Infrastructure

Risk-Informed, Technology-Inclusive Regulatory Framework for Advanced Nuclear Reactors

🇺🇸United States··Final Rule·High Impact·View source ↗

AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.

🇬🇧 English

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is issuing a final rule that establishes an entirely new, alternative regulatory framework for licensing commercial nuclear power plants. This framework, mandated by the Nuclear Energy Innovation and Modernization Act (NEIMA), is risk-informed, performance-based, and technology-inclusive — designed specifically to accommodate advanced reactor designs that go beyond traditional light water reactor (LWR) technology. Historically, NRC regulations were built around LWR designs, creating barriers for non-LWR technologies such as molten salt reactors, high-temperature gas reactors, sodium-cooled fast reactors, and other advanced concepts. This rule removes those structural barriers by providing a technology-neutral licensing pathway applicable to any commercial nuclear plant design. The framework emphasizes risk-informed decision-making, meaning that regulatory requirements are scaled to the actual safety risk posed by a given design, rather than applying uniform LWR-derived prescriptive rules. Performance-based criteria allow applicants to demonstrate safety outcomes through any technically valid method, rather than prescribing specific design solutions. This rule is a significant modernization of U.S. nuclear licensing and is expected to accelerate the deployment of next-generation nuclear technologies, supporting both domestic energy security and U.S. competitiveness in the global advanced nuclear market.

AI-generated summary. May contain errors. Refer to official sources for legal decisions.

Key Changes

  • Establishes a new alternative licensing pathway under 10 CFR Part 53 specifically for advanced nuclear reactor designs not based on light water reactor technology
  • Implements risk-informed, performance-based regulatory requirements that scale to the actual safety risk profile of each reactor design rather than applying prescriptive LWR-derived standards
  • Fulfills the statutory mandate of the Nuclear Energy Innovation and Modernization Act (NEIMA) by creating a technology-inclusive framework applicable to all commercial nuclear plant types

+ 3 more changes with Pro

Obligations

What this law requires

high

Applicants seeking to license advanced reactor designs must demonstrate safety outcomes using the risk-informed, performance-based framework rather than LWR-derived prescriptive rules.

Advanced reactor design applicants and commercial nuclear power plant license applicants
licensing
high

NRC must apply regulatory requirements scaled to the actual safety risk posed by a given reactor design, rather than applying uniform LWR-derived prescriptive requirements.

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)
operational
high

Applicants must use technically valid methods to demonstrate safety outcomes under the performance-based criteria framework, rather than being limited to specific prescribed design solutions.

Commercial nuclear power plant applicants and advanced reactor design applicants
licensing
high

NRC must establish and maintain a technology-inclusive regulatory framework applicable to any commercial nuclear plant design, including non-LWR technologies such as molten salt reactors, high-temperature gas reactors, and sodium-cooled fast reactors.

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)
operational

Affected Parties

Advanced nuclear reactor developers and startups (e.g., molten salt, gas-cooled, sodium-cooled designs)Commercial nuclear power plant operators and license applicants+6 more…

Tags

nuclear energy,advanced reactors,NRC regulation