The Second Coming of Nuclear Power
Newsweek|January 21, 2022
As the demand for energy rises, miniaturized nuclear power plants could be a climate-friendly new source. Critics aren’t so sure
By David H. Freedman, Illustration by Anil Yanik
The Second Coming of Nuclear Power

THE U.S. AND 80 OTHER COUNTRIES agreed in November at the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland, to convert most of the world to green energy in a few decades. It’s a necessary step to curb greenhouse gases that cause climate change, but it comes with a daunting challenge: how to simultaneously meet a worldwide demand for energy that is expected to rise as fast as the temperatures.

A new generation of nuclear reactors is emerging as a potential solution. These are not the troubled giant reactors of old, with their big cooling towers and mazes of cooling pipes that guard against the possibility of a China-syndrome meltdown. The new reactors are designed to be simpler, safer, cheaper and much, much smaller.

A kid near the site of the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant shortly after the accident in 1979.

One tiny reactor the size of a school bus could supply power to a nearby town or factory. Or many of them could be strung together to equal the output of a giant nuclear plant. Not only are they expected to be safer and to produce electricity more cheaply than conventional nuclear plants, they also do so without releasing so much as a puff of greenhouse gas.

This story is from the January 21, 2022 edition of Newsweek.

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This story is from the January 21, 2022 edition of Newsweek.

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