

On Wednesday, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced it had granted its first construction authorization in nearly a decade. The approval allows work to start at a site in Kemmerer, Wyoming, by a company called TerraPower. Best known for having Bill Gates among its financial backers, the company is attempting to build a radically different reactor that is sodium-cooled and integrates energy storage into its architecture.
That authorization doesn’t guarantee the reactor will be licensed to operate, but it marks an important milestone for the company.
TerraPower’s design, dubbed Natrium and developed in collaboration with GE Hitachi, includes several innovative aspects. The most prominent is the use of liquid sodium for cooling and heat transfer. Using sodium keeps the primary coolant in liquid form, avoiding many of the issues associated with the high-pressure steam systems of water-cooled reactors. However, sodium is highly reactive with air and water, which introduces safety risks. Natrium is also a fast-neutron reactor, potentially enabling it to consume certain isotopes that would otherwise contribute to radioactive waste in more conventional reactor types.
The reactor is relatively small compared with most current nuclear stations (about 245 megawatts versus roughly one gigawatt) and incorporates energy storage. Instead of using the sodium’s heat to generate steam, the facility will load that heat into a salt-based thermal storage medium that can be dispatched to produce electricity immediately or held for later use. That capability allows the plant to operate alongside variable renewable generation, which might otherwise undercut it on price. The storage system also permits temporary output increases up to around 500 MW.














