Government Eases Rules for Building Tiny Nuclear Power Plants
Published Date: 5/1/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission is making it easier and faster to get licenses for small nuclear reactors, called microreactors, by creating simpler rules that match their lower risks. This change helps companies build more of these reactors quickly while keeping safety strong. If you’re involved in making or using these reactors, get ready to share your thoughts by June 15, 2026, and expect a smoother, less costly approval process soon.
Analyzed Economic Effects
7 provisions identified: 7 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Much Faster Licensing Timelines
If you apply to build a microreactor, the NRC proposes much faster review timelines. The rule says the NRC could issue an operating license within 6–12 months after accepting an application (and Executive Order 14300 directs a final decision within 18 months), assuming the application is complete and other conditions are met.
New Licensing Paths: ML, SDA, CP+OL
The proposed rule creates multiple licensing options you can use: a manufacturing license (ML), standard design approval (SDA), and joint construction permit (CP) plus operating license (OL). You could combine requests in a single application to approve designs, manufacturing, and site-specific licenses together.
Estimated Multi‑Billion Dollar Industry and NRC Savings
The NRC’s draft regulatory analysis estimates net averted costs of about $3.76 billion (using a 7% discount rate) and $11.84 billion (using a 3% discount rate) from this proposed rule and guidance. The analysis says savings grow as the number of applicants increases.
Begin Construction Before Permit for 'Nth' Units
For "nth-of-a-kind" designs (reactors whose design the NRC has already approved), the proposed rule would allow certain construction activities to begin under a general license before issuance of a construction permit, if specific conditions are met. This could shorten deployment time for repeat designs.
Streamlined Rules and Flexibility on Requirements
The rule lets applicants use streamlined, risk-informed safety rules that match lower risks of microreactors. It also permits applicant-defined terms, allows alternative quality-assurance programs instead of appendix B, offers alternative fitness-for-duty rules, fewer full-time resident inspectors, and provisions for remote or autonomous operation.
Faster Environmental Clearance via Categorical Exclusions
The proposed rule would permit use of categorical exclusions under the National Environmental Policy Act for some microreactor actions if specified conditions are met. That could shorten or avoid environmental assessments or impact statements for certain deployments.
Flexible Transportation Risk Evaluation
If an applicant cannot meet the testing and performance rules of 10 CFR part 71 for packaging and transport, the proposed rule would allow use of a risk-based methodology to evaluate normal and accident transport conditions. This gives alternative paths to demonstrate transport safety.
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Key Dates
Department and Agencies
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