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May 29, 2025 4:45 PM Eastern Daylight Time

NuScale Power’s Small Modular Reactor (SMR) Achieves Standard Design Approval from U.S. Nuclear

Uprated SMR design will support a wider range of off-takers and consumers seeking clean energy through small modular reactor technology

NuScale remains the only SMR technology company to have received approval from the NRC for its SMR technology design; today’s announcement marks NuScale’s second design approved by the United States’ nuclear regulator

CORVALLIS, Ore.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--NuScale Power Corporation (NYSE: SMR), the industry-leading provider of proprietary and innovative advanced small modular reactor nuclear technology, today announced that it has received design approval from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for its uprated 250 MWt (77 MWe) NuScale Power Modules™.

The U.S. NRC’s uprate approval of the NuScale SMR technology now strengthens ENTRA1 Energy to produce and deliver energy as the most near-term American SMR power solution via ENTRA1 Energy Plants™ with NuScale SMR technology inside. ENTRA1 Energy is NuScale’s partner and independent power plant development platform, which holds the global exclusive rights to the commercialization, distribution, and deployment of NuScale’s SMRs.

The uprate approval by the U.S. regulatory authority increases the power output per module from NuScale’s previously-approved 50 MWe design, enabling ENTRA1 Energy Plants to provide a wider range of off-takers and consumers with reliable, carbon-free energy. NuScale remains the only SMR technology company with design approval from the NRC, and the company remains on track for deployment by 2030.

“We are thrilled that the NRC has approved our second SDA application, this time for our 77 MWe design. This marks a historic moment not only for NuScale, but the entire industry, as NuScale and ENTRA1 move closer to meeting the demands of clean energy users,” said John Hopkins, NuScale President and Chief Executive Officer. “For more than a decade, our team has proudly worked alongside the NRC to achieve the successful approval of our designs. The NRC is domestically and internationally recognized and respected for its rigorous safety standards, and this approval is a crucial step toward meeting our goal of providing clean, reliable, and, most importantly, safe energy to off-takers and consumers.”

NuScale’s first Design Certification Application (DCA) for its 160 MWt (50 MWe) SMR design was accepted by the NRC in March 2017. Subsequently, the NRC affirmed its approval of NuScale’s 50 MWe SMR design, marking the first design to receive its approval.

NuScale’s uprated design features the same fundamental safety case and passive safety features previously approved by the NRC with a power uprate and select design changes to support growing capacity needs. Originally slated for approval later this summer, today’s announcement marks the early completion of the NRC review process.

“NuScale is proud to have worked with the NRC and to have met its stringent regulatory application process as we continue to lead the way in the SMR industry with our second design approval,” said Carrie Fosaaen, Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Services. “With today’s announcement, NuScale continues to advance with ENTRA1 Energy in the commercialization of our SMR technology inside ENTRA1 Energy Plants while remaining steadfast in our mission to improve the quality of life for people around the world through safe, clean energy.”

About NuScale Power

Founded in 2007, NuScale Power Corporation (NYSE: SMR) is the industry-leading provider of proprietary and innovative advanced small modular reactor (SMR) nuclear technology, with a mission to help power the global energy transition by delivering safe, scalable, and reliable carbon-free energy. The Company’s groundbreaking SMR technology is powered by the NuScale Power Module™, a small, safe, pressurized water reactor that can each generate 77 megawatts of electricity (MWe) or 250 megawatts thermal (gross), and can be scaled to meet customer needs through an array of flexible configurations up to 924 MWe (12 modules) of output.

As the first and only SMR to have its designs certified by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, NuScale is well-positioned to serve diverse customers across the world by supplying nuclear energy for electrical generation, data centers, district heating, desalination, commercial-scale hydrogen production, and other process heat applications.

To learn more, visit NuScale Power’s website or follow us on LinkedInFacebookInstagramX, and YouTube.

About ENTRA1 Energy

ENTRA1 Energy is an American independent global energy production platform dedicated to increasing energy security by providing safe, reliable, cost-effective, and environmentally responsible electric power. ENTRA1 Energy is NuScale’s exclusive global strategic partner and holds the global exclusive rights to the commercialization, distribution, and deployment of all NuScale’s products and services. ENTRA1 is the one-stop-shop and single hub for the financing, investment, development, execution, and/or management of ENTRA1 Energy Plants™ with NuScale SMRs-inside.

To learn more, visit ENTRA1 ENERGY’s website or follow us on LinkedIn and X.

Forward Looking Statements

This release contains forward-looking statements (including without limitation statements containing terms such as "will," "believes," "expects," “anticipates,” "plans" or other similar expressions). These forward-looking statements include statements relating to our SMR design’s ability to support a wider range of off-takers, consumers and customers with energy, progress with respect to meeting the demands of clean energy users, our leadership in the SMR industry, our ability to deploy and the timeline for deployment, advancement of the commercialization of SMR technology, strategic and operational plans and expectations, the growth in demand for clean energy, capital deployment, future growth, new awards, backlog, earnings and the outlook for the Company’s business.

Actual results may differ materially as a result of a number of factors, including, among other things, the Company’s liquidity and ability to raise capital; the Company's failure to receive new contract awards; cost overruns, project delays or other problems arising from project execution activities, including the failure to meet cost and schedule estimates; our expectations regarding obtaining regulatory approvals, and the timing thereof, to deploy our SMRs in the United States and abroad; forecasts regarding end-user adoption rates and demand for our products in the markets that are new and rapidly evolving; limitations on the effectiveness of our controls and procedures and our remediation plans related thereto; intense competition in the industries in which we operate; failure of our partners to perform their obligations; cyber-security breaches; foreign economic and political uncertainties; client cancellations of, or scope adjustments to, existing contracts; failure to maintain safe worksites and international security risks; risks or uncertainties associated with events outside of our control, including weather conditions, pandemics (including COVID-19), public health crises, political crises or other catastrophic events; macroeconomic conditions; the use of estimates and assumptions in preparing our financial statements; client delays or defaults in making payments; the failure of our suppliers, subcontractors and other third parties to adequately perform services under our contracts; uncertainties, restrictions and regulations impacting our government contracts; the inability to hire and retain qualified personnel; the potential impact of certain tax matters; possible information technology interruptions; the Company's ability to secure appropriate insurance; liabilities associated with the performance of nuclear services; foreign currency risks; the loss of one or a few clients that account for a significant portion of the Company's revenues; damage to our reputation; failure to adequately protect intellectual property rights; asset impairments; climate change and related environmental issues; increasing scrutiny with respect to sustainability practices; the availability of credit and restrictions imposed by credit facilities for our clients, suppliers, subcontractors or other partners; failure to obtain favorable results in existing or future litigation and regulatory proceedings, dispute resolution proceedings or claims, including claims for additional costs; failure by us or our employees, agents or partners to comply with laws; new or changing legal requirements, including those relating to environmental, health and safety matters; failure to successfully implement our strategic and operational initiatives and restrictions on possible transactions imposed by our charter documents and Delaware law. Caution must be exercised in relying on these and other forward-looking statements. Due to known and unknown risks, the Company’s results may differ materially from its expectations and projections.

Additional information concerning these and other factors can be found in the Company's public periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), including the general economic conditions and other risks, uncertainties and factors set forth in the section entitled “Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements” and “Summary of Risk Factors” in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 and in subsequent filings with the SEC. The referenced SEC filings are available either publicly or upon request from NuScale's Investor Relations Department at ir@nuscalepower.com. The Company disclaims any intent or obligation other than as required by law to update the forward-looking statements.

 

Contacts

Media contact

Chuck Goodnight, Vice President, Business Development
media@nuscalepower.com

Investor contact

Rodney McMahan, Senior Director, Investor Relations
ir@nuscalepower.com

Thank  you  Ed  Lyman  for  this  Nuclear  Blog

https://blog.ucs.org/edwin-lyman/terrible-thirteen/

 
The US public deserves to have a clear understanding of the safety and security of the nation’s 54 nuclear plant sites (with a total of 94 operating nuclear reactors): and in particular, the plants that are the poorest performers. Unfortunately, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) doesn’t mak
 
N2
MJK
 
Eric Epstein stated in the Request: "TMIA seeks to halt a restart commitment for 
the purchase and fabrication of new fuel at this time. The procurement is premature, and 
it would comprise an irreversible and irretrievable commitment of resources . Approval
would introduce bias in favor of approval of the contemplated restart of TMI-1 before the 
NRC  Staff has complied with the National Environmental Policy Act obligation of 
environmental review, and determination of whether an Environmental Impact
Statement (“EIS”) is required for the proposed restart."
 
Mr. Epstein added, "TMI-Alert further requests that the Commission give this 
request priority and consideration for the obvious reason that to authorize 
Constellation to commence making arrangements for the restart would turn 
the controversial process of restart into a merely performative mockery."
 
         Epstein concluded, "It would flagrantly violate NEPA to permit Constellation 
to proceed with ordering fuel for the restart of a long-shutdown nuclear power plant 
where there is a request for restart which has not been acted upon by the NRC Staff,
particularly as to the fulfillment of the agency’s NEPA obligations."
 

NRC MastheadNuclear ReactorsNuclear MaterialsRadioactive WasteNuclear SecurityPublic Meetings & InvolvementNRC LibraryAbout NRCReport a Safety ConcernNRC FacebookNRC TwitterNRC LinkedInNRC InstagramNRC YouTubeNRC FlickrNRC NRC BlogNRC GovDeliveryNRC RSS FeedNRC Homepage

Greetings:

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) staff is issuing for public comment, “Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants, Supplement 10, Second Renewal, Regarding Subsequent License Renewal for Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station Units 2 and 3, Supplement 1, Draft Report for Comment (NUREG-1437).” The draft supplement updates NUREG-1437, Supplement 10, Second Renewal, Final Report issued in January 2020. The supplement includes the NRC staff’s evaluation of the environmental impacts of Peach Bottom subsequent license renewal including new information obtained since issuance of the 2020 report.

The draft supplement is available in the NRC’s Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS) as ML25111A147. ADAMS is accessible from the NRC’s website at https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. To begin the search, select “Begin Web-based ADAMS Search.” For problems with ADAMS, please contact the NRC’s Public Document Room (PDR) reference staff at 1-800-397-4209, at 301-415-4737, or by email to PDR.Resource@nrc.gov.

The draft supplement has been submitted to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency via e-NEPA. The supplement is being distributed to interested Federal, State, Tribal, and local agencies, industry organizations, interest groups, and members of the public via this notice and other appropriate methods. 

A notice of availability of the draft supplement including request for comment and opportunity to request a hearing and to petition for leave to intervene will be published in the Federal Register on or about May 30, 2025.

When the comment period opens, comments on this draft supplement may be submitted by: going to https://www.regulations.gov and searching for Docket ID NRC-2024-0214; Emailing PeachBottom-SLRSEISS1@nrc.gov; or Mailing Office of Administration, Mail Stop: TWFN-7-A60M, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, ATTN: Program Management, Announcements and Editing Staff. Comments should be submitted by July 14, 2025, to ensure their consideration.

For further information, contact Kevin Folk, Senior Environmental Project Manager, Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555–0001; telephone: 301–415–6944; email: kevin.folk@nrc.

 
"The years-long federal permitting process for new reactors is a check on TVA’s — and other reactor sponsors’ — near-term nuclear ambitions. The NRC review of TVA’s construction permit application could stretch into 2028, based on NRC’s generic schedule. If NRC issues the construction permit, TVA could begin building the reactor complex while seeking a separate operating license that NRC says can take up to 36 months to review. A final decision on the operating license might not come until 2031 or early 2032, not far off from TVA’s December 2032 target ..."
 
 
 
"NuScale remains on track for an expected July approval from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission for its uprated 77-MW electric design, the company said in a news release Monday."

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