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United States

Senate Passes Bill To Support Advanced Nuclear Energy Deployment (reuters.com) 151

The U.S. Senate has passed a bill to accelerate the deployment of nuclear energy capacity, including by speeding permitting and creating new incentives for advanced nuclear reactor technologies. From a report: Expanding nuclear power has broad bipartisan support, with Democrats seeing it as critical to decarbonizing the power sector to fight climate change and Republicans viewing it as a way to ensure reliable electricity supply and create jobs. A version of the bill had already passed in the House of Representatives and it will now go to President Joe Biden for a signature to become law. It passed the Senate 88-2 votes.

"In a major victory for our climate and American energy security, the U.S. Senate has passed the ADVANCE Act with overwhelming, bipartisan support," said Senator Tom Carper, a Democrat, who is Chairman of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. "Today, we sent the ADVANCE Act to the president's desk because Congress worked together to recognize the importance of nuclear energy to America's future and got the job done," said Republican Shelley Moore Capito, a ranking member of the committee.

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Senate Passes Bill To Support Advanced Nuclear Energy Deployment

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  • When they could just allocate specific funds to hire companies to build them?
    • That source requires registration. Try here: https://www.cnn.com/2024/06/19... [cnn.com]
      Or the senate page here:
      https://www.epw.senate.gov/pub... [senate.gov]

  • In case anyone is wondering, Huffpost notes [huffpost.com]:

    In a rare show of bipartisan unity on clean energy, the House of Representatives voted 365 to 36 last month to pass its version of the legislation, called the ADVANCE Act. All but two senators — Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.) — supported the bill in Tuesday’s vote or abstained, with a final tally of 88-2.

    Doesn't include their reasons though.

    • by mspohr ( 589790 )

      Pork barrel spending.
      Billion$ in subsidies.

    • I believe Sanders and Markey are both long time opponents of all civilian nuclear power just on principle. At their current ages -- Bernie's 82 and Markey's 77 -- they're unlikely to ever change.

      The US has three power grids with minimal connections between them -- the Eastern, the Western, and Texas. (Note that the interconnect boundaries don't necessary follow state lines; parts of the State of Texas fall in each of the three.) The national labs have studied plans to make the grids carbon-free for go
  • by davide marney ( 231845 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2024 @03:54PM (#64561911) Journal

    Here is the text of the actual bill: https://www.epw.senate.gov/pub... [senate.gov]

    It is incredibly hard to read these bills, since they are written like git updates ("section A of paragraph subpart AA sentence J is replaced with paragraph 1(c)d.3"). But there are a couple of interesting tidbits that can be gleaned. Apparently there will be a single Commission that will organize all advanced nuclear licensing, and they are going to have a contest for the first vendor that can achieve various technical milestones. The prize appears to be (if I'm reading this right) that the winner gets to have all their licensing costs refunded. That's probably substantial!

    The prize categories are:

    - uses isotopes derived from spent nuclear fuel or depleted uranium as fuel
    - a nuclear integrated energy system that reduces greenhouse gas emissions
    - operates flexibly to generate electricity or high temperature process heat for nonelectric applications

    • The description of the bill has an interesting statement: "https://www.epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/press-releases-republican?ID=2348A9E4-7B90-40D2-8F32-39D402B2405C"

      Modernizing outdated rules that restrict international investment.

      How fortuitous that right after several large international holders of US treasury bonds start dumping them, suddenly an USD-denominated investment opportunity capable of absorbing a very large quantity of dollars shows up.

      • I had not thought of the investment angle. How interesting. I believe I also read some updated language in there that mentions Russia and China by name as countries that are forbidden from providing investment. But maybe I have that wrong.

    • It is incredibly hard to read these bills, since they are written like git updates ("section A of paragraph subpart AA sentence J is replaced with paragraph 1(c)d.3").

      Off-topic, but my state legislature writes bills, amendments, and committee reports in the same style. (I'm old, so still think of them as diff instructions rather than git.) When a bill -- as you say, a diff from the current body of statute -- moves along, it may be amended in the first committee -- a diff to a diff -- then that committ
      • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

        Fascinating! Is any of that automated? Like, how can the people debating the bill even read it to figure out what they are discussing? Tools like this are ubiquitous in software, are they not used in legislation?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      That last one is interesting but also a bit worrying. Presumably they mean stuff like producing steel... Which means temperatures that would melt many of the materials used in reactors.

      • by _merlin ( 160982 )

        That last one is interesting but also a bit worrying. Presumably they mean stuff like producing steel

        Nah, it's indirectly referring to hydrogen production, e.g. see some of the discussion here [stanford.edu].

  • ... our climate and American energy ...

    Every country will have to make a choice: Remove fossil fuels at any cost (See: "nuclear energy" and "kinetic battery") or wait for the free market (with government incentives) to fix the problem.

    • The thing is, removing fossil fuels doesn't have to be "costly", at least not for the government, because it can be done through carbon taxes. The government should *make* money from decarbonization, which it can use either to fund more decarbonization or offset specific costs of decarbonization.
      • ... done through carbon taxes.

        Every government that said that, has promptly been un-elected: A big change to government and the economy is an easy target for every fear-monger in the country.

        To date, government can effect change only by buying more stuff: That can be solar panels or nuclear power-stations.

  • Thanks for posting the name of the act in the summary. Here is S.1111 - Accelerating Deployment of Versatile, Advanced Nuclear for Clean Energy Act of 2023 [congress.gov] (warning: pdf). It will be interesting to see what it is in it.

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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