Newsroom Archive

Sort By

  • Oldest
  • Newest

In a unanimous vote crucial to the future of the only nuclear power plant construction project in the United States, all four co-owners of the two Westinghouse AP1000 nuclear reactors being built at Georgia Power’s Vogtle site in Waynesboro, Georgia, agreed this week to continue the project.

Press Statement

NEI Applauds Historic Votes in Georgia

This week's votes in support of continued construction of two new reactors at Plant Vogtle in Georgia are a forward-looking affirmation of the need for reliable and clean new electricity generation.

U.S. House of Representatives passed the Nuclear Utilization of Keynote Energy (NUKE) Act (HR 1320), introduced by Reps. Kinzinger (R-Ill.) and Doyle (D-Pa.). The bipartisan NUKE Act sets in motion well-justified and timely steps to reform some of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s outdated and inefficient regulations.

The resilience of the nation’s 98 nuclear power reactors in the face of extreme events is a constant, however unpredictable the events themselves may be—Hurricane Florence included. Resilience is a measure of these facilities’ outstanding ability to withstand whatever Mother Nature can throw at them and quickly return to providing life-saving electrical service when people and businesses need it most.

NEI Vice President for Suppliers, New Reactors and International Programs Dan Lipman, and IAEA Deputy Director General Mikhail Chudakov signed a unique cooperation agreement on Sept. 20, enabling direct information exchange between NEI and the IAEA on issues relevant to the development, construction, operation and decommissioning of civilian nuclear power plants.

Hurricane Florence is the latest significant weather event to test America’s nuclear energy facilities.

Axios reporter Amy Harder talks with Monica Trauzzi on Washington D.C.’s Georgetown waterfront in the third episode of “Off the Menu.”

Blog

A Hero Retires

After 49 years of safe, clean, reliable operation, a nuclear power plant retires.

Before leaving town this week, Congress approved its energy and water spending package for fiscal 2019. The bill approves $1.33 billion in funding for the Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) nuclear energy research, development and deployment programs, an increase of $121 million over fiscal 2018.

The U.S. nuclear industry is making good progress on its innovative program to develop and install advanced accident tolerant fuel (ATF) in the existing reactor fleet by the early- to mid-2020s.

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed the Nuclear Energy Innovation Capabilities Act (NEICA), legislation designed to speed advanced reactors to market. Passed by the Senate earlier this year, the bill now goes to the White House for President Trump’s signature.

Douglas E. True, a veteran of the nuclear industry with more than 30 years of experience at the global engineering and consulting firm Jensen Hughes, is joining the Nuclear Energy Institute as senior vice president & chief nuclear officer.