wartime R&D “

Making bombs. Windscale (now Sellafield) was a case in point and also gave valuable insight on meltdown scenarios.

That was then and this is now. Fossil fuels can easily do the job, but if you really must go CO2 – sort of – free, then nuclear has to be the choice.

Reply to  strativarius
March 4, 2026 7:57 pm

That was a fire in the graphite moderator, not a meltdown. Bad enough though. Lessons learned were put in place in other graphite moderated reactors including the X10 reactor at Oak Ridge.

March 4, 2026 6:41 am

I’m guessing that the 95% of the article that promotes serious discussion items was written to hide the proposal to hide this turd mountain, “Repealing the Price-Anderson Act in order to privatize safety and insurance regulation.” Nope. If rules and regs need to be modernized, let’s rock. But we’re not going to do the Ben Dover and jet them altogether.

OTOH, I like “Making waste storage the responsibility of waste owners.” As long as we understand that we are talking a stewardship solution that gets us down the road far enough to protect the thousands of generations living close enough to be poisoned, and that those solutions are in place pre-construction, I’m in.

youcantfixstupid
Reply to  bigoilbob
March 4, 2026 8:03 am

“As long as we understand that we are talking a stewardship solution that gets us down the road far enough to protect the thousands of generations living close enough to be poisoned”

I’m flabbergasted that this canard is still front & center in people’s minds. Calling what is left over after use ‘waste’ is an entire misnomer. It’s ‘depleted material’, most if not all of the long lived radioactive nuclides can be reprocessed, recycled and reused (my ‘3Rs of nuclear fuel’). Everything left is relatively short lived (10s to 100s of years not thousands) and thus there’s no need to worry about ‘thousands of generations’.

This fundamentally demonstrates the problem with this industry in terms of over control by government. There’s simply no incentive for private industry to even try to properly frame the handling of post-use or ‘depleted material’.

Reply to  youcantfixstupid
March 4, 2026 8:18 am

Call it what you like, and recycle what you can. But you still are left with – yes – long lived nuc waste that needs long term storage. Tapping slippers 10 times doesn’t help. It’s still mostly being stored, unsafely, in the back 40 of virtually every US present and past nuc power facility.

Europe is now developing these solutions, and so should we. In fact, ironically, we have already made such a big problem for ourselves, that if we (finally) devise a permanent storage solution, the extra risk for adding more, later, would be negligible. Channels:

“I can’t swim!”
“The fall will probably kill you.”

Max More
Reply to  bigoilbob
March 4, 2026 8:35 am

It is being stored perfectly safely. You can go up to the containers and hug them and you will suffer no harm.

Reply to  Max More
March 4, 2026 10:45 am

Dream on. NO ONE believes that this is any more than an interim solution.

https://www.oecd-nea.org/brief/brief-03.html

“Storage cannot be relied upon in the long-term to provide the necessary permanent isolation of the wastes from man’s environment, and future generations should not have to bear the burden of managing wastes produced today. Seen from this perspective, while disposal of HLWis not an urgent technical priority, it is nevertheless an urgent public policy issue.”

George Kaplan
Reply to  Max More
March 4, 2026 6:53 pm

Permanent or temporary (transportation) storage? One leaks, the other shouldn’t.

Reply to  bigoilbob
March 4, 2026 8:36 am

But you still are left with – yes – long lived nuc waste that needs long term storage.

You should at least do some research before commenting. “youcantfixstupid” tried to give you a hint, but you just rejected it.

From Congressional Research Service https://crsreports.congress.gov R48364
dated January 23, 2025

About 95% of SNF consists of uranium from the fresh fuel that was originally loaded into the reactor and 1% consists of fissile plutonium produced from irradiated uranium, both of which can be used in new fuel. The remaining 4% of SNF consists of highly radioactive fragments of uranium and plutonium (fission products) that must be disposed of.

SNF is Spent Nuclear Fuel. The remaining 4% is what needs to be properly stored. The U.S. does not reprocess SNF currently so 100% is being stored. Take the space now being used and reduce by 96%. No longer a major issue.

Reply to  Jim Gorman
March 4, 2026 10:37 am

All la la land. Almost none of which is going on now – as you admit. Too eoxnsive, too impractical, and the stuff is functionally “Out Of Mind” now.

AGAIN, “Call it what you like, and recycle what you can. But you still are left with – yes – long lived nuc waste that needs long term storage.” Read for comprehension. If you actually DO this, as opposed to wishing for it, I’m all in.

Reply to  bigoilbob
March 4, 2026 5:16 pm

Other countries are doing reprocessing and doing it safely. Is it expensive? Probably. But, so is wind and solar. Some of the money invested in power generation from renewables that aren’t reliable, could be spent to do the reprocessing.

It is a matter of priorities, not feasibility.

Reply to  Jim Gorman
March 5, 2026 6:17 am

Our “priorities” are shaped by the short term economics of one time fuel production/use/temporary hide away. Just as with coal, oil, copper, gold, etc, we are loading our descendants up with life cycle asset retirement obligations. Many of which will fester and disproportionately handicap low income/net worth planet earthers until they demand tardy solutions.

Reply to  bigoilbob
March 5, 2026 6:56 am

Just as with coal, oil, copper, gold, etc, we are loading our descendants up with life cycle asset retirement obligations.

It is why I have long thought that depreciation expense for real property should be placed into trusts that are irrevocable even through bankruptcy. Once the real property has been remediated, any extra (if any) can be reused.

Reply to  Jim Gorman
March 5, 2026 7:12 am

Quite the constructive idea! But how would it apply to extractive activities with or without separated surface and mineral rights, on rented land? Not gotcha or rhetorical. You know more than me here.

And also IMO, renewable ops shouldn’t get off the hook either. The problem there is with site abandonment of those found to be built over sub par energy sources – the old Kern County California wind farms for example.

Reply to  bigoilbob
March 5, 2026 8:01 am

If you are talking about depletion allowances, those are a different issue. However, there is property depreciation on the physical equipment at a well. Remediation of an abandoned well would be covered by the depreciation fund.

Reply to  Jim Gorman
March 4, 2026 10:58 am

And why doesn’t the US reprocess? It’s done, safely, elsewhere.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
March 4, 2026 11:20 am

“And why doesn’t the US reprocess? It’s done, safely, elsewhere.”

We don’t do it here in the US because once-through nuclear fuel is currently cheaper than recycled nuclear fuel. This situation has the potential to change in the next several decades as cheaper technological means for recycling are developed.

Recycling of nuclear fuel is currently being done elsewhere because a public policy decision has been made in those countries which do it that some portion of their nuclear fuel supply must remain in house as a matter of national energy security.

The additional costs of their recycled fuel over once-through fuel is accepted by these countries as a necessary trade-off for gaining the desired energy security benefits.

MarkW
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
March 4, 2026 11:28 am

Because there are too many people like Bob who don’t want nuclear to succeed because they are afraid of things they don’t understand.

Reply to  MarkW
March 4, 2026 4:37 pm

Read my comments for comprehension. Big fan. But do it right, or not at all. As I spotted for this post, the real goal is to dereg, because (close eyes, click slippers) The Biz Can Regulate Itself.

Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
March 4, 2026 5:23 pm

Beta Blocker has given you a good answer. I would only add that it is basically a decision by government to not do it. To reprocess more than once requires fast reactors which have never been approved by the regulatory agencies. In addition, the plutonium that is recovered can be used in nuclear bombs. Many politicians feel doing this would be a slippery slope to our enemies doing the same.

Denis
Reply to  bigoilbob
March 4, 2026 12:38 pm

France has been getting the majority of it electricity from nuclear power plants for many decades; about 3/4 of it at present. They have also been reprocessing used fuel to recover fissile plutonium and uranium left behind for all that time. The recovered materials are used to make new fuel. I was once told by a French engineer that the leftovers from processing are turned into glass and “stored in a room in Le Hauge.” The US was developing reprocessing technology as well but that work was shut down by President Carter because of his odd thinking that practice would lead to proliferation of nuclear weapons.

Reply to  Denis
March 4, 2026 1:08 pm

If there is a viable solution, a la the French solution, then it should be pursued. I don’t think that a Carter opinion from over 45 years ago – with the 50 year old tech available at the time – is what’s stopping this. More likely, plain ol’ economics. From “too cheap to meter” to “too expensive to do properly, so let’s cut corners”. It’s just easier and cheaper to mine more uranium and push the issue down to the kids.

cementafriend
Reply to  youcantfixstupid
March 4, 2026 10:26 pm

The Chinese have in operation a Thorium nuclear reactor which can use up radio active waste as a fuel and are building a large new one. They have tens of new uranium nuclear reactors under construction and hundreds planned in various stages. Their waste will be fuel to the Thorium reactors in future.
Finland has shown that Nuclear Power stations are cheaper (80 year life) than any other power stations in Europe. The French have more than80% of their electricity from nuclear and are under way with constructing a new one with more planned. UAE has shown that Nuclear generation is cheaper than natural gas. Their permitting took a long time (because of all the nuclear scares) but the construction only took a few years. Their 4th unit was commissioned within one year.
The Russians have small modular reactors already for remote sites and vessels like tugs and icebreakers. The Chinese have sustained a fusion reaction over 5 minutes. Some wind and solar fields (large areas, noisy, unsightly and unreliable) have already closed. The public is coming to their senses. Remotely operated Nuclear power is the future. Hopefully, some socialist activists will be locked up for mental problems.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  bigoilbob
March 4, 2026 8:39 am

The states of Colorado, Wyoming, and Utah are underlain by groundwater flows which contain hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of kilograms of radioactive Uranium-235.

It is Uranium-235 which Mother Nature has seen fit to leach out of the granitic rocks underlying the Rocky Mountains and then to transport outward through the various stratigraphic layers of geology hosting those groundwater flows.

It gets worse. All that Uranium-235 is being continuously refreshed by these groundwater flows and will still be down there underfoot in Colorado, Wyoming, and Utah for thousands of generations into the future.

Except for those who rely on untreated groundwater for their potable water supply, next to no one in Colorado, Wyoming, or Utah cares about the presence of thousands if not millions of kilograms of U-235 underfoot. Nor should they.

Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 10:41 am

Ok? As I will repeat, if it’s safe, DO it. The Europeans are. Of course that begins with convincing the locals. FYI, it’s THEIR land, or at risk adjacent, so they get (and should get) veto power. No reason required.

MarkW
Reply to  bigoilbob
March 4, 2026 11:30 am

Says the guy who backs every attempt by others to make sure that nobody is allowed to “do it”.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  bigoilbob
March 4, 2026 11:42 am

On a related topic, disposition of civilian nuclear wastes, I will note here that the true reasons the Yucca Mountain project was shut down in 2009 and 2010 were these:

— Nuclear energy advocates in the US-DOE and inside the US Congress knew full well that burying our spent nuclear fuel underground makes no sense whatsoever. Sooner or later, likely within the next hundred years or so, our stock of spent nuclear fuel will be recycled, greatly reducing our nuclear waste volume.

— The Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) in New Mexico had come online in the mid-2000’s for handling radioactive defense wastes. The salt beds of the Salado Formation underlying WIPP are a near perfect host media for radioactive wastes which have no further economic value and which must remain isolated for millennia.

— Only a small portion of WIPP’s reserved area is needed for handling defense wastes. WIPP can be expanded to handle civilian nuclear wastes if and when the time comes to do so. WIPP’s successful startup in the mid-2000’s made Yucca Mountain a 100% total boondoggle.

And so the Congress supported Obama’s decision to shut down Yucca Mountain and defunded the Yucca Mountain project, giving Harry Reid an easy cost-free political win in the process.

Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 12:56 pm

If the WIPP can be “expanded” to handle nuc power waste, then why has it not been? Rhetorical. It is not big enough.

And where are these Bigfoot economic recycling/reprocessing efforts? And even if your wishes came true, your magic word here is “reduced”. There will still be a need for long term storage.

As to other locations, which state referendum approved them? I’ll wait. AGAIN, in the US, states have rights. BTW, I’m being passed a note. The depths below your back yard have been found to be a geologically acceptable site. As before, I’ll wait for your response.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  bigoilbob
March 4, 2026 4:22 pm

Roughly twenty square miles of New Mexico landscape underlain by the Salado Formation has been reserved for WIPP. Roughly two square miles are now being used for defense waste disposal. Volume limitations at WIPP are strictly administrative, not technical.

Waste management scientists already know that the Salado Formation of bedded dry salt has clear advantages over Yucca Mountain’s volcanic tuff from every waste management perspective — technical suitability advantages, operational advantages, and cost advantages.

WIPP has not yet been assigned the task of handling America’s civilian nuclear waste because as of yet, there has been no pressing environmental need to do so.

Interim storage of SNF on the surface will be perfectly safe for a hundred years or more. If a dry cask begins leaking, the spent fuel can either be moved to a new cask, or the old cask can be overpacked.

When the time comes that America begins reprocessing our spent nuclear fuel, then WIPP will become an expressly-identified candidate for permanent disposal of the wastes from reprocessing activities. If not the only expressly-identified candidate.

State approval will be necessary for WIPP to begin accepting civilian nuclear wastes. That approval will either be given, or it won’t. And if approval isn’t given, it will be denied for purely political reasons, not for valid concerns about WIPP’s suitability to host nuclear waste.

Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 4:30 pm

“WIPP has not yet been assigned the task of handling America’s civilian nuclear waste because as of yet, there has been no pressing environmental need to do so.”

Wrong. The buck passing neglect of waste now being “temporarily” stored on sites is indeed “pressing”. At least if you are interested in demonstrating the actual cradle to grave stewardship of nuclear power that we claim to want. Avoidance of this now facilitates the Delay And Deny practice of continued one time nuc fuel manufacture and use – as mentioned by other commenters here.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  bigoilbob
March 5, 2026 6:07 am

Sorry B-o-B, the nuclear fuel cycle ecosystem here in the United States has not yet evolved to the point where the WIPP facility in New Mexico must be opened to civilian nuclear wastes.

That day will come, eventually, but only when fuel reprocessing in the US begins in earnest when larger volumes of waste which have no future economic value are being generated. But we aren’t there yet.

sherro01
Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 2:36 pm

BB,
Why do you single out U-235 for your groundwater comments? There is also U-238 at 138 times more. Both have half lives of around a billion years, meaning that their natural radiation is harmless to people because they are so slow to decay.
Did you select U-235 because it is the fissile one that makes reactors work and so is better scare material?
Possibly a survey would show that those frightened by Uranium are also TDS sufferers. Geoff S

Beta Blocker
Reply to  sherro01
March 4, 2026 4:53 pm

Geoff, I did choose U-235 because it is the fissile component of the uranium now being transported and concentrated by the groundwater systems underlying Colorado, Wyoming, and Utah. It is therefore more scary, as you say.

By far the larger portion of the uranium in those groundwater systems is the U-238 component, likewise radioactive. So if we include U-238 as well, there are in fact some millions of kilograms of uranium floating around down there, not just hundreds of thousands of kilograms.

The fact is that a properly-packaged volume of nuclear waste material disposed of in the salt beds of the Salado Formation isn’t going anywhere, given that no water has been present in that formation for 250 million years.

Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 7, 2026 9:45 am

“The states of Colorado, Wyoming, and Utah are underlain by groundwater flows which contain hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of kilograms of radioactive Uranium-235.”

If what you state is true and relevant to the photograph that heads the above article (i.e., the pictured nuclear power plant is using groundwater to supply the cooling water to each of the steam-emitting cooling towers in the plant), then the matter goes far beyond what you assert.

That is,
— the emitted steam from each cooling tower is putting radioactive particles into the atmosphere (concentrated, of course, on humans, animals and plants that are in the prevailing downwind direction from the power plant), and
— the emitted steam is adding to the most powerful greenhouse gas in Earth’s atmosphere: water vapor.

Robbradleyjr
Reply to  bigoilbob
March 5, 2026 7:32 am

” … hide this turd mountain, ‘Repealing the Price-Anderson Act in order to privatize safety and insurance regulation’.” If nuclear is safe, what is the issue? And the collected monies ($7 billion?) would fund the changeover to private insurance.

ResourceGuy
March 4, 2026 6:43 am

Good job. Thank you for the sobering slap in the face. They need it.

Bruce Cobb
March 4, 2026 6:44 am

Over-regulation and rabid anti-nuke ideology and activism were what killed the nuclear industry. With some effort, I think nuclear fission could be brought back, to some extent at least. Nuclear went the same way coal did, and for a similar reason: irrational fear and hatred. Both could be brought back, but it won’t be easy, thanks to the envirodopes.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
March 4, 2026 12:01 pm

By the end of the 1980’s, the nuclear industry had learned all the hard lessons as to how a nuclear construction project could be kept on cost and on schedule. The American nuclear industrial base at the close of the 1980’s could deliver a nuclear power plant at the lowest possible cost within the NRC’s 1980’s regulatory environment.

Even without the burdens of NRC regulation, building a nuclear power plant is a highly complex endeavor.

What actually happened at the end of the 1980’s was that gas-fired power plants could be delivered faster and cheaper than nuclear. This happened within an environment where energy reliability and security issues were being systematically downplayed in favor of going for the very cheapest near-term energy solution that was possible. Gas-fired generation provided that cheaper near-term solution.

Mactoul
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
March 4, 2026 9:31 pm

NRC is more radiophobic than the general public.

Robbradleyjr
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
March 5, 2026 7:37 am

I disagree. If you read the long paper, the industry was noncompetitive before the 1970s backlash. Federal subsidies were crucial, and turkey projects in the 1960s were big money-losers for GE and Westinghouse.

ResourceGuy
March 4, 2026 6:49 am

What nuclear waste disposal? The set aside accounts for eventual placement will start to exceed the GDP of some countries at the rate its going.

Reply to  ResourceGuy
March 4, 2026 7:10 am

One of the original ideas of dropping the spent fuel to the bottom of the Mariana Trench is still the most viable.

rbcherba
Reply to  DMacKenzie
March 4, 2026 7:33 am

Unfortunately, that would throw away the ‘unspent’ portion of the spent fuel. Only about 5%, if I recall correctly, of the fuel is actually used up. 95% can be reprocessed for new fuel. Several countries reprocess nuclear fuel and we started to until Carter shut it down.

Reply to  rbcherba
March 4, 2026 10:50 am

Whatever is finally left over after all proper use- could it be shot into space? Into the sun? Isn’t the cost of moving stuff into space much cheaper now than decades ago?

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
March 4, 2026 11:02 am

OMG, launching nuclear materials into space? What if there is an accident? (Heard every time someone talks about this.) There are protesters at the ready to protest anything.

MarkW
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
March 4, 2026 2:24 pm

If it makes it into orbit, then it will either burn up on re-entry, spreading it over hundreds if not thousands of square miles, or it will come down in a single chunk ready to be picked up and stored again.
If it fails to make it to orbit, it will come down in a single chunk.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
March 4, 2026 11:05 am

Why not put it back in the exhausted uranium mines?

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
March 4, 2026 12:38 pm

“Why not put it back in the exhausted uranium mines?”

It makes no sense to bury our spent nuclear fuel. See my comment here.

cgh
Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 5, 2026 7:20 pm

Agreed. It can and eventually will be turned into new nuclear fuel.Until such time, it can be stored indefinitely,

Curious George
March 4, 2026 7:13 am

The article does not contain the word France. So much for objectivity.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Curious George
March 4, 2026 8:22 am

The decision by France more than four decades ago to go with nuclear power was strictly a public policy decision on their part. Their decision was made with the objective of insulating France from the fossil-fuel energy supply shocks of the 1970’s. For which they were obliged to pay a premium for nuclear’s energy security and reliability benefits, over and above what fossil-fueled power plants would have cost.

The French paid the lowest cost premium for nuclear they could get away with by choosing standard plant designs and by spending the money upfront needed to establish a robust French nuclear construction industrial base, one which could use high-efficiency teamwork methods to keep nuclear’s capital costs as low as practically possible.

Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 11:05 am

The French paid the lowest cost premium for nuclear they could get away with by choosing standard plant designs and by spending the money upfront needed to establish a robust French nuclear construction industrial base, …

Very smart decisions. However, the French nuclear fleet is nearing end of life, or will be soon. Are new nuclear plants being built to replace them?

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
March 4, 2026 12:05 pm

Macron is saying that a new generation of nuclear plants will be constructed. If that is to happen, the French must pay the upfront costs of reestablishing their nuclear industrial base to the same level of efficiency and capability as the one which existed fifty years ago in the mid-1970’s.

Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
March 5, 2026 6:50 am

do you live in France or do you just believe the mass media crap?

cgh
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
March 5, 2026 7:22 pm

No need to replace them. Simply refurbish them for continued operation. This has been carried out in lots of NPPs in North America. Ontario has added about four decades to the life of its NPPs.

The Expulsive
Reply to  Curious George
March 5, 2026 8:47 am

Or Jan Fonda…

Walter Sobchak
March 4, 2026 7:18 am

“Repealing the Price-Anderson Act in order to privatize safety and insurance regulation.”

You are apparently a member of the enormous club of people who do not understand Price Anderson. It does not shield the owners from liability. Their status as legal corporations does that. It imposes a strict liability scheme on owners of reactors. A person injured by a reactor accident does not have to prove negligence to obtain compensation. It also requires the owners to maintain insurance. It is a perfectly rational scheme for imposing liability and insuring against it. Without the law it would have taken years of litigation after an accident to figure out who is liable for what.

Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 7:57 am

Going with nuclear power is strictly a public policy decision. We buy nuclear for its energy security and reliability benefits, for which we are obliged to pay a premium over what gas-fired generation costs.

How much of a premium should we be willing to pay for the energy security and reliability benefits of nuclear? How much should we value those energy security and reliability benefits? These are public policy decision questions, not private investor decision questions.

Knowing that nuclear cannot match the costs of gas-fired generation, the clear answer is that we should pay the lowest premium for nuclear we can get away with.

Here in the US, reducing NRC regulations which involve LNT requirements and ALARA requirements will reduce capital costs somewhat, possibly ten to fifteen percent without affecting the basic nuclear safety features of new-build reactors.

However, the NRC’s nuclear quality assurance requirements cannot and will not go away for the simple reason that a nuclear power plant which has not been built to its design specification is an inherently dangerous nuclear power plant.

The single largest cost driver for nuclear power is the lack of a robust nuclear construction industrial base. Reducing nuclear’s capital costs from $18,000/kw to $8,000/kw will require firm orders for somewhere between ten and twenty AP1000-size 1200 MW nuclear reactors.

The same holds true for the 300 MW and smaller SMR reactors. The upfront costs of establishing a robust SMR industrial base must be paid by someone before the cost savings of scaled up production can kick in.

Private investors will not take on the risk of building those initial ten or twenty nuclear power plants. The only way that happens is for the federal and state governments to buy those initial ten or twenty plants, paying for them out of the public treasury.

Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 8:48 am

Not totally true. The biggest killer is that an anti-nuclear government, at any level, will step in 3/4ths of the way through and kill the project. Private investors can’t, won’t, and shouldn’t invest in an unreliable future outcome.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Jim Gorman
March 4, 2026 9:47 am

It is totally true. The amount of money needed upfront to establish a robust nuclear industrial base — one which can support firm orders for ten to twenty reactors and thus reduce nuclear’s capital costs from $18,000/kw to $8,000/kw — is so large that it is not in any private investor’s best interest to devote that kind of money to any individual project, or a collection of projects, when the return on the investment is so far out in the future.

Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 10:52 am

So, meanwhile, trillions of $$ are being invested in data centers and AI. I can only wonder if that expenditure is wiser than going big with nuclear.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
March 4, 2026 12:30 pm

Joseph, within the short timeframes they are expecting, it is highly unlikely these AI firms can get enough electricity from either the power grid or from behind-the-meter sources to support current AI computing architectures.

These AI firms must move to computational architectures which consume far less electricity than currently deployed architectures consume.

Advocates of distributed computing architectures claim they have the necessary technical solutions needed to greatly reduce AI’s power consumption needs. But it remains to be seen if these claims are valid.

Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 11:07 am

An can be endangered by a political reversal.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
March 4, 2026 12:13 pm

“An can be endangered by a political reversal.”

Absolutely. The Democrats have said that when they regain control of the federal government, they will reverse any and all policy decisions made by the Trump administration, returning the state of the nation to what it was in the summer of 2024 when Biden was president. And so Trump’s nuclear ambitions would be quickly cancelled along with every other policy decision he ever made while he was president. This would happen as much for spite as it would for sound policy decision making.

sturmudgeon
Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 1:03 pm

Mostly for ‘spite’; the word that governs Dems decision-making.

March 4, 2026 8:00 am

This article is garbage. In France currently the cost for residential electricity is 17 cents per kwh: for other users it is 27 cents per kwh due to tariffs and taxes. It can be done competitively with rational administration as France has demonstrated for over 50 years.

Compare that to Germany and California that have tried to go totally green; Germany over 41 cents and California in the low 30s. The cost of electricity in Germany is now having a severe impact of their manufacturing sector.

Reply to  drhealy
March 4, 2026 10:53 am

So, will any of the German companies move to France?

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
March 4, 2026 1:54 pm

Time will tell.

cgh
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
March 5, 2026 7:26 pm

Germany is already de-industrializing. Europe’s largest steelmaker Thyssen-Krupps terminated steel production in Germany. BASF has moved out of the country. Siemens started relocating manufacturing centres out of Germany in the 1990s.

Reply to  cgh
March 6, 2026 7:29 am

The politicians have bought into the globalist view that one doesn’t need to manufacture hard products to create wealth, One can create a service economy dedicated to “servicing” the wealth of others created by manufacturing hard products.

At least most of the Republican politicians in the US have woken to the fact that this is not a long-term solution to national policy. Trump, as a builder, understands what it takes to create real honest, down to earth wealth. You MAKE goods to sell at a profit. Paying someone a pittance to manage your profit doesn’t build wealth for the accountant.

KevinM
March 4, 2026 8:01 am

Article makes a big deal of subsidies given to nuclear. Please list the top three at least.

“As of early 2024, there are 54 nuclear power plants across 28 U.S. states, according to the U.S. Department of Energy” 

54 is not a big number to research if one is going to publish a definitive article.

cgh
Reply to  KevinM
March 5, 2026 7:28 pm

There are no direct financial subsidies to nuclear power in the US or anywhere else.

Jeff Alberts
March 4, 2026 8:18 am

The last nuclear accident of note in the US was 47 years ago (Three Mile Island). And no deaths or long term health effects were determined.

As far as waste goes, the French have been reprocessing their nuclear waste for decades, using up to 96% of the fuel potential.

Fear, leading to gross overregulation, which leads to vastly increased costs, is the primary factor stalling US nuclear power generation.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Jeff Alberts
March 4, 2026 9:52 am

Here in the US, reducing NRC regulations which involve LNT requirements and ALARA requirements will reduce capital costs somewhat, possibly ten to fifteen percent without affecting the basic nuclear safety features of new-build reactors.

However, the NRC’s nuclear quality assurance requirements cannot and will not go away — for the simple reason that a nuclear power plant which has not been built to its design specification is an inherently dangerous nuclear power plant.

The single largest cost driver for nuclear power here in the US is the lack of a robust nuclear construction industrial base. Reducing nuclear’s capital costs from $18,000/kw to $8,000/kw will require firm orders for somewhere between ten and twenty AP1000-size 1200 MW nuclear reactors.

Those orders are not in the cards unless the federal and state governments buy the reactors, paying for them out of the public till. It’s not going to happen any other way.

Mactoul
Reply to  Beta Blocker
March 4, 2026 10:13 pm

“a nuclear power plant which has not been built to its design specification is an inherently dangerous nuclear power plant”

More nuclear plants have been running safely in France, China, India and other places without the benefit of NRC design specifications.

Beta Blocker
Reply to  Mactoul
March 5, 2026 6:50 am

As someone who has done serious nuclear quality assurance, I am not talking about NRC-imposed design changes.

I am talking about the processes used to ensure that safety significant systems have been manufactured, fabricated, and installed to the design and performance specifications outlined in the plant’s design documents — regardless of how a given system came to be identified as safety significant.

One very large factor in the cost overruns experienced in the 1970’s and early 1980’s — and more recently at Vogtle 3 & 4 — was that plant licensees were not implementing the quality assurance programs they had described in their license applications.

The consequence was that much post-fabrication rework of systems and components was needed to fix those systems and components which had not been initially manufactured, fabricated, and/or installed to the original design specification.

For example, at Vogtle 3 &4, rework was needed for roughly 40% of the plant’s safety significant components and systems. That this happened was completely the fault of the plant’s owners, its EPC prime contractor, and the various subcontractors supporting the construction effort.

Reply to  Jeff Alberts
March 4, 2026 11:08 am

And that fear brings out the NIMBYs and the never-ending lawsuits, plus political action.

Max More
March 4, 2026 8:34 am

Nuclear energy should be operated on a free market basis, yes. What the author fails to realize is that nuclear can and should be FAR less expensive than it is. Not long ago, South Korea was building nuclear reactors for a quarter of the cost in the USA. The USA used to be able to build at much lower cost. The solution is a combination of deregulation (and rejection of LNT and ALARA) and legal reform to curtail insane lawsuits.

Sergio
March 4, 2026 8:48 am

In reality, since 1979 (Three Mile Island accident), politics has used nuclear power as a cash cow.

Even France, which has the highest density of nuclear power plants, has fallen into this quagmire for decades.

On the other hand, Russian technology has continued to advance, recently accelerating with the help of China, and is now generations ahead of Western technology: just look at the global market.

Small Modular Reactors have been well known from the beginning for their functionality and disproportionate costs (especially in safety), on submarines, aircraft carriers, and icebreakers (Russian); on paper they are fascinating but will always be a niche solution, so at the moment, with the technological delay of many generations, they should not even be considered because they distract and burn investments.

A general strategy is missing while there are still too many unnecessary rules.

It would be worth studying modestly the reasons for Russian/Chinese success and starting from there.

Reply to  Sergio
March 4, 2026 11:10 am

A general strategy is missing while there are still too many unnecessary rules.” Exactly.

Ex-KaliforniaKook
Reply to  Sergio
March 4, 2026 2:52 pm

No small reason for Russian/Chinese success is that there are no protesters or lawsuits trying to impede progress. Even if the US underwrote those protesters (as the Russian/Chinese do in the US) they would quickly be hauled off to work camps where their energy could be put to a productive use.

strativarius
March 4, 2026 8:50 am

Story tip – Mad Ed will not be best pleased

Rachel Reeves ‘committed’ to end windfall tax as she holds crisis talks with North Sea oil and gas bosses https://www.gbnews.com/money/rachel-reeves-end-windfall-tax-north-sea-oil-gas

Rud Istvan
March 4, 2026 8:51 am

In the US, CCGT is the lowest cost electricity generation. There are sufficient natgas shale reserves for that to remain true for decades. The best US nuclear strategy is not to build more Gen 3 now—the newest Voglte 3&4 are a commercial disaster—but rather to seriously explore the many Gen4 nuclear fission concepts (various SMR, various MSR being real contenders), select a couple of the best, build pilot lines to work the engineering kinks out, then start commercializing the best Gen4 with a suitable regulatory framework when CCGT needs replacement decades in the future. The warrantied CCGT life is 40 years, so go nuclear after another half century or so.

KevinM
Reply to  Rud Istvan
March 4, 2026 9:42 am

“the newest Voglte 3&4 are a commercial disaster”
If they’re still running in 40 years they’ll have been worth it.
If Internet were better in the late 1980s, historical web articles would scream about commercial disaster – now it is indispensable.

KevinM
Reply to  KevinM
March 4, 2026 1:33 pm

Unclear reference is to California’s Diablo plant circa 1985.

March 4, 2026 9:25 am

The ten thousand or so fission reactors, Gen III or later Gen IV, will require the cessation of war, otherwise, they are a good deal.

March 4, 2026 9:27 am

I usually respect Robert Bradley‘s opinions, but on this topic he is sadly out of touch. Other nations have quite successfully developed nuclear power and have left the United States in their dust. Furthermore, the nuclear industry has finally gotten smart. Instead of designing massive, complex multi-billion dollar gigawatt facilities, they are rapidly designing, testing and licensing next-generation small modular reactors. These will be safe largely pre-fabricated using standardized, licenses and designs. They can be quickly sighted, permitted, designed, constructed and started up at or near the locations where the power is needed without extensive transmission systems.

The electric power industry is already highly experienced with modular, scalable power plants. They are called combined cycle gas turbines (CCGT). When I worked for a subsidiary of Duke Energy in the late 1990s, Duke could site, permit, design, construct and startup a CCGT in 18 months or less. Each module, consisting of a 270 MW gas turbine and a 130 MW secondary heat recovery boiler, can easily be duplicated to size the facility according to need (i.e., 400, 800, 1200, 1600 MW, etc.). On the other end of the spectrum, central plant industrial and institutional boilers are no longer the massive high MMBtu tube boilers. Those are being replaced by small modular boilers. Small modularity is the same path being taken today by the next generation nuclear industry.

But what about the waste, you argue? Nuclear waste is not such an insurmountable problem. Of course, we should allow reprocessing of spent fuels. But of course, there will still be some high-level radioactive waste with long-lived radionuclides that must be stored long enough for them to decay. 10,000 years is the goal for safe storage. From nearly the beginning, the nuclear industry has paid fees into the government to site, design and operate such a waste facility. The government failed — In particular, President Obama failed.

Thousands of scientists and engineers spent decades and billions of dollars to site and design such a facility. Such was the Yucca Mountain Project (YMP) adjacent to the US nuclear Nevada Test Site, already an isolated nuclear wasteland. Site selection, design and testing were complete and had obtained Congressional approval. The facility was ready to operate, and then President Barack Hussein Obama was elected. As a political favor to a Nevada senator, Obama, on day one of his administration, issued an executive order killing the project. Neither Trump nor Biden has since had the foresight or political will to restart YMP.

As usual, government over-regulation, politics, and misplaced public apprehensions are the primary reasons nuclear power is so expensive and projects so difficult to complete.

Prior to the Three Mile Island accident (1979) and the Soviet Chernobyl disaster (1986), the US nuclear industry was growing at such a rate, coupled with subsequent efficiency improvements over the years, that nuclear power could easily be safely generating well over half of our US electricity supply today. Environmental activists played a huge role in damaging and suffocating nuclear power growth so that it flatlined ever since the 1980s. For the climate doom sayers who are cut from the same environmentalist cloth, this was a massive own goal. Given the nuclear growth trajectory at that time, today’s CO2 emissions (not that we care) in the US would be at 1970s levels, and the environmentalists would have to go looking for another planetary crisis to shut down western civilization. Not to mention that President Reagan, whose policies were instrumental in collapsing the Soviet Union, collapsed Soviet CO2 emissions.

Fast forward to today, and the watermelon greens (communists) have been busily demonizing a benign and essential atmospheric gas, carbon dioxide, with the ongoing intent of destroying western civilization. Except for their ignorant foot soldiers, greens don’t care at all about climate or any other aspect of the world environment. All they seek is destruction, and their puppet masters seek totalitarian control.

KevinM
Reply to  pflashgordon
March 4, 2026 9:46 am

Raises question: How much did the US anti-nuclear movement of the 1970s contribute to the failure of US EV adoption as of 2026?

Reply to  KevinM
March 4, 2026 10:10 am

Good point, Kevin. However, electricity generation capacity is sized for demand and reliability. Rapid EV adoption would still require rapid expansion of generation capacity, and old conventional nuclear power cannot be rapidly grown to meet such rapid demand of growth.

if greens weren’t today freaking out about CO2 and climate, we would likely expand CCGT rapidly to meet increasing demand, eventually followed by next generation, small modular reactors over the longer-term. The key difference today would be that we would not have wasted trillions of dollars building not-fit-for-purpose wind and solar energy projects. We would also have had no reason to governmentally force strict efficiency standards on internal combustion trucks and automobiles, and there would be no perceived need to force the development and adoption of EVs. As Bjorn Lomborg has advocated for many years, resources could have been spent on higher priority alleviation of human suffering around the world.

I have been a career-long professional scientist and environmental steward (for 50 years), and I have always fought to counter the activist side of environmentalism, especially NGOs and the dark money funding their outrageous schemes.

Reply to  pflashgordon
March 4, 2026 10:22 am

The main tool in any activist’s playbook is: FUD (Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt)

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  pflashgordon
March 4, 2026 11:11 am

And an appeal to emotion.

Reply to  pflashgordon
March 4, 2026 9:49 am

By the way, some of the latest designs for SMRs do not involve boiling water to make steam to spin a generating unit.

KevinM
Reply to  pflashgordon
March 4, 2026 1:21 pm

How do they convert heat to electricity?

tedms
Reply to  pflashgordon
March 4, 2026 6:49 pm

The problem with Yucca Mountain as a nuclear waste site:

“A fundamental problem with the proposed Yucca Mountain facility is that it is positioned above the water table in a location where infiltrating water would be rendered corrosively aggressive to the waste containers… No other country is proposing to locate a spent fuel or high-level waste repository above the water table.”

“The problems in developing a safety case for Yucca Mountain have arisen essentially from selection of an inappropriate site and an invalid disposal concept. Although located in a desert region, the unsaturated rock at Yucca Mountain contains large quantities of water that can percolate rapidly downward to the saturated zone, where it is then carried away horizontally towards the residential and agricultural area of Amargosa Valley. The downward seeping water would enter the hot, oxidising environment of the waste tunnels and there promote rapid waste package corrosion, waste dissolution and the migration of radionuclides to a major aquifer and hence to Amargosa Valley, contaminating groundwater resources there to an unacceptable degree.” https://ag.nv.gov/uploadedFiles/agnvgov/Content/Hot_Topics/Issue/0952-4746_32_2_175.pdf

Beta Blocker
Reply to  tedms
March 5, 2026 9:23 am

Expensive engineered measures such as titanium drip shields were needed at Yucca Mountain to deal with these kinds of issues, ones which were unique to that site.

Yes, analysis shows that Yucca Mountain and its volcanic tuff, with these various engineered additions included, does meet the long-term repository criteria. But the Salado Formation at the WIPP facility in New Mexico also meets the repository criteria without needing all these expensive engineered measures.

Back in 1987 when Congress dropped two of the three candidate repository sites to focus on Yucca Mountain, it was already known by nuclear waste scientists that the salt beds of the Salado Formation underlying parts of Texas and New Mexico were a much better host media than was the volcanic tuff at Yucca Mountain, or the basalt rock at Hanford, Washington.

The 1987 legislation which dropped the Texas and Washington sites became known as the ‘screw Nevada bill’ in that the Texas site was already known to have clear scientific and operational advantages over both the Nevada and the Hanford candidate sites.

claysanborn
March 4, 2026 9:44 am

Regarding #10: SpaceX has arguably done laps around NASA. <– This strongly suggests that if private enterprise can get the regulatory monkey off fission reactor’s backs, it too could excel. Either fission is viable or it isn’t. Who gets to decide? As one poster suggested above, France seems to have a pretty good handle on fission, and as I understand it, they vitrify their waste for viable long term stability. And is Thorium reaction (e.g. LFTR) really possible.
Bottom line, apparently nothing is free. Society must takes risks to advance. Take Chernobyl out of the equation, and nuclear fission has an apparently very low death record, and arguably a low health risk record. Fear factor, YES! Media: “If it bleeds, it leads. If it doesn’t bleed, give the appearance that it bleeds. If that doesn’t work, lie. Rinse, repeat. Call it ‘saving democracy'”.

KevinM
Reply to  claysanborn
March 4, 2026 1:27 pm

The SpaceX/NASA comparison has another issue wrapped up in it – workplace demographics. In the private sector, inexperienced youth is laid off by old organizations when the economy gets tough, slowing change. In the public sector, age does not exit before full retirement, slowing change. The effect has positives, the reduction of rookie mistakes, and negatives, a slowness to adopt new technology. Everyone I’ve ever talked to claims to be the exception to the negative half of the stereotype.

Adding to reconnect with thesis: Let’s see how SpaceX looks in about 30 years.

Sparta Nova 4
March 4, 2026 11:14 am

USA once had a breeder program. That was halted over concerns of the weapons grade plutonium produced.

Breeders were good for minimizing radioactive waste from normal fission plants.

No clue how to go forward, but breeders need to be part of the conversation regarding spent fuel rods..

Uranium came out of the ground. Why not repurpose exhausted mines for storage?

Walter Sobchak
March 4, 2026 12:56 pm

“Lifting all antitrust constraints on industry collaboration.”

This idea is a complete contradiction of ending government involvement. The anti-trust laws are perfectly general. They exist to protect markets. Thank god it is politically impossible to repeal them, even as to a single industry.

Walter Sobchak
March 4, 2026 1:21 pm

“Making waste storage the responsibility of waste owners.”

What? The real issue is understanding that the storage of “spent” fuel rods (the high level waste) is a creation of the demented policies of Jimmy Carter, may his name be blotted out. In a rational world used fuel rods which are usually still contain 955 of their usable U235 would be recycled. In other countries such as France and Japan that is what they do. They wouldn’t be a problem then.

March 4, 2026 1:56 pm

The waste disposal canard is as silly as carbon sequestration .

Hell , just vitrify the stuff and drop it in an ocean trench .
If that disturbs you , just stick it back in the holes it was mined from . It will fit in one corner .

ntesdorf
March 4, 2026 2:28 pm

Nuclear power may have its problems and be rather costly, but by comparison with wind and solar, it is a slam-dunk for consideration and way cheaper. The market should decide, not the government.

Bob
March 4, 2026 2:36 pm

This post is nonsense, read this.

https://www.eia.gov/analysis/requests/subsidy/