Pentagon’s ‘Mobile’ Nuclear Microreactor Will be Demonstrated at Idaho National 
Lab

By Brandi Vincent,  Defense Technology Correspondent  APRIL 14, 2022 
https://www.nextgov.com/emerging-tech/2022/04/pentagons-mobile-nuclear-microreactor-will-be-demonstrated-idaho-national-lab/365693/


The potential, modern energy source could help power operations in austere 
environments down the line.

The Defense Department is set to prototype a mobile microreactor and ultimately 
demonstrate that small nuclear device at the Energy Department’s Idaho National 
Laboratory.

In a record of decision regarding Project Pele issued by the Pentagon’s 
Strategic Capabilities Office this week, officials confirmed plans to produce 
an “inherently safe by design” transportable microreactor that can deliver 1 to 
5 megawatts of electrical power for at least 3 years in full operation.

“Advanced nuclear power has the potential to be a strategic game-changer for 
the United States, both for the DOD and for the commercial sector,” Project 
Pele Program Manager Dr. Jeff Waksman said.

“For it to be adopted, it must first be successfully demonstrated under 
real-world operating conditions.”

Microreactors can operate independently from the electric grid and generate 
roughly up to 50 megawatts of power.

Project Pele marks the first electricity-generating, fourth-generation nuclear 
reactor to be designed and built in the United States.

Once operational, it will be a High-Temperature Gas Reactor that relies on 
High-Assay Low Enriched Uranium Tristructural Isotropic fuel. China’s HTR-PM 
was the first nuclear reactor demonstrated in the world, reaching criticality 
last September.

This announcement comes several years after Defense officials articulated 
intent to conduct an environmental analysis associated with making such a 
reactor, as mandated by the National Environmental Policy Act—and also launched 
a microreactor design competition.

With expectations to select one engineering design in the spring, DOD is 
considering separate competing options from BWXT Advanced Technologies LLC of 
Lynchburg, Virginia and X-energy LLC of Greenbelt, Maryland.

At this point, the DOD uses approximately 30 terawatt-hours—or 30 million 
megawatt-hours—of electricity per year, which is more than some small nations, 
and more than 10 million gallons of fuel per day, officials noted.

Those levels will likely increase going forward, as new weapons and radars 
systems and the electrification of non-tactical vehicles come into fruition.

“A safe, small, transportable nuclear reactor would address this growing demand 
with a resilient, carbon-free energy source that would not add to the DOD’s 
fuel needs, while supporting mission-critical operations in remote and austere 
environments,” according to the Pentagon’s press release.

Still, critics weighed in ahead of the office’s decision. In the final, 
more-than-250-page environmental impact statement comment response document, 
the department acknowledged how public commenters in opposition to the proposed 
microreactor fabrication “identified concerns including the risks associated 
with accidents, waste disposal, impacts to the Snake River Aquifer and spent 
nuclear fuel management.”

Once the prototype is demonstrated, DOD will decide “whether or not to 
transition the technology and to use it operationally,” officials noted.

Beyond Energy and Defense, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the U.S. Army 
Corps of Engineers, the National Nuclear Security Administration and NASA are 
involved in this effort.

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