...commercial reactor built in the United States, in about three years time from conception to providing power to the grid, Shippingport, was a small reactor, one that was actually thorium fueled for one fuel cycle.
It was basically a submarine reactor built on land. (All submarine reactors are SMRs.)
It provided power to the grid beginning in 1957. It was rated at 60MWe whereas the most recent European reactor to come on line, the EPR in Finland at Olkiluoto is producing 1600 MWe, and the Vogtle 3 reactor which came on line in the US last month (soon to be followed by Vogtle 4) is a 1100 MWe reactor.
All the world's research reactors, including but not limited to those for producing medical isotopes, are small reactors. In a sense, research reactors installed in universities and research institutions were also modular, inasmuch they were largely all produced around the same technology, the GA Triga type reactors with hydride fuels. They made a lot of them, way back in the 1960's; some still function quite well.
What is different is the mode of manufacturing. I have linked this video before from Oak Ridge, showing that we are pretty much ready to print reactors:
The laboratory in which my son is pursing his Ph.D. is working on this technology. It's very real.
All over the planet, with some even in the United States, despite the power of antinuke ignorance here, people are designing and planning to build multi-mission reactors, reactors that do not merely produce electricity but provide heat for process chemistry, including but not limited to desalination and district heat.
New fuel facilities are being built.
The
creativity that informed nuclear scientists in the 1960's is re-emerging at a very critical time.
We still have reactionaries, of course, who oppose nuclear energy, even some who consider themselves "environmentalists" although what they are really doing is working to destroy our environment.
Unfortunately there is a wing of our party that embraces these very dangerous, and frankly deadly ideas, that nuclear energy is something to
oppose rather than embrace. I was very disappointed to learn that Illinois Governor Pritzker vetoed a bill to allow the construction of new reactors in that State. This is not progressive; it's regressive and reactionary, particularly when the climate shit is hitting the fan.
Here at DU our "E&E" forum is inconsistent with the idea that informed America's first great environmentalist, John Muir, who thought that wilderness should be protected from industrialization and fought to create that protection. (He lost the fight; the Hetch Hetchy dam was built.) The modern day Sierra club never sees a wilderness, whether marine or land based that it doesn't want industrialized.
SMR's are pretty much here. In a sense, since 1955, they've
always been here. The question really comes down to whether nuclear energy is more "dangerous" than climate change and millions of deaths each year from air pollution. One has to be numerically and functionally (and indeed ethically) illiterate to believe this, yet people do, here and elsewhere.
We can and should authorize and order SMR's at a break neck pace. This issue is not technical. Nuclear energy has a 70 year old technology with a spectacular record of providing energy at low human and environmental cost, better than any other form of energy. The issue social, inasmuch as there is a readiness throughout our culture, on the right certainly but we on the left are hardly innocent, to embrace ignorance.
Complainants focusing on nuclear energy while ignoring the huge environmental, economic, moral, and human cost of all other forms of energy strike me exactly the same as the morons in the Republican party who want to carry on endlessly about Hunter Biden in the presence of the Trump crime family.
For most of the period of my nuclear advocacy, dating back to the time when I worked out in my own mind the consequences of Chernobyl, I've been a big reactor kind of guy. I've changed my mind. We can and should build small reactors on an assembly lime basis, thousands upon thousands of them. They are the
only viable option for ending the use of fossil fuels.