Emerging Nuclear Innovations

Japan’s close call notwithstanding, nuclear will remain an important baseload power source worldwide. And after decades of relative inactivity, companies in China, Europe and elsewhere are poised to reinvigorate the industry with innovations aimed at overcoming the historical objections to nuclear power as we know it today. Which companies are best positioned to open a new nuclear chapter, and why? Read this report by Kachan & Co.

Emerging Nuclear Innovations

Emerging Nuclear Innovations
Picking global winners in a race to reinvent nuclear energy

A report by Kachan & Co., November 2011.

The world will not abandon nuclear energy because of the Fukushima Daiichi incident in Japan. Most worldwide nuclear authorities still project growth in nuclear power.

But the Japanese plant failures underscored the need for new, safer types of nuclear power that have been quietly in gestation for years. For instance, power plants that don’t rely on uranium, and/or that are much smaller in scale, or that don’t produce weaponizable byproducts. Or that are capable of consuming today’s vast stores of plutonium waste. Or that are based on reactions that can’t possibly melt down or explode in the face of natural disasters or terrorist attack.

Some dispute whether it's a clean technology, but nuclear power will need to remain part of the energy mix. Which types of nuclear technologies will be scaled up in the future? The ones the world has come to know and fear? Or promising new breakthroughs like those detailed in this report, which could reshape the face of energy on the planet?

This report equips the reader to better understand the potential market impact of new forthcoming nuclear innovations, identifies technologies and companies expected to win and lose, and makes recommendations for how to best profit from this emerging sector.

Essential for

  • Utilities and large corporations seeking baseload power and/or industrial heat
  • Investors considering investing in, or against, nuclear energy
  • Nuclear equipment vendors, designers, plant builders
  • Governments & energy associations
  • Service providers seeking to identify future energy industry giants
Methodology

Kachan & Co. conducted 30 interviews with leading vendors, consulting scientists, associations, government bodies and others, and synthesized secondary research for this report over a six month period. One company's facilities were toured by Kachan. Research uncovered many details about nuclear innovators' technologies, and their latest research and funding statuses, not available anywhere else.

Organizations receiving significant profiles in report, based on exclusive Kachan interviews
Flibe Energy, General Atomics, General Fusion, Helion Energy, Hyperion Power Generation, the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), Invap, Lightbridge, NuScale, Ottawa Valley Research, QPower, Radix Power and Energy Corp, Rare Earth Extraction Co., Rhodia, Scandinavian Advanced Technology (SCATEC), Terra Power, Thor Energy, Thorium One International, Tri Alpha Energy, U.S. National Ignition Facility (NIF) and a secretive Australian company that claims to have a working fusion reactor entering utility trials.

Technologies compared
Improvements in conventional light water reactors (LWRs), including boiling water reactors (BWRs) and pressurized water reactors (PWRs), use of thorium as a fuel in molten salt and solid fuel reactors, molten salt reactors (MSRs), fast neutron reactors (FNRs), pebble bed reactors (PBRs), modular reactors, and latest approaches to neutronic and aneutronic fusion.

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"The entrenched interests of [today’s nuclear] industry have helped suppress better alternatives. That is about to change."

-From the report

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