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Small nuclear reactors could be built in Massachusetts if Healey's energy bill passes
Small nuclear reactors could be built in Massachusetts if Healey's energy bill passes

CBS News

time14-05-2025

  • Business
  • CBS News

Small nuclear reactors could be built in Massachusetts if Healey's energy bill passes

Gov. Maura Healey has unveiled new legislation that aims to save residents $10 billion on utility bills, in part by bringing more energy into the state. And one of the ways she's proposing to do that is by putting nuclear power back on the table in Massachusetts. The governor's bill would "allow for advanced nuclear development and deployment," her office says, and proposes consideration of small modular reactors "that could improve reliability, stabilize prices, and decarbonize region's power grid." "We've got new, innovative, very safe ways to do nuclear," Healey said at a press conference on Tuesday. Nuclear power in Massachusetts If the bill passes, it would repeal a 1982 law that requires any new nuclear facility in Massachusetts to get approval from a statewide ballot initiative. The administrations says eight of 14 states that had similar nuclear moratoriums have since moved to fully or partially lift those limitations. "We're proposing that the state take a look at nuclear," Energy and Environmental Affairs Sec. Rebecca Tepper said. "We're not talking about sort of your old-school nuclear power plant. What we're talking about is cutting edge, small-scale nuclear technology." The only nuclear power plant in Massachusetts, the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station in Plymouth, shut down permanently in 2019 after 47 years of generating electricity. The administration says the bill could save utility customers $10 billion over 10 years. Healey also stresses it's more important than ever for Massachusetts to build its own energy supply from different sources. "The Trump administration has not been favorable toward wind," Healey said. "But we're moving ahead with everything. I know members of the Trump administration support nuclear, for example." Small nuclear reactors Last year, tech giants Amazon and Google said they are also pursuing nuclear technology to help power artificial intelligence, which requires a lot of energy. The small modular reactors, which Google hopes to have online by 2030, generate about a third of the power that traditional reactors do, but they can be built faster and at a lower cost. They still produce hazardous waste, but instead of fuel roads they use fuel "pebbles" that are about the size of golf balls. At least one nuclear safety expert is skeptical that this new technology will work out. "There's only one problem with small modular reactors: They don't really exist," George Washington University professor Sharon Squassoni said in a recent CBS Sunday Morning interview. "I think they're going to find out pretty quickly that it takes way too long and it's way too expensive."

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