December 22, 2024

Congratulating Nuclear’s 1st “40 under 40” Class

 

The American Nuclear Society announced its inaugural class of Nuclear 40 Under 40 winners on Dec 13th and we want to congratulate them all. It is rather exciting to see the ANS announce this program, which is not just recognition of the contributions of young people working in the industry. In fact, this reflects a remarkable transformation for the industry overall, which has previously seen decades of decline and the aging of its work force, but which is now seeing growing interest and engagement by young people, reflecting the industry's resurgence.

There are many ways for young professionals to engage with nuclear power, everything from simply studying nuclear engineering or launching a nuclear venture, as did Brad Fox, a founder of Nuclearn (one of our portfolio ventures), all the way to leading the U.S. DOE's Office of Nuclear Energy, as is Dr. Katy Hoff, one of the 40 individuals selected. According to the ANS, those selected "represent the exceptional talent, vision, and drive that is transforming the nuclear sector across the community, . . . [with] remarkable commitment, innovation, and leadership in advancing nuclear science and technology, paving the way for a future in which nuclear power and applications will continue to play a vital role in addressing global challenges."

This industry recognition "celebrates the impact these individuals have made in fields as varied as advanced reactor technology research and deployment, radioisotope systems, nuclear policy, waste management, machine learning and artificial intelligence, fusion technology, fuel supply chain development, advanced fuel research, nonproliferation and national security applications, aging management, and many more."

The 2024 Nuclear 40 Under 40 includes:

Abdalla Abou-Jaoude Assel Aitkaliyeva JungHyun Bae Nicholas Brown
Emily Caffrey Danielle Castley Adam Deatherage Harsh Desai
Kevin Field Sarah Finkeldei Carlo Fiorina Shannon Fitzgerald
Bradley Fox Joseph Garguilo Dave Grabaskas Karen Koop Hogue
Benjamin Holtzman Kathryn Huff Bret Kugelmass Florian Laggner
Lauren Lathem Erica Libra-Sharkey Jessie Lilya Ben Lindley
Kevin Lyon Matthew Marzano Kallie Metzger Tommy Morgan
Kristi Nichols April Novak Erik Nygaard Brett Rampal
Benjamin Reinke Paul Romano Koroush Shirvan Grace Stanke
Sarah Stevenson Kurt Terrani Aditi Verma Lizzy Yates

In particular, we congratulate Brad Fox, from Nuclearn, Katy Huff, who heads up the Office of Nuclear Energy, Kurt Terrani of USNC, Harsh Desai of Zeno Power, and Grace Stanke, a former Miss America winner who devoted her year in the spotlight to advocating for nuclear power, and who is now part of Constellation Energy.

October 21, 2023

Grace Stanke

Grace Stanke, as the reigning Miss America, has literally changed the face of nuclear power. As a 21-year old nuclear engineering student, she is much more than a pretty face, and is studying to become a nuclear fuels engineer. In her spare time, however, she entered the Miss America contest, was crowned Miss Wisconsin and then, in 2022, won the Miss America pageant. Having the brains to study nuclear engineering is not what distinguishes Miss Stanke, as she serve her year as an ambassador of the Miss America contest. It's that she's chosen to use her platform to promote and elevate the nuclear industry and the benefits of nuclear power for addressing climate change.

Much of the press that she has garnered in her travels this past year, has remarked on the changing trends that Miss Stanke's efforts have aided. Nearly 60% of Americans favor nuclear power plants and believe that the US should protect existing nuclear power and boost nuclear capacity. This represents a big increase from being clocked in at just 43% support as recently as 2020.

Miss Stanke, as Miss America, has an extraordinary platform and she hasn't been shy about using it to support and extoll the virtues of nuclear energy.  She's bringing nuclear to entirely new constituents at the same time that nuclear power is gaining traction with governments around the world trying to decarbonize, with filmmakers like Oliver Stone, whose documentary "Nuclear Now," laid the groundwork for more Americans to get educated about the benefits of nuclear power, and with billionaire entrepreneurs and business leaders like OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Elon Musk and Bill Gates, all of whom have been consistently touting the benefits of atomic energy but probably not reaching too many young women.

As the reigning Miss America and soon-to-be nuclear fuels engineer, Miss Stanke's year-long campaign to promote nuclear power in over 20 states was probably seen by millions of young women students, who now see her as a rolemodel, both highly educated and very elegant and poised, bringing them information that might have been impossible to convey in almost any other way.

Now, combined with the efforts of nuclear social media influencers like Isabelle Boemeke and widely-regarded documentaries, Ms. Stanke is probably sweeping along an entire generation of young women in her wake who may be primed to consider careers in nuclear, where they had previously probably never thought much about nuclear power at all. Now a growing percentage will recognize that nuclear power attracts women like Grace Stanke both for a career but also for its instrumental role in combating climate change and achieving both net-zero goals and sustainable development goals.

Miss Stanke will graduate next year and still has the majority of her professional career ahead of her. But, having accepted a position with Constellation Energy after her graduation, she is sure to continue to have a big impact on the industry.

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Sources:


Daily Mail:  The Glamorous new face of Nuclear power: Miss America,
by Alice Wright, Oct. 7, 2023
MENAFN: Miss America Powers Up the Nuclear Debate, 10/11/23

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