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Nuclear Reactors 1479 – Natura Resources and Texas A&M University Are Collaborating On The Deployment Of Molten Salt Small Modular Reactors in Texas – Part 1 of 2 Parts
Part 1 of 2 PartsNatura Resources (Natura) announces the deployment of two advanced nuclear projects in Texas, aimed at enhancing energy security and reliability for the rapidly growing state. These deployments are located in the Permian Basin and at Texas A&M University’s RELLIS Campus. They represent significant strides in addressing Texas’ energy and water needs. The Natura MSR-100 is a cutting-edge small modular reactor (SMR) that utilizes molten salt reactor (MSR) technology.Natura has entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Texas Tech University (TTU) and Abilene Christian University (ACU) to develop its molten salt reactor (MSR) technology. This collaboration includes the Texas Produced Water Consortium (TxPWC) at Texas Tech. It will focus on integrating MSR technology with water desalination systems. The goal of the collaboration is to provide a sustainable solution for water scarcity by purifying produced water from oil and gas operations, making it available for agricultural and other beneficial uses.Doug Robison is the Founder and CEO of Natura Resources. He emphasized the importance of this partnership, “Our collaboration with Texas Tech and ACU is a pivotal step in addressing Texas’ critical water and energy challenges. By leveraging our MSR technology, we aim to secure crucial water resources and drive innovation in clean energy.”Natura is also partnering with Texas A&M University to deploy the Natura MSR-100 reactor at the RELLIS Campus. This initiative is part of a project known as “The Energy Proving Ground,” which involves multiple nuclear reactor companies. The project intends to bring commercial-ready small modular reactors (SMRs) to the site. They will provide a reliable source of clean energy for the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT).Doug Robison highlighted the significance of this deployment. He said “We are thrilled to continue our partnership with Texas A&M University to showcase how our technology can meet the energy needs of Texas and the nation. The Natura MSR-100 at the RELLIS Campus will play a crucial role in advancing our clean energy mission.”The Natura MSR-100 is a cutting-edge small modular reactor (SMR) that is based on molten salt reactor (MSR) technology. Two research MSRs operated in the United States in the mid-20th century. The 1950s Aircraft Reactor Experiment (ARE) was primarily motivated by the technology’s compact size, while the 1960s Molten-Salt Reactor Experiment (MSRE) aimed to demonstrate a nuclear power plant using a thorium fuel cycle in a breeder reactor.These are the key features of the Natura MSR-100.The Natura MSR-100 reactor utilizes a liquid fuel composed of fissile uranium material dissolved in a molten salt mixture. This fuel enhances safety and efficiency and produces less long-lived radioactive waste.The Natura MSR-100 reactor operates at temperatures exceeding one thousand one hundred and twelve degrees Fahrenheit, which improves thermal efficiency and electricity generation.The Natura MSR-100 reactor operates at lower pressures and includes passive safety mechanisms that reduce the risk of accidents.The high-temperature heat generated by the Natura MSR-100 can be used for desalination, providing a sustainable source of clean water.Please read Part 2 next -
Nuclear News Roundup Feb 18, 2025
North Korea criticizes US over AUKUS nuclear submarine deal reuters.com
Renewed interest in nuclear energy emerges among Maine lawmakers newcentermaine.com
Could nuclear energy make its way to Pueblo kktv.com
Uncertainty surrounds nuclear tax credit guidance, NRC changes utilitydive.com
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Geiger Readings for Feb 18, 2025
Ambient office = 102 nanosieverts per hour
Ambient outside = 137 nanosieverts per hour
Soil exposed to rain water = 136 nanosieverts per hour
Beefsteak tomato from Central Market = 126 nanosieverts per hour
Tap water = 99 nanosieverts per hour
Filter water = 84 nanosieverts per hour
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Nuclear Reactors 1478 – Texas A&M University Will Host Small Modular Reactor Clusters Constructed By Four SMR Companies
It was announced last Tuesday that four small-scale nuclear reactors are to be hosted on Texas A&M University land. CEOs from four nuclear power companies have agreed to work with the Texas A&M System to develop prototype and commercial-ready “small modular reactors” (SMRs). The first SMR has the potential to be constructed within five years.
Smaller than their traditional commercial nuclear reactors counterparts, SMRs are designed so that their components can be factory-built and assembled at their site of use. They could be particularly useful for remote locations, for industrial applications and powering facilities like data centers.
Texas A&M says that its accommodation of the reactors will provide the “missing element” needed to bring more nuclear power to Texas. “Plain and simple: the United States needs more power” said Texas A&M Chancellor John Sharp in a statement. “Nowhere in the country, other than Texas, is anyone willing to step up and build the power plants we need. Thanks to the leadership of Gov. Greg Abbott and others in Texas state government, Texas A&M System stands ready to step up and do what is necessary for the country to thrive.” The four SMRs will be built at Texas A&M-RELLIS, a twenty-four-hundred-acre technology and innovation campus in Bryan, Texas.
According to the university, reactor manufacturers had been struggling to find sites to build clusters of the small-scale fission reactors. Power generated at this “Energy Proving Ground” could be used to increase the supply of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT). The university has projected that the four reactors built at the site will have a combined electrical output of more than one gigawatt. This is equivalent to a full-sized nuclear power reactor.
The companies involved in the collaboration are Aalo Atomics, Kairos Power, Natura Resources and Terrestrial Energy.
Matt Loszak is the co-founder and CEO of Aalo Atomics. He said, “We are excited to partner with an innovation leader like the Texas A&M System, and to jointly help shape the future of energy while creating opportunities for research, education and the Texas economy.” Aalto Atomics intends to build up to six “pods” at the Texas A&M–RELLIS site. Each pod will contain multiple reactors with each reactor having a ten-megawatt output. For comparison, a regular-sized commercial nuclear reactor typically has an output of around one thousand megawatts. Loszak added, “This collaboration is a pivotal step for Aalo as it provides us with a platform to demonstrate the potential of our factory mass-manufactured nuclear technology to deliver reliable, clean energy that will ultimately power the next generation of data centers and AI infrastructure.”
Joe Elabd is the Texas A&M vice chancellor for research. He said, “The Energy Proving Ground will allow these companies to safely test their SMRs and set the stage for deploying small nuclear reactors across the country. The agreements that the Texas A&M System has with Kairos, Natura, Terrestrial and Aalo are going to change the energy landscape for the whole country. The Energy Proving Ground will allow these companies to safely test their SMRs (small modular reactors) and set the stage for deploying small nuclear reactors across the country.”
Texas A&M -
Geiger Readings for Feb 17, 2025
Ambient office = 100 nanosieverts per hour
Ambient outside = 169 nanosieverts per hour
Soil exposed to rain water = 140 nanosieverts per hour
Avocado from Central Market = 127 nanosieverts per hour
Tap water = 86 nanosieverts per hour
Filter water = 70 nanosieverts per hour
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Geiger Readings for Feb 16, 2025
Ambient office = 80 nanosieverts per hour
Ambient outside = 151 nanosieverts per hour
Soil exposed to rain water = 165 nanosieverts per hour
Roma tomato from Central Market = 97 nanosieverts per hour
Tap water = 91 nanosieverts per hour
Filter water = 81 nanosieverts per hour
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Nuclear News Roundup Feb 15, 2025
Air Force to launch unarmed nuclear missile from Vandenberg overnight latimes.com
Belgium retires oldest nuclear power reactor world-nucleawr-news.org
Last Energy seeks site license for Welsh microreactor plant world-nuclear-news.org
Democratic lawmakers urge Rubio to renew New START nuclear pact with Russia reuters.com
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Geiger Readings for Feb 15, 2025
Ambient office = 71 nanosieverts per hour
Ambient outside = 151 nanosieverts per hour
Soil exposed to rain water = 158 nanosieverts per hour
Russett potato from Central Market = 95 nanosieverts per hour
Tap water = 91 nanosieverts per hour
Filter water = 79 nanosieverts per hour
Dover Sole from Central = 104 nanosieverts per hour
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Nuclear Fusion 111 – Astral Systems Working On Lattice Confinement Fusion To Produce Radioactive Isotopes For Medical Applications
As cancer rates in the developed nations rise due to lifestyle and environmental pollution, so does the need for the nuclear isotopes used in detecting those cancers in a medical setting. But with many reactors built in the Seventies and Eighties being scheduled for shutdown and decommissioning, the nuclear isotopes used in medicine are becoming rarer and more expensive. Now, a startup from Bristol, U.K. hopes to increase production of these nuclear isotopes by using a new, radical, technology.
Talmon Firestone and Dr. Tom Wallace-Smith co-founded Astral Systems. They plan to utilize something called multistate fusion (MSF) technology in its “compact reactors.” This will enable an increase in the supply of nuclear isotopes used in modern medicine. These reactors are so compact that they could fit on the average desk.
Astral Systems has now closed over a four million fifty-seven-thousand-dollar investment led by Austria-based VC Speedinvest and U.K.-based Playfair. The company says that its approach will commercialize MSF technology, achieving better performance with greater efficiency and lower cost than traditional nuclear power reactors.
The approach employs what is referred to as lattice confinement fusion (LCF). This concept was first discovered by NASA. It can achieve solid-state fuel densities that are four hundred million times higher than those achievable normally, according to the company.
Astral Systems has developed and demonstrated the first of its kind multi-state fusion device. It enables orders of magnitude improved fusion rates on a reactor architecture that utilizes a quarter century of engineering design.
Leveraging earlier research from NASA, Astral Systems also claims that its platform could lead to other applications such as safe hybrid nuclear energy, space exploration, and industrial and security industry applications.
Astral Systems reactors can support a wide variety of medical, industrial, and research applications well before any fusion plant is plugged into the grid. The company is developing innovative system designs to address global challenges such as those in health access and zero carbon energy.
Astral Systems’ co-founder and CTO, Dr. Tom Wallace-Smith said in an interview, “The whole industry has been constrained of supply constraint historically because of reliance on centralized reactors.”
Wallace-Smith added, “Whereas what we’re proposing is placing them in industrial units or in the basement of hospitals or production centers. We can then produce the drugs exactly where they needed, and be able to reduce the reliance on these centralized production sites.”
Wallace-Smith believes that its competitors are constrained by existing technology. He said, “Most other approaches are based on linear, accelerated technology, whereas what we’re doing is essentially taking a very high TRL core architecture and putting in 2020 physics, where the ceiling is quite high in terms of performance. So we’re just at the start of what’s achievable with this.”
Rick Hao is a partner at Speedinvest. He said in a statement, “Astral Systems represents the best of U.K. deeptech. Astral is delivering a fresh approach to nuclear fusion that addresses urgent medical, industrial and power needs.” So far Astral has constructed three commercial fusion facilities from which it’s already generating revenues.
Also participating in the recent funding round were angel investors including Oliver Buck, founder of ITM Isotope Technologies, and Pete Hutton, former ARM president of Product Group.
Astral Systems