APS, SRP, and TPE are eying ways to help meet the Arizona's growing energy needs, and nuclear power appears to be their top choice.
The big three Arizona utilities are studying whether to try and build a second nuclear power plant in the state.
Britain on Thursday promised to free more sites for nuclear energy developments across England and Wales, seeking to attract private investment into Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) as part of its push ...
Kairos Power, Natura Resources, Terrestrial Energy and Aalo Atomics—have agreed to begin preliminary moves to locate small ...
Texas A&M University System collaborates with four companies to develop advanced nuclear reactors at its Rellis Campus, in a ...
Texas A&M is closer to its goal of powering a part of the Texas electric grid by offering land to four cutting-edge companies ...
Arizona Public Service (APS), Salt River Project (SRP) and Tucson Electric Power (TEP) announced they’ll be working together to explore adding nuclear generation in Arizona, and retired coal sites may ...
Chancellor John Sharp announced Tuesday he had offered land near the Texas A&M University campus to four nuclear reactor ...
Parker Yamasaki covers arts and culture at The Colorado Sun as a Poynter-Koch Media and Journalism Fellow and former Dow ...
In 2023, Dow announced its UCC1 Seadrift Operations manufacturing site for the location of an X-Energy small modular reactor ...
The initiative aligns with the country's strategic shift in energy policy under Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.
Arizona's three largest electric utilities will jointly explore expanded nuclear-power options. A new plant here could be operational by the 2040s.