Researchers, lawmakers look to turn Wisconsin into the 'Silicon Valley' for nuclear energy
A group of researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Realta Fusion, a Madison-based nuclear startup, have developed a fusion device in Stoughton that creates the same kind of reaction that fuels the sun and stars. The process is much different than fission, the nuclear reaction that powers current nuclear reactors and the atomic bomb.
Fusion is a carbon-free process that relies on heated plasma, a gas made up of hot ions and free-moving electrons. The process doesn't create radioactive waste like current nuclear reactors do, so it eliminates the need to store harmful materials.
Wisconsin lawmakers are hoping to work alongside those researchers as they learn about scaling up fusion reactions and create support for companies interested in researching and investing in the technology.
Three of the 45 companies working on fusion are already located in Wisconsin, and the new bills could encourage more to come here.
Nuclear energy could be one area of compromise for Wisconsin lawmakers, with Gov. Tony Evers including it in his most recent budget proposal, and Republican legislators pushing a package of bills that would lay the groundwork for a new, cleaner type of nuclear energy to meet the rising energy demands statewide.
Rep. David Steffen, R-Howard, is one of the lawmakers who authored a package of three bills supporting nuclear development in Wisconsin and streamlining the process of locating a new fusion energy plant when the technology is ready.
"We are already in a deficit position in terms of energy production and next-generation nuclear provides the greatest opportunity for sustainable, clean, safe energy for the people and businesses of Wisconsin," he said in an interview.
The package includes two bills and one resolution in support of nuclear energy, authored by Steffen, Rep. Shae Sortwell, R-Two Rivers, and Sen. Julian Bradley, R-New Berlin.
The resolution contends Wisconsin is a desirable location for nuclear development, and how technology discovered in the state can be used to strengthen national security and provide safe, clean energy.
The Senate has approved the resolution, and the Assembly will have its first look at it in an upcoming Committee on Rules meeting
The second of the three bills would create a State of Wisconsin Nuclear Power Summit Board and direct the state to host a summit, drawing knowledge to the state. The bill would also allocate funding for the summit.
The final bill would direct the Public Service Commission to conduct a nuclear power siting study, to find the best location for a new plant to be erected in the Madison area.
The bills have not yet been taken up by committees but could receive hearings as soon as next week.
Steffen said a working power plant likely wouldn't go online for nearly a decade. It's important to get the legislative work done now, he said, so that when a company is ready to build a new plant, all of the groundwork has already been laid.
Another driver behind the bills is the newly proposed Microsoft center in Mount Pleasant, which will need a large amount of reliable energy, he said.
"We are going to be in a dramatic energy production deficit very soon," Steffen said. "The Microsoft data center campus will be drawing more power than the entire city of Madison."
Evers' budget also directs the Public Service Commission to conduct a nuclear feasibility study and create an appropriation to fund it, signs that the issue may see some agreement between Republicans and Democrats.
But there could be a catch in getting the other bills passed, because of debate over another set of bills focused on energy.
Republicans are locked in a fierce debate over energy regulation, with one side supporting the so-called "Right of First Refusal" bill and others supporting the "Energy Reform Act." The second bill would incentivize nuclear energy development in the state, but both largely focus on energy transmission and who gets the first rights to building transmission lines.
But as that debate plays out, the interest in nuclear energy still seems like a focus for Wisconsin, both for lawmakers and researchers.
In Stoughton, just a few miles south of Madison, Realta Fusion and researchers and students from UW-Madison have been developing a small fusion reactor that has been generating plasma for the last several months successfully.
The reactor isn't noisy. Though the reaction isn't visible inside the machine, periodic clicks measure what's happening inside. Nearby, a group of researchers studies charts of the energy being produced.
The reactor traps high-energy particles, or plasma, between two magnetic fields and creates fusion reactions. The fusion reaction uses smaller elements, like hydrogen, and fuses them together, instead of breaking larger elements like fission does, said Dominick Bindl, the vice president of technical development for Realta.
The process of fusion is much cleaner than fission, Bindl said, and there aren't any radioactive waste left behind, making it safer and environmentally friendly.
"After you complete the fusion between two isotopes of hydrogen, you make helium and no long-lived radioactive waste," he said. "It's emissions-free. There are no carbon emissions from the formation of this energy."
And because the fusion reaction creates "dense" energy when a plant is eventually built, it will contain all the fuel needed for 30 years of operation, Bindl said. Once the reactor is turned on, it will run constantly and be able to feed into the energy grid. There won't be a need to establish a new grid or add in supporting technology.
"You turn it on, and it just runs," he said.
A plant would require a cooling system, but less so than the current nuclear reactors, which have to be sited near bodies of water and require large amounts.
The companies are currently studying the reactions in Stoughton to figure out how far away from communities fusion reactors would have to be, but there will likely be less space to consider because the reactions are safer. This technology is vastly different than the reactors that melted down in Chernobyl.
Realta is doing work to ensure that people understand the difference between fission and fusion, and will work diligently to educate and assure people if they're worried or scared.
"There's no such thing as a fusion runaway reaction," Bindl said. "That's where we spend a lot of time engaging with the community on educating the community as to what fusion is, what the risks are, and how we will manage those risks to ensure that when we have fusion technologies available to deploy energy, people want those solutions."
Steffen is well aware that there is hesitancy around nuclear energy from the public.
Recent television shows about the Chernobyl explosion have brought those worries to the forefront again, and environmental groups routinely push back on the state's current reactors in Kewaunee and at Point Beach near Two Rivers over worries about pollution in Lake Michigan from the nuclear waste storage. But he encourages residents to learn more about fusion, and how much safer it really is.
"The next generation nuclear is not your father's nuclear," he said. "The plans that are going to be coming online in the next decade are ones that are safer, cleaner, produce less waste. They're smaller."
This is "an incredible opportunity for the future," he said, and Wisconsin has the chance to be at the forefront of the research and implementation of this new technology. With investors like Bill Gates supporting fusion, it's sure to grow by leaps and bounds in the coming decade.
If the bills proposed in the Legislature are all passed, Wisconsin will be steps ahead of other states and already know where there's space to put a plant. Capitalizing on this opportunity now gives the opportunity to cement the state as a place where nuclear research and development is welcome and encouraged, Steffen said.
It's an opportunity that doesn't exist for solar or wind energy. While the state can purchase those products, it's unlikely that Wisconsin will become a leader in those areas.
"Wisconsin already is considered a leader on fusion technology, and we do have arguably the world's best nuclear engineering program, and we are already a recognized international hub for nuclear technology, especially next-generation nuclear," Steffen said. "We have the opportunity to capitalize that and make Wisconsin and Dane County in particular the Silicon Valley of next generation."
Laura Schulte can be reached at leschulte@jrn.com and on X @SchulteLaura.
This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Could Wisconsin become the 'Silicon Valley' of nuclear fusion?
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
18 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Map Shows Tax Cuts Promised by Trump Administration Across 50 States
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Tax Foundation, a nonpartisan Washington-based think tank, has produced a map forecasting the effects of President Donald Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act on taxes across the United States, broken down to the county level. The White House's website reposted the map, noting that the Tax Foundation said Trump's package would "reduce federal taxes on average for individual taxpayers in every state" and create almost 1 million jobs. Newsweek contacted the Tax Foundation for comment on Saturday outside regular office hours. Why It Matters Trump signed his One Big Beautiful Bill, the centerpiece of his economic agenda, into law on July 4 after it narrowly passed both the House and Senate. The Congressional Budget Office has said the legislation will add $2.4 trillion to the U.S. national debt, a forecast that contributed to a falling out between Trump and his previous close confidant Elon Musk. The One Big Beautiful Bill included sweeping tax cuts, reduced spending on Medicaid, and additional funding for the military and border security. It also raised the U.S. debt ceiling by $5 trillion. What To Know On Wednesday, the Tax Foundation published a study forecasting the effects of the One Big Beautiful Bill on taxes paid by the average American on a county-by-county basis between 2026 and 2035. This was accompanied by a map showing the breakdown by county over this period. Two days later, the White House published a news release welcoming the study, which included a screenshot of the Tax Foundation's map taken for 2026. According to the Tax Foundation, the average tax cut per American for 2026 will be $3,752 because of Trump's spending package. This is forecast to fall to $2,505 in 2030 as some measures expire before increasing again to $3,301 in 2035. A map produced by the Tax Foundation showing the effects of President Donald Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill in 2026 on a county-by-county basis. A map produced by the Tax Foundation showing the effects of President Donald Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill in 2026 on a county-by-county basis. Tax Foundation The states forecast to see the largest tax cuts in 2926 are Wyoming ($5,375), Washington ($5,372) and Massachusetts ($5,139). By contrast, the smallest cuts are expected in West Virginia and Mississippi—at $2,503 and $2,401, respectively. In its report, the Tax Foundation described the One Big Beautiful Bill as "the most significant legislative changes to federal tax policy since the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act," which was passed in Trump's first term. The president's One Big Beautiful Bill contained a number of tax cuts, including extending corporation and income taxes he imposed in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. It also raises the cap on state and local tax deductions over the next five years to $40,000 for those making less than $500,000 per year, reduces tax on tips and overtime pay, and phases out some of former President Joe Biden's energy tax credits. The Tax Foundation also projected that the One Big Beautiful Bill would produce about 938,000 jobs "over the long run," including 132,000 in California and 81,000 in Texas. What People Are Saying White House deputy press secretary Anna Kelly said in the news release: "President Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill is the largest, most consequential tax cut on the middle class ever. Now, the Tax Foundation—the leading nonpartisan tax policy nonprofit—confirms that. Between lower inflation, massive investments, and historic tax cuts, all Americans are reaping the benefits of the Trump Economy—and the Golden Age has just begun." What Happens Next While supporters of Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill may be buoyed by the Tax Foundation's report, which suggests it will result in widespread tax reductions and job creation, critics are likely to continue raising concerns about its effects on the national debt and Medicaid cuts.


The Hill
an hour ago
- The Hill
Do Cuomo and Adams secretly want Mamdani to win?
I have worked with a number of very successful candidates and politicians. The one really invaluable skill they all had in common was that they understood basic math. They knew that two plus two often leads to victory, and that two minus one — or three — usually leads to defeat. Addition, subtraction, division. Simple. Unless, to paraphrase a line from 'Top Gun,' 'Your ego is writing checks your body can't cash.' There is no doubt that many New York City residents — as well as countless people around the country and world who now fear for that iconic city's future — have been shaken by a recent Siena College poll showing that far-left socialist Zohran Mamdani leads the race to become the next mayor by 19 points over his next-closest opponent, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Behind them are Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa with 12 percent and incumbent Mayor Eric Adams with 7 percent. Mamdani has the gift of basic math working massively in his favor. In this particular case, division. Without doing a thing, the cliché 'divide and conquer' has been the most important campaign strategy in his quiver. Other than offering the socialist panacea of 'a chicken in every pot' — free stuff to constituents who really know nothing about him — it is the one factor that may make him the next mayor of New York. Mamdani doesn't have to pay for it, focus-group it or expend any political capital. He simply has to sit back and prepare as the respective egos of Cuomo and Adams hand him the keys to Gracie Mansion — and the four years he will need to bring New York City to its knees. Why? Because Cuomo and Adams are now engaged in an ego-fueled blinking contest to see who might exit the race first. That, or they secretly want Mamdani to win. Either way, it's Mamdani with the Cheshire Cat-like smile. This is proving to be an interesting election in that the winning candidate will be the one least despised by the voters. Each of the four major candidates have high negatives and elicit harsh criticism from various blocks of voters. Sadly, forgotten in this high-profile contest between dueling egos are the millions of people in the city who are either barely getting by or suffering in the throes of dysfunction and despair — ironically enough, often caused by the failed policies of previous ego-driven mayors. Many of the residents of New York City who are struggling daily with poverty, crime and lack of education for their children are Black or minority. Ah, but we are seemingly not allowed to talk about that. Many on the left — with a huge assist from Democratic leadership, the media, academia and teachers unions — have gamed it so if you even try to point out the failings of a major American city such as New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Washington or Baltimore and who is running it, you risk being labeled a racist, bigot or a misogynist. I don't care what a mayor looks like or how they identify sexually. The only thing I care about is the suffering of millions of constituents. Life for those people is beyond brutal in many cases — an irrefutable fact you almost never hear about, because that would run counter to the various narratives of the left's noise machine. For example, let's look at another major American city that is a poster child for failure, massive dysfunction and turning its back on those most in need: Chicago. A city in which, as I have pointed out in the past, more than 40,000 men, women and children — almost all minority and from the inner city — have been murdered over the last six decades. Extrapolate that number across multiple American inner cities and you have our nation's greatest failing … ever. Except, 'shhhh,' once again, you are not supposed to talk about it. New York City is Chicago on steroids. It has multiple — fixable — problems and life-crushing emergencies across the five boroughs. Unfortunately for those most at-risk inhabitants, many of the people who can help them are entitled elites who exist in bubbles of luxury and safety floating far above the 'unwashed masses' of the city. Two of those elites are Cuomo and Adams. To them, it seems as if the title of 'mayor' is yet one more trophy they can amass, serving either as a potential stepping stone to higher office or to private sector appointments and riches once the last term is complete. In the meantime, those millions of desperately hurting New Yorkers ignored by the elites had better prepare themselves. If (when) Mamdani wins, things will get much worse. 'Free stuff' is the false promise to grab the vote of those New Yorkers. Once Mamdani secures that vote, it will only be about what is best for him and his socialist movement going forward. Those at-risk residents won't even be a fleeting memory.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Trump's inspired Kennedy Center Honors picks spotlight liberals' own performance art
The Kennedy Center Honors are the nation's top performing-arts-achievement awards and their celebration the highlight of the capital's cultural calendar. Yet the honorees are typically announced in that most artless of ways — a press release. Not this year. You'd think liberals who decry conservatives as contemptible Philistines would be pleased to see a Republican president focus the country's attention on the arts with something of a show itself. But no — not when that president is Donald Trump. They slammed the selections too, though the list isn't much different from those under Democratic presidents such as Barack Obama — and reflects a wide swath of what Americans appreciate and admire in the arts. Of course, the small spectacle Trump held Wednesday at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts wasn't exactly establishment Washington. The president walked to a podium in front of five pictures on easels, all covered with red cloth. Two attractive women in sleeveless dresses and high heels assisted — distinctly reminiscent of ring girls in boxing and Trump's beloved UFC — dramatically unveiling each honoree on cue. 'Rocky' creator-star Sylvester Stallone, glam-metal rockers KISS, country king George Strait, disco goddess Gloria Gaynor and Broadway luminary Michael Crawford will receive the 48th annual Kennedy Center Honors. Trump himself — also the center's chairman — will host the gala tribute Dec. 7, which CBS will air later that month. DC doesn't have a lot of glitz, so the December weekend honorees and those paying tribute to them spend in town is a big deal. I know because I covered the cocktail parties, the rehearsals, the red carpets and more for years when I lived in Washington. And the political and performing elite can't stand the idea of Donald Trump taking part in the ritzy rituals. Trump didn't attend a single Honors gala in his first term after 2017 honoree 'All in the Family' creator Norman Lear said he'd skip any White House event to protest the president. But Trump 2.0 is bolder and brasher — and wants to make real his 'vision for a Golden Age in arts and culture,' as he put it. The media fawned over First Lady Michelle Obama's White House Kitchen Garden. They published deep think pieces about her husband's summer playlists. But the same people who believe right-wingers want to cut all cultural education are annoyed when a GOP president spends an hour talking about great artists. 'You might be wondering why you haven't heard much about important issues like inflation, health care or infrastructure lately, but there's a very good reason: Donald Trump doesn't care,' late-night talker Seth Meyers said. Conservatives 'want to go on Fox News and whine about woke,' he continued. 'This is what the right really cares about. This is why Trump is spending his precious time announcing the Kennedy Center Honors.' Cue the subtle — and not-so-subtle — digs about the choices. 'The line-up explains a lot about him, his power and why he's president,' CNN's Stephen Collinson intoned. It's 'more populist than 'high' culture.' 'At the Kennedy Center, Trump Puts His Pop Culture Obsession on Display,' The New York Times headlined its story. Time Senior Correspondent Philip Elliott declared, 'The Kennedy Center Honors Is Now Just Another Trump Show,' and likened the Florida man to Stalin, who made the genius Shostakovich's life a living nightmare. This year's choices, Elliott wrote, 'signal yet the latest example of Trump putting his thumb on the scale of American culture and tossing it back to yesteryear.' Who's going to tell the storied Time the Kennedy Center Honors are lifetime-achievement awards whose winners always send us 'back to yesteryear'? Liberals howling this isn't the highfalutin' list it should be forget the first awardees under Obama included Bruce Springsteen, Robert De Niro and Mel 'Blazing Saddles' Brooks. LL Cool J won in 2017. Trump's is not a way-out-there list. It's true one spot usually goes to classical music or dance, and I'm disappointed that's missing — though to Trump, Michael Crawford is operatic. And he did originate the title role of 'The Phantom of the Opera,' which Andrew Lloyd Webber wrote for his then-wife, classical soprano Sarah Brightman. KISS is an inspired choice — a great American story. Two Jewish New York kids whose families had fled the Holocaust, Stanley Bert Eisen and Chaim Witz, transformed themselves into the makeup-laden, otherworldly Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons. And in doing so, they transformed concert touring itself. Texan George Strait helped bring back a very American genre as a trailblazer in neotraditional country in the 1980s, when pop crossovers were stealing stages in Nashville and beyond. Now young country-not-crossover stars such as Zach Top and Parker McCollum cite his influence. As a Strait fan from Alberta, the Texas of Canada, told me, 'People like him because he's real. He's not fake ass. And he can actually sing.' Authenticity — it reminds me of my time covering the Honors. At the various events, the rest of the press wanted to talk only to the cool kids. At the cocktail party the year Steve Martin won, for example, their sights were set on well-known actors. That let me have Ricky Jay, Steve Martin's friend who appeared with him in the David Mamet film 'The Spanish Prisoner,' all to myself. He was one of the greatest magicians of our time, a learned man with an amazing medieval collection. Another year, it was just me and an AP reporter left on the red carpet for Chris Cornell, there to perform for The Who — the super famous stars had walked it already. The AP fellow knew nothing about him, so I was able to ask all of the questions of one of rock's greatest voices. Speaking of David Mamet, can Trump turn his attention to Mark Twain Prize for American Humor next? The Kennedy Center refuses to give it to politically incorrect geniuses like him and Woody Allen. Washington could certainly use some intelligent laughs these days.