born at 321.89 PPM CO2

"Quality is never an accident. It is always the result of intelligent effort." - John Ruskin

Sunday, 19 January 2025

(NAT) NATRIUM HITS KEY MILESTONE

Since founding TerraPower in 2008, Bill Gates has had his eye on developing a safe, efficient, and clean next-gen nuclear plant. That project, called Natrium, has already broken ground in Wyoming and has just leaped over a critical hurdle.

In Kemmerer, Wyoming, the Naughton Power Plant has been burning coal to provide electricity since the 1960s. But in September 2019, it was announced that the plant would be shut down by 2025 due to issues with operating efficiency and compliance with environmental regulations. Yet unlike other towns where coal plants get shuttered, Kemmerer won't simply fade from the map. Instead, it is the site where Natrium, America's first coal-to-nuclear project, is taking place.

The project is being spearheaded by TerraPower, a next-gen nuclear development company founded in 2008 by Bill Gates and several other high-wealth backers. TerraPower is now also supported by the US Department of Energy, which gave the company an $80 million grant in October 2020 as part of its Advanced Reactor Demonstration Project program.

TerraPower broke ground on Natrium in June of last year and, this week, the company announced that it received approval from the Wyoming Industrial Siting Council (ISC) for the first of the Natrium plants, known as Kemmerer Power Station Unit 1. According to the company, this makes them the first developer to receive a state permit for an advanced nuclear project in US history.

The permit allows TerraPower to begin building the non-nuclear portions of its plant, including its "energy island," which will hold the plant's turbines and molten-salt energy storage tanks. These tanks are critical to Natrium's energy efficiency as they can be used to store energy in the form of heat that can be released on an as-needed basis to supply additional power to the local grid when required. More of this article (New Atlas) - link - more like this (nuclear) - link - more like this (Wyoming) - link

No comments:

Post a Comment