April 4, 2026

Diablo Canyon Wins NRC Approval for 20-Year License Extension ()

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved PG&E's 20-year license extension for Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, allowing operations into the mid-2040s pending California legislative approval, and overall marks a major step in extending the state’s largest source of zero-carbon power...

March 26, 2026

NRC Unveils Final Part 53

At long last, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has finalized its new regulatory framework for advanced reactors that are designed to  accelerate regulatory reviews by simplifying and tailoring the review and safety burdens to the specific types of reactor being reviewed, which is why the regulation is titled “Risk-Informed, Technology-Inclusive Regulatory Framework for Advanced Reactors.”

The Nuclear Energy Innovation and Modernization Act (NEIMA), signed in 2019 formally directed the NRC to develop the new, technology-inclusive regulatory approach, since prior to this time, only light water reactors have been licensed by the NRC. The resulting rule—10 CFR Part 53—brings an updated, modernized approach to regulatory and, hence, safety reviews for next generation reactors and industry participants.

Newly appointed NRC Chairman, Ho Nieh, said “This is really a historic milestone. With the addition of Part 53 to Part 50 and 52—and I believe some of you know that we’re working on a microreactor licensing framework—America now has many options available to applicants and licensees that want to pursue the development and deployment of new nuclear technologies.” This final rule from the NRC action is intended to provide a clear risk-informed, technology-inclusive licensing framework that enables advanced nuclear designs to move from concept to construction more rapidly and safely.

Part 53’s shift from a technology-specific to a technology-neutral approach to reactor licensing is intended to address a long-standing issue in regulatory frameworks that were developed specifically for light water reactor technology. Licensing reactors that do not use LWR technology has required applicants to seeking regulatory exemptions to many burdensome prescriptive requirements, leading to a cumbersome licensing process.

“Part 53 offers a comprehensive new approach to license advanced reactors, including non-light-water reactors, across their life cycles,” according to the NRC release. “It provides designers and operators with more flexibility in how they build and run their plants while continuing to ensure safety.”

This week’s announcement comes more than a year after the NRC first published their Part 53 proposed rule, which was widely viewed as not being the solution the industry was looking for. Some 158 public comments were accepted including from Westinghouse, The Breakthrough Institute, the Nuclear Energy Institute, the Idaho National Laboratory and many others. Apparently, the newly revised rule incorporated many of the changes requested by commenters and eliminated sections of the rule that some parties deemed unusable.  Nieh said the final version of Part 53 addresses many of the complaints and comments he and the NRC heard regarding earlier versions of the rule. “I do believe this framework does provide the appropriate flexibility and risk-informed approaches that will make it a usable tool among the other options that are already available,” said Nieh.

According to Acting Deputy Office Director for New Reactors Jeremy Bowen,  Part 53 could enable reactor designs to receive approval in 18 months or less. The cost of the application could be reduced by half or more, given the shorter review and the added flexibility of Part 53. A 2023 analyses of the earlier draft regulation estimated the net averted costs to the industry and the agency for just one applicant could range from $53.6 million to $68.2 million, which may be bigger under the updated final rule.

History: Part 53 is the first new reactor licensing framework issued by the NRC since 1989, when the agency introduced Part 52. NRC officials added that it is the first major update to reactor licensing standards since 1956, when the Atomic Energy Commission (the NRC’s predecessor) issued Part 50. The final rule’s has been long awaited by the industry but, even with the five year time frame that it took, was issued ahead of the 2027 deadline ordered by NEIMA. Today's rules will hopefully update rules that were put in place many, many decades ago that were being used to license the first wave of nuclear reactors built in the United States in the ’60s and ’70s. Said Ho, "We did not know as much about the technology [then] that we know today, where we [did] not have the sophistication and analytical tools to evaluate safety cases that we have today. . . . To me, I see this as removing the friction in legacy frameworks that are no longer needed today.”

According to the NRC website, the Part 53 final rule will be published on April 3, and the rule will go into effect 30 days after it appears in the Federal Register. As part of the posting, the NRC will publish nine additional guidance documents, with additional guidance to follow.

References

ANS, NRC unveils Part 53 Final Rule, March 26, 2026

March 21, 2026

Finland Proposes Overhaul of Nuclear Energy Law to Accelerate New Projects ()

Finland has proposed a comprehensive overhaul of its nuclear energy legislation to streamline licensing, improve investment conditions, and support the deployment of new technologies, including small modular reactors...

March 14, 2026

U.S. Energy Secretary Backs Calls to Reopen Indian Point Nuclear Plant ()

Chris Wright supports calls from Rep. Mike Lawler to rebuild and reopen the shuttered Indian Point Energy Center, arguing the plant’s closure was a “foolish” political decision that has contributed to higher electricity costs and reduced grid reliability across the Northeast...

March 14, 2026

China, Brazil, Italy, and Belgium Join Global Nuclear Capacity Tripling Effort ()

Four new countries—China, Brazil, Italy, and Belgium—have endorsed the Declaration to Triple Nuclear Energy by 2050, totaling 38 existing formal signatories in pursuing low-carbon, reliable, and scalable nuclear power. The move emphasizes advanced reactor technologies, including small modular reactors and fourth-generation designs.

March 14, 2026

Von der Leyen Calls Europe’s Nuclear Phase-Down a “Strategic Mistake,” Announces EU Support for SMRs ()

After more than a decade of policies that sidelined nuclear, the EU has finally begun to acknowledge the misstep. Ursula von der Leyen said Europe made a “strategic mistake” in turning away from nuclear power as the European Commission unveiled plans for new financial support and a strategy in an effort to deploy small modular reactors across the continent in the early 2030s——a modest but notable signal of shifting sentiment, even as member states remain divided and nuclear policy itself remains largely unchanged...

February 19, 2026

Sign our Petition to let California build Nuclear again

California is one of the most progressive, productive, and innovative economies in the world. Yet we are ceding our clean energy leadership because we have put blinders on about nuclear power. We are petitioning to change this anachronistic paradigm because nuclear waste hasn't hurt anyone but climate change is going to destroy our future. There are plenty of solutions to nuclear waste but just a few types of energy that can compete with fossil fuels and nuclear is one. California needs to deploy more nuclear power if we want to succeed in achieving zero-carbon energy by 2045 while also providing abundant and reliable power to our economy.  This petition seeks to get the CEC to determine that there are a plethora of safe solutions to nuclear waste as well as reprocessing capabilities coming online to satisfy the terms of the existing laws, such that the CEC can begin issuing permits again and preparing to bring California into the 21st Century on energy.

February 13, 2026

Norway Initiates Formal Impact Assessment for Proposed SMR Plant ()

Norsk Kjernekraft, a collaborative partner to Blykalla, recently secured approval from Norwegian authorities to start an impact assessment for a proposed multi-SMR plant in Aure and Heim, initiating the first step in the country’s nuclear licensing process...

February 8, 2026

Maritime Nuclear Moves Toward Deployment in the U.S. ()

CORE POWER convened its largest U.S. maritime nuclear summit to date in D.C., bringing together DOE, NRC, maritime regulators, classification societies, and industry participants to advance deployable pathways for floating nuclear power plants and nuclear propulsion, including licensing, classification, liability, safeguards, and ship integration...

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