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Book Recommendations > Going Nuclear

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message 1: by Alan (new)

Alan Hughes (henacynflin) | 1 comments I know that this may seem to be an unusual recommendation for the group but this book does make a good case for the role of nuclear energy to make the energy from renewables a practical proposition. The arguments are cogent and well documented and whatever side of this debate you find yourself there will be much which be of interest.

Going Nuclear: How the Atom Will Save the World

Going Nuclear How the Atom Will Save the World by Tim Gregory


message 2: by Clare (last edited Jul 05, 2025 03:06AM) (new)

Clare O'Beara | 9178 comments Mod
Hi Alan, all contributions are welcome. I've added your title to the Group Bookshelf, thanks.
Nuclear plants do indeed save carbon emissions, once they are built. The constructing part, using a lot of concrete, metals and trucks, obviously emits a considerable amount of carbon.

Not all countries want or are equipped to run nuclear plants, due to technical skills, maintenance and hazardous waste disposal. Where they are run safely, they contribute stable power supply to the grid.

We are hearing of potential for micro-nuclear generation plants for supply to datacentres.


message 3: by Clare (new)

Clare O'Beara | 9178 comments Mod
Devices and Desires by P.D. James is set in a community living beside a nuclear plant in Britain.
Devices and Desires (Adam Dalgliesh, #8) by P.D. James P.D. James


message 4: by Clare (new)

Clare O'Beara | 9178 comments Mod
https://www.theregister.com/2025/11/2...

"Google and atomic power biz Westinghouse Electric claim that AI will speed construction and cut the cost of building the new US power plants it is planning in response to rising demands for energy to fuel AI.

The pair announced back in July that they are working together to transform how nuclear reactors are constructed and optimize their operation. Now, they are showing off how the first of those works in practice.

Also back in July, Westinghouse disclosed plans to build ten additional large nuclear reactors in the US. Last month, the Trump administration backed it with an $80 billion deal to help fund those plans.

The problem, according to Westinghouse, is that atomic power plants have long and uncertain construction timelines, and the considerable build costs can easily run over budget. To make matters worse, there have been little or no new nuclear builds for at least a couple of decades, so lots of vital know-how has been lost.

This is where Google comes in, with help to develop a custom AI-powered platform to optimize the reactor construction process."

https://www.theregister.com/2025/07/1...

https://www.ans.org/news/2025-10-28/a...


message 5: by Robert (new)

Robert Zwilling | 2950 comments The growing micro and mini reactor industry is starting to grow. The main impetus is for micro reactors to provide power for data centers. These have small foot prints and some can be transported in shipping containers for rapid deployment. They eliminate years of building, expensive cost over runs, exhaustive environmental studies, and extensive site requirements.

A specific U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) program for test reactors operates under a separate, expedited DOE authorization process, rather than traditional Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) commercial licensing, for research and development purposes.

The companies building the micro reactors, which is a new industry, with no track record, are very satisfied with this arrangement. It was expressed by the nuclear industry that the NRC rules were restricting the nuclear industry from developing new products. Basically, the new micro reactors are being fast tracked into eventual distribution.

"Industrial applications in some states may also face uncertainty over to "what extent utility regulations will apply if the power user is not also the reactor owner/operator", she said." Basically this is about any company being in possession of a nuclear power generator simply by buying or renting it. Though small in size, they are nuclear devices.

https://www.reuters.com/business/ener...


message 6: by Clare (new)

Clare O'Beara | 9178 comments Mod
" Basically this is about any company being in possession of a nuclear power generator simply by buying or renting it. Though small in size, they are nuclear devices."

Who guards the guards?


message 7: by Robert (new)

Robert Zwilling | 2950 comments It is claimed that all the safe guards and regulations already in place for traditional nuclear reactors will be used for the micro reactors. However, the existing rules are already being bypassed and its likely that they will continue to be bypassed under the excuse of national security.


message 8: by Clare (last edited Nov 25, 2025 02:37AM) (new)

Clare O'Beara | 9178 comments Mod
https://www.theregister.com/2025/11/2...

"Amazon-backed nuclear energy startup X-energy says it has booked orders for 144 small modular reactors (SMRs) which will eventually deliver over 11 gigawatts of power, assuming that they actually get built. And investors continue to support this vision.

On Monday, X-energy revealed that it had gotten Jane Street and a slew of other private equity firms to deliver a $700 million Series D funding round to keep the lights on while the startup waits for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to sign off on a four-unit deployment of its Xe-100 reactors at Dow's Seadrift Operations manufacturing site in Texas.

The Xe-100 is a fourth-generation high-temperature, gas-cooled reactor capable of producing 80 MW of power over its 60-year operational life. The startup claims the cash infusion will help to shore up its supply chains and attract new customers.

Nuclear power, and in particular SMRs, has become a hot topic amid the AI boom as power has increasingly become a bottleneck for datacenter expansion across the US and much of Europe. "

https://www.theregister.com/2024/10/1...


message 9: by Robert (new)

Robert Zwilling | 2950 comments The 700 million and the 144 orders are mainly for powering new Ai data centers. This is part of the Ai speculative bubble which may or may not burst. Opinions are strong but facts are currently inconclusive.


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