September 22, 2024

Big Banks Agree to Finance Nuclear

Fourteen of the world's largest banks and financial institutions, including Bank of America, Citi, Parabas, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, are pledging to increase their financial support and backing for nuclear energy. This announcement was made at an event held in New York City during Climate Week, in a long-awaited recognition by these financial institutions that the nuclear sector has a critical role to play in the transition to low-carbon energy and provided direct support of COP28's pledged goal of a global tripling of nuclear power.

The announcement occurred at a gathering in the Rockefeller Center, which brought together heads of state, ministers, and top executives from the nuclear and finance sectors. John Podesta, White House climate policy adviser, introduced the sesion by saying, “Our mission is clear: to ensure nuclear energy plays its role in building a sustainable, secure future. If we work together, we can make nuclear a cornerstone of our climate strategy.”

The banks did not commit to any specific funding but their pledge is an acknowledgement that the availability of funding is critical in the transition to low-carbon energy. In particular, high financing costs have been an obstacle to the construction of new plants and lack of availability of funding interest contributed to the decline in new projects for most of the last four decades. with the majority of the world's  reactors built in the 1970s and 1980s.

We believe that this new bank pledge is a reflection of the demand inflection point that nuclear is experiencing, with increasing customer interest demonstrating the value that nuclear has for both reliable energy and carbon-free energy. Banks are increasingly aware that, rather than being controversial, nuclear power is becoming increasingly popular, especially for those fully committed to decarbonization.

Bank of America has already begun to recommend nuclear investments for its clientel, having previously issued its "Nuclear Necessity" report. It will naturally follow, then, that BofA and other banks that have done their homework, will be willing to provide direct lending, project finance and investment banking support to utilities and other nuclear companies looking to deploy new nuclear generation.

This announcement should help to shift attitudes at other international and multilateral agencies, such as the World Bank and IMF, which still do not provide any finance to nuclear projects. What is becoming increasingly clear is that there is virtually no scenario in which the world can achieve carbon neutrality by 2050 without nuclear power, according to the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. These banks have heard that message and are ready to deal.

[Read more at the below sources.]

Sources

Financial Times, World’s biggest banks pledge support for nuclear power, by Lee Harris and Malcolm Moore, September 22, 2024

World Economic Forum, Center for Energy & Materials, World's biggest banks back nuclear power, and other top energy stories, Roberto Bocco, updated Oct. 9, 2024.

Environmental Energy Leader, 14 Major Banks Pledge Support to Triple Nuclear Capacity by 2050: Leading financial institutions unite to accelerate global nuclear energy expansion, September 24, 2024.

September 15, 2023

What’s NEXT? Coal to Nuclear transition


John Kerry, working on the sidelines of US Climate Action, announced the winners of Project Phoenix and a new US initiative called NEXT, short for Nuclear Expediting the Energy Transition Porgram, as part of the State Department's FIRST Program. Czechia, Slovakia and Poland were selected to participate in Project Phoenix and receive support for coal-to-SMR feasibility studies. 

In a September 7, 2023 announcement issued by the State Department we learn about progress that has been made in a State Department program called Foundational Infrastructure for the Responsible Use of Small Modular Reactor Technology (FIRST).

Building on his announcement of Project Phoenix at the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Sharm El Sheikh (COP27), Secretary Kerry announced that project proposals from Czechia, Slovakia, and Poland were competitively selected to participate in Project Phoenix and will receive support for coal-to-SMR feasibility studies.

So, while at the Three Seas Iniative Summit in Bucharest, Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry announced the Project Phoenix winners and a new initiative for the U.S. to accelerate the transition to clean energy which furthers the role of "new, secure, and safe nuclear technologies." 

This is the NEXT program, short for Nuclear Expediting the Energy Transition, with One Stop Shop for SMR Support.  The NEXT effort will provide countries in Europe and Eurasia that are approaching SMR deployment decisions at the NEXT virtual center where they can apply for a suite of advanced project preparation tools and services.  These services may include in-person technical, financial, and regulatory consultancies and advisory services; expert study tours to visit U.S. nuclear facilities, national laboratories, and universities; competitively selected provision of an SMR simulator to support workforce development.

Project Phoenix and NEXT One Stop Shop are subprograms of the U.S. Department of State’s Foundational Infrastructure for the Responsible Use of Small Modular Reactor Technology (FIRST) Program. The United States is committed to supporting the use of innovative, safe, and secure clean energy technologies to power global decarbonization efforts, advance energy security worldwide, and provide options to achieve net zero transition in hard-to-abate energy sectors.

Read The State Department's Announcement at: Special Presidential Envoy for Climate Kerry Announces Project Phoenix Participants and the Nuclear Expediting the Energy Transition (NEXT) Program, September 7, 2023.

For extra color on the benefits of the Coal-to-Nuclear transition, see Level Up your coal plant by giving it a nuclear reactor!, publishd to Youtube by Thies Becker.

July 7, 2020

Lagarde puts fighting climate into agenda of European Central Bank’s bond program

Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank, wants to use the €2.8tn asset purchase scheme in the fight against climate change. This marks the first time that the ECB president has committed to “greening” the central bank’s operations, including asset purchases. “I want to explore every avenue available in order to combat climate change,” Lagarde told the Financial Times. “This is something that I hold very strongly.” The move makes the ECB the first main central bank to examine using a flagship bond-buying programme to pursue green objectives.

Read more by Roula Khalaf and Martin Arnold at the Financial Times: "Lagarde puts green policy top of agenda in ECB bond buying."

© 2025 Nucleation Capital | Terms & Policies

Nucleation-Logo