US conducts first air transport of nuclear microreactor in bid to show technology's viability
Source: Reuters
February 16, 2026 12:10 AM EST Updated 6 hours ago
HILL AIR FORCE BASE, Utah, Feb 15 - The U.S. Departments of Energy and Defense on Sunday for the first time transported a small nuclear reactor on a cargo plane from California to Utah to demonstrate the potential to quickly deploy nuclear power for military and civilian use. The agencies partnered with California-based Valar Atomics to fly one of the companys Ward microreactors on a C-17 aircraft without nuclear fuel to Hill Air Force Base in Utah.
Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment Michael Duffey were on the C-17 flight with the reactor and its components, and hailed the event as a breakthrough for U.S. nuclear energy and military logistics. This gets us closer to deploy nuclear power when and where it is needed to give our nations warfighters the tools to win in battle, Duffey said. President Donald Trump's administration sees small nuclear reactors as one of several ways to expand U.S. energy production.
Trump last May issued four executive orders aimed at boosting domestic nuclear deployment to meet growing demand for energy for national security and competitive AI advancements. The Energy Department in December issued two grants, opens new tab to help accelerate development of small modular reactors. Proponents of microreactors also have touted them as energy sources that can be sent to far-flung and remote places, offering an alternative to diesel generators which require frequent deliveries of fuel.
But skeptics have argued that the industry has not proven that small nuclear reactors can generate power for a reasonable price. "There is no business case for microreactors, which even if they work as designed will produce electricity at a far higher cost than large nuclear reactors, not to mention renewables like wind or solar," said Edwin Lyman, director of nuclear power safety at the Union of Concerned Scientists.
Read more: https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/us-conducts-first-air-transport-nuclear-microreactor-bid-show-technologys-2026-02-16/
I heard this on the radio early this morning!
riversedge
(80,158 posts)of this plane that was transporting nuclear material??? Costs.???
I do not have access to the article. Sorry.
muriel_volestrangler
(105,883 posts)I think the idea is to show the reactor itself is small and light enough to be transported by air (the C-17 can operate from fairly short runways, though I see that the Wikipedia article notes the weight the runway can take is also an issue).
The article goes on to say
though it notes there isn't necessarily a plan for how radioactive waste from the site will be handled.
riversedge
(80,158 posts)discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,746 posts)The agencies partnered with California-based Valar Atomics to fly one of the companys Ward microreactors on a C-17 aircraft without nuclear fuel to Hill Air Force Base in Utah.
I think title 10 of the CFR describe requirements for nuke fuel transport.
BumRushDaShow
(167,542 posts)but not always as they might get published later that day.
There is one now though - https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/us-conducts-first-air-transport-of-nuclear-microreactor-in-bid-to-show-technologys-viability/ar-AA1WqQsL
(I deal with Reuters by clearing their cookies on my Firefox browser)
orangecrush
(29,522 posts)LiberalArkie
(19,541 posts)Think of islands where right now they burn oil for electricity. Very rural areas. even American Indian areas where it is cost prohibitive to build out high energy transmission lines.
Not everyone lives in metro areas.
Hugin
(37,677 posts)Sure flying around uncharged units is a snap, but once they are activated. Nobody is going to want to touch them for 10,000 years.
This is one of the worst legacies of the Soviet Union.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radioisotope_thermoelectric_generator
hunter
(40,510 posts)It's a nuclear reactor that's about the size of a shipping container.
A complete power plant can be assembled from components that can be delivered anywhere an ordinary shipping container can.
The dangers of nuclear waste are comparable to other non-nuclear hazardous wastes modern industry generates. Many of these dangerous non-nuclear wastes have a half life of forever. After a few hundred years used nuclear fuel has about the same total radioactivity of the ores that it was mined from. Some of the radioactive elements in this used fuel are more mobile in the natural environment than those in natural ores but it's not a huge technical problem to contain them. This used fuel can also be recycled into new fuel and other useful elements.
Of course the most dangerous energy wastes humans produce come from fossil fuels. The most dangerous fossil fuel by far is natural gas because many people think it's clean (or at least better than coal) and it supports their renewable energy follies. We are well trained to completely dismiss natural gas accidents which kill people every year, accidents that smother people with carbon monoxide, explode entire buildings, or incinerate entire neighborhoods. What's far, far worse are the greenhouse gasses dumped recklessly everywhere as combustion products and methane leaks.
Natural gas will be the energy resource that destroys the natural environment as we know it and possibly cause the collapse of our current civilization.
Hugin
(37,677 posts)The US is only barely making 250 years and the seams are splitting. Contracts only last an average of three years. Whos going to pay to watch over and maintain these reactors for a few hundred years?
If only one of them falls into the wrong hands during that time, a few hundred years. I guess its our great grandchildren who will find out.
EarthFirst
(4,023 posts)The gross incompetence and regulatory drawdowns is generally terrifying.
pecosbob
(8,348 posts)This is 1950's technology just like the ramjet and hyper-cruise missile.