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TerraPower in Deal with Meta for Eight Natrium 345 MW Advanced Nuclear Plants

Their first demonstration reactor is scheduled to go online in 2031. But they’re going to build 8 production reactors, with all the regulatory hurdles, in any reasonable length of time? Right.

The headline should probably be, “Meta invests in nuclear startup” and leave it there. My guess is this deal is quietly swept under the rug when the first reactor fails to go fully online by 2032.

2 hours agopico303

While Wyoming is a demonstration plant, it is a demonstration plant of exactly the reactor they plan to build in series.

And they have received NRC approval.

https://thebreakthrough.org/press/release-the-nrc-issues-con...

So not sure what additional regulatory hurdles you see. Can you enlighten us?

2 hours agompweiher

From your link,

> TerraPower must still complete construction, submit an operating license application, and satisfy all applicable safety and regulatory requirements before loading fuel and beginning operations.

2 hours agocapnrefsmmat

Basically the built plant must pass a rigorous inspection before starting operations. But for that the plant needs to be built!

2 hours agonine_k

And built well, which has been a source of big delays in the past.

2 hours agobronson

And I’m sure no corners will be cut!

an hour agodevmor

I mean that doesn't sound like very big hurdles. It is an inspection of a completed reactor to make sure it wasn't managed and built like trash. Every factory and business and powerplant is subject to an inspection before it can operate. Even most residentual homes require an inspection before people can live in it.

2 hours agoAngryData

It is what typically all reactors get stuck on for years - or often decades.

2 hours agolazide

I doubt it.

There used to be separate construction and operating permits, and sometimes you got the building permit, built the plant and then never got the operating license.

This has now been streamlined with a combined construction/operating license. If you built what you promised to build, you get to operate it.

an hour agompweiher

Can you give an example of a plant that has been built under this streamlined process and what kind of timeline it had?

The only recent nuclear buildouts that I personally have knowledge of are expansions to existing plants and thus have a lower barrier to get going.

an hour agodevmor

Since it was just released, that’s pretty hard to do eh?

I’m familiar with the reactors built on other previous ‘expedited’ processes that ended up being anything but fast. We’ll see how it goes eh?

44 minutes agolazide

If it was just released, then your claims about it are entirely hypothetical and best-case-scenario. Of course we have to "see how it goes" - there's no merit but hopefulness to your stance...

16 minutes agodevmor

It will be quietly canceled in about two years….

an hour agoDanox

That's the permit/approval for the pilot/test, right? There are about a million approvals they need to get through. Are they using the DoE fast tracking method?

an hour agochermi

Is it not possible that they build the first one and things don't go smoothly and they need to make some adjustments for subsequent builds?

an hour agothinkcontext

They must investigate how it affects the whales. But won't be told which whales and where

20 minutes agoTiredOfLife

This is the correct response

a minute agoUnicironic

Didn't the Trump admin put in the same lawyer who helped Uber to "reform" the NRC? I can't find the Bloomberg article but they made it sound like they were going to gut the NRC. To be clear I am not endorsing this, but I read that was happening or they were at least trying.

2 hours agosrmatto

> Under this commercial agreement, Meta will provide funding to support the deployment of the Natrium plants, with delivery of initial units as early as 2032

The wording there implies some upfront money from Meta, and that this isn’t just a PPA like we normally see.

But with no numbers attached it’s hard to know if it’s a serious investment or just PR fluff.

3 hours agoMichaelNolan

Does anyone understand how Meta is able to spend so much money on AI with basically no AI product to speak of? Especially after sinking billions of dollars into a failed VR product? I just don't really understand why they are investing in data centers, I don't know of any actual product they offer that anyone is seriously considering using in the space.

2 hours agokamranjon

There are many uses for AI other than selling API/chat access. For Meta it can be for example use internally as a software tool, in the same way that they have their own datacenters instead of running on AWS. They can also use them to power recommendation algorithms to increase time on platform. Or they can use them to better target adverts and thus increase the revenue from ads. They can also use them to help people make ads on their platforms etc....

2 hours agozipy124

Because Zuckerberg is the king and has complete control, but Meta is so far behind in this so-called AI model race it will be canceled quietly. It will just be but a footnote in about 2 to 3 years.

an hour agoDanox

The market forgives misadventures cause Meta is still solvent and they make money YoY. Additionally, they are developing heavily in the AI space with making Llama available to the public and all the AI integrations into their products.

2 hours agomagicmicah85

Internal use to watch everything and control everything

2 hours agobtbuildem

They are using the same infinite money glitch as Google - ads revenue.

2 hours agoSoKamil

They will sell the capacity to others. And building data centers let's them leverage local tax advantages/incentives.

2 hours agosandworm101

Imagine buying ad space on their platforms, but instead of writing copy and providing images, you simply give it your website.

Then they generate unique copy and images for each user (or hyper-targeted bucket of users), tailored to what would make them click. All continuously A/B tested.

2 hours agotyre

I'm imagining it, and it'd at best be the same as if you gave your website to an ad sales agent without any instructions as to what your actual product or target audience is. At worst it'd be writing copy that is fully fabricated, doesn't match your brand language, and opens you up for false advertising claims.

43 minutes agobulder

I think it is a bad idea to allow Meta to participate in nuclear reactor operations. Nuclear reactors and other power infrastructure should be utility-owned and managed under clear regulations designed to eliminate the possibility of control by outside interests who might, or would, be tempted to unload byproducts suitable for production of weapons to anyone who had the money to buy them. They should be prohibited from spinning off any part of their operations into weapons development and prohibited from investing in any entity that is involved in weapons production.

I like the idea of a network of thorium reactors. I don't want to see any part of that network owned or controlled by people that we already know place their own selfish interests above everything else.

Therefore I guess I am suggesting that high net worth individuals should be prohibited from all investments in or operations involving weapons production.

Maybe I just don't trust that guy and think that he would gladly offload the responsibility of waste disposal or processing on anyone in a backroom deal that we don't learn about until he has been providing materials to refine and construct weapons to individuals who will gladly employ them in attacks.

I'm not paranoid, I just hate assholes.

an hour agodoodlebugging

Most nuclear power plants worldwide are owned and operated by private companies rather than governments?

If anything, nuclear tends to be much more strictly regulated than the 73 GW (wtf) of off-grid mostly gas plants to power datacenters for example.

https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/fast-tracked-power-p...

24 minutes agodopa42365

I mean, didn't we give the government and the public long enough to prove they could provide abundant, cheap nuclear? They were so closed in the 60/70s and have since failed miserably and everyone has suffered for it. Cheap, abundant energy is good for humanity. If a private company accelerates it, I'm here for it.

Yes, I'm also for solar, and wind, and geothermal, and nat gas, and way out there fusion. It's hard to exaggerate how much cheap, abundant, reliable energy helps civilization.

an hour agochermi

But everything about this is already privatized, from the uranium mining to the nuclear power plant operators to the nuclear waste disposal, to each piece in the nuclear triard manufacturered by military industry, from the private contractors guarding our bombs down to the luxury fallout shelter industry. It's big business. You aren't paranoid, just naive to think Mark Zuckerberg is in any way the problem in particular, think of all the billionaire assholes you have never heard about.

https://www.icanw.org/investing_in_the_arms_race

an hour agolyu07282

Meta have recently appointed a new president, ex Wall Street with connections to sovereign wealth and also she is married to a republican politician

Financial press saying they are exploring all means of raising large sums of money for AI investment

Also rumours Meta is going to start a Cloud business.

34 minutes agofsuts

> A dual Natrium reactor site can provide 690 MW of reliable 24/7 365 power

Given that they haven’t actually built one, asserting the performance seems inappropriate, _especially_ the uptime which IIRC is far, far higher than is typical for proven designs, let alone a new one.

2 hours agoOctoth0rpe

Well operated, mature nuclear power plants can easily achieve 90%+ uptime. I don’t think this is a huge issue.

2 hours agochristina97

In fact, the uptime of US nuclear power plants was above 90% for the last decade.

And even if a reactor goes offline, a power plant usually operates 2 to 4 reactors, so the entire plant continues operating.

2 hours agonine_k

This is a brand new type, there's no way that equivalent operation to a decades old design with centuries of operational experience can be assumed. Presumably its been designed for high uptime but it would not be unusual for new technology like this to require some refinement.

an hour agothinkcontext

Is 90% equal to 24x7, 365?

2 hours agotesting22321

Yes. The refueling takes the most time but that is planned years in advance. A one-year planned outage every decade can still be 24/7/365 in the other nine years.

2 hours agosandworm101

Natrium is expected to spend around 1 month refueling every 24 months.

an hour agop1mrx

So that is say 5% downtime. Add in time for upgrades and refurbishments, and refueling periods alone are bang on the 10% downtime number.

an hour agosandworm101

Ah yes, the ol' GitHub method of reporting. "When we're up, we have lots of nines!"

an hour agobronson

Unless they hire Homer Simpson.....

2 hours agoveverkap

> The eight 345 MW advanced sodium cooled reactors would provide Meta with up to 2.8 GW of carbon-free, baseload energy. Each reactor comes with the Natrium technology’s innovative built-in energy storage system providing the capacity to boost total output to 4 GW of power.

For energy storage, is it storing the hot water, or using batteries to store generated electricity?

2 hours agonelsondev

Sodium cooled. They will store heat in a big thermos of molten salt.

2 hours agosandworm101

Hence, natrium.

an hour agojihadjihad

Even if this flops, it's still better to lose money on this than the Metaverse.

an hour agopornel

The name makes me think it is a molten salt reactor, but it uses liquid sodium. Still aptly named.

I was hoping the Thorium molten salt ones with atmospheric pressure vessels would pick up pace thanks to this boom in power demand or Helion would arrive on the scene right on time for this.

3 hours agogopalv

It is a molten salt reactor, just not a molten salt thorium reactor.

2 hours agoeigenspace

Sodium (without chlorine or similar) is a metal, not a salt.

They plan to use molten salt for energy storage, but the reactor itself is liquid metal cooled.

an hour agop1mrx

Sad for Meta it will be obsolete by the time it’s theoreticallyput online which I doubt will ever happen.

an hour agoDanox

Capex bubble anyone?

Meta should be a good buy somewhere in $150-$200 area. I guess.

2 hours agobaq
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3 hours ago

At least we might get some good things from the AI bubble.

31 minutes agovictorbjorklund

Yes! Almost every human problem boils down to an energy problem. I welcome the future in which we have so much nuclear power (and other power sources) that electricity is too cheap to meter.

29 minutes agogottorf
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2 hours ago

So what? The tech doesn't work well and the contractors have no knowledge of government contracting.

2 hours agosnigacookie

When I read this I am more convinced that Europe is done. With leaders like Kaja Kallis, Rutte and Ursula it's so blatantly visible that these people can't think further than one minute. It's really time for a breakup so countries are no longer chained to insanity. They are destroying themselves.

2 hours agoholoduke

Ursula Vonderleyenska is not real and can not harm you

2 hours agoMuromec

It seems Europe is living rent free in your head, maybe you should talk to a shrink.

2 hours agobflesch

I think that person is in the EU and certainly not living rent free!

But it is a very real concern that there seems to be a total lack of technology investment and innovation across Europe.

2 hours agopetcat

> that there seems to be a total lack of technology investment and innovation across Europe

I wouldn’t be concerned, because this is obviously false.

2 hours agop2detar

yes, and hopefully all of them will be set up in his garden and his children kindergarten.

Because why somebody else should bear the risk of a nuclear disaster.

This is nonsense. State/society is the last backstop, the last resort insurer in nuclear risk. Why shall we insure nuclear risks so Mark gets richer with more clicks ? again socializing the costs and privatizing de profits.

Not in my backyard.

2 hours agojulcol

Maybe you're right. Maybe we should just continue to burn coal and let people die of black lung mining it and millions of people living in the pollution zone. Safe, clean energy is overrated.