Comments by Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS)

Regarding NRC Proposed Rule, “Licensing Requirements for Microreactors and Other

Reactors With Comparable Risk Profiles”

Docket ID NRC-2025-0379; 91 Fed. Reg. 23,628 (May 1, 2026)

Submitted June 15, 2026 via Federal eRulemaking Portal

Nuclear Energy Information Service is a Chicago-based safe-energy advocacy, nuclear power watchdog environmental organization.  NEIS opposes the continued deployment of nuclear power in an energy landscape that has amply demonstrated the presence and effectiveness of cheaper, more quickly deployable, and superiorly cost-effective means of providing electric power.

NEIS hereby adopts, supports and incorporates by reference the comments submitted by the Nuclear Information and Resource Service (NIRS; dated June 15, 2026) and those of the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP, dated Feb. 2026), including DEEP’s request for a 45-day extension of the public comment period, unreasonably denied without justification on May 1, 2026.

In addition, NEIS provides the following comments.  Taken together, NEIS supports the contention made by other commenters that this Proposed Rulemaking should be terminated.

ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATIONS:

  • Validity of promulgating directives is challengeable:

NRC lists as its reasons for issuing this Proposed Rulemaking clauses from the ADVANCE Act, and the Presidential E.O. 14154 (90 FR 8353; January 29, 2025), titled, “Unleashing American Energy,” with an objective of unleashing “America’s affordable and reliable energy and natural resources;” as well as E.O 14300.

While the directives from the ADVANCE Act may be defensible from a regulatory, engineering and technological standpoint, those of the E.O.s are not.

For example, micro reactors and related small modular nuclear reactors (SMNRs) are not yet shown to be either “affordable (or) reliable,” largely because they do not yet exist in significant enough numbers to support this contention.  Even preliminary SMNR costs have escalated well beyond initial optimistic marketing values (e.g., NuScale/UAMPS debacle of 2023-24).  The President’s declaration of a “National Energy Emergency” has yet to be verified in any credible, reality-based manner, casting serous doubt on its validity as a basis for the changes proposed in the E.Os.

  • Numerous references to “self-regulation”:

Sections that call for “licensee-defined design and quality assurance criteria,” significant flexibility in safety classification, and reduced reliance on deterministic safety principles such as the single-failure criterion are tantamount to de facto industry self-regulation.

It would be wise to recall the dangerous history of this abdication of regulatory responsibility and accountability and its effects on the public and the environment:

  • The determination that lack of FAA regulatory oversight allowing Boeing to largely self-supervise its own design and operational procedures was responsible for two fatal crashes;
  • Acknowledgement that railroad lobbyists opposing vital train safety regulation led to the East Palestine train derailment and subsequent chemical fire;
  • Recalling that, “The … Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant accident was the result of collusion between the government, the regulators and Tepco, and the lack of governance by said parties,” according to the National Diet of Japan official report, Executive summary of The Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission, June 2012, p. 16.

The broad “… proposed rule [that] would provide flexible licensing pathways with streamlined requirements… to enable a broad spectrum of deployment models,” is likely to result in virtually no meaningful regulation at all, given the current large numbers of proposed designs, and the NRC’s and Administration’s goals of rapid deployment.

  • Significant systemic safety concerns not sufficiently addressed:

Emphasis on speed (actually haste) and genericization is an unacceptable combination that contains the elements of potential disaster.  Among these are:

  • “Microreactors and Other Reactors with Comparable Risk Profiles” exist in a world vastly different from that which ushered in the Age of Large-Scale Reactors. While the design goal of a safer reactor is highly desirable, not only does it remain a goal until actually demonstrated, it should not be the presumption on which to discard the “defense in depth” philosophy that has been the industry-proclaimed hallmark of nuclear power operations to date.  To make that egregious error of logic is a techno-hubris that places the public and environment at great risk.  Some examples of this dangerous and flawed thinking include:
  • Designs that will no longer require some form of containment, both for stationary and mobile designs
  • Termination of emergency planning zones and procedures
  • Reduced operational personnel, with the expectation they will operate multiple units; or worse, “autonomous function” operations (particularly if it is based on A/I technology of speculative performance capability for these functions).
  • Insufficiently considered safety elements:
  • Multiple designs, no matter how generic, will be placed in varied operational conditions and for varied purposes which may have impacts on operation that differ from site to site, as well as among designs;
  • Widespread dissemination of micro- or SMNRs will be operated under diverse environmental conditions, such as local geography, climate and weather, and now the increased frequency and intensity of adverse weather phenomenon – all of which must be factored into safety considerations;
  • The “Age of the Drone” and its effects on safety and security have been amply demonstrated in Ukraine and the Middle East. We submit that even undergrounding of reactors would have been of little safety value in Mariupol or Gaza.  Release of radioactive contents of micro- and SMNRs through use of drone warheads cannot be ruled out.  This is of particular concern with designs that will be running on HALEU fuel, or are sodium or helium cooled.  The increased radiologic inventory from a HALEU release, and the vulnerability and subsequent chemical hazards from a loss of the proposed coolants create unique radiologic and chemical hazards that must be designed against.  This vulnerability may be of even greater concern during the transportation of micro- and SMNR reactors to their designated final destinations.
  • This point was made abundantly clear by national security expert, Brig. Gen Chris King (retired) during a nuclear power debate held on Pacifica Radio in 2023. King’s response to the notion of numerous, mobile micro-reactors distributed all over the country was revealing:

“How do I protect and ensure the safety of those [SMNRs] from an external threat? And the more [reactors] you got, the harder it is to protect…If there’s a thousand of those scattered around, and someone’s moving them around at their own choosing, that’s a significant threat…

“That’s very, very risky from a force protection, from a national security standpoint.  It would be very difficult to achieve national security goals in that domain.”

     –Brig. General Wendell Chris King, retired, Dean Emeritus, U.S. Army Commander, General Staff College, Aug. 15, 2023, “Climate Hour”, Pacifica Radio–

4.)  Once again – the radioactive waste:

While much attention has been given to promoting these new reactor designs, we do not see comparable attention paid to the additional amounts of radioactive waste they will add to the >100,000 tons of high-level radioactive waste (HLRW) already accumulated in the U.S – with no disposal occurring to date.

Worse, the proposed use of HALEU, as well as the multiplicity of designs creates new and previously non-existent radwaste problems, both terms of the change in core inventories, and the creation of new and non-traditional forms in which the waste will occur.  All of this complicates the final disposal plans for HLRW.

For the above reasons, and particularly given the denial of an extended comment period, NEIS urges the NRC to terminate this Proposed Rulemaking process.

We thank you for your consideration.

David A. Kraft, Director

Nuclear Energy Information Service (NEIS)

3411 W. Diversey, Ste. 13

Chicago, IL  60647

(773)342-7650

neis@neis.org

 

 

PRESS STATEMENT

So – you think Illinois 11 nuclear reactors are safely regulated? 

Better think again.

May 29, 2026

CHICAGO:  The headlong plunge by Governor Pritzker and the Legislature into new nuclear power plants for Illinois have always been prefaced by the term “safe”.  This has occurred despite the numerous warnings about the Trump Administration’s dismantling the federal Nuclear Regulatory Agency’s (NRC – the Agency charged with ensuring “adequate” safety and protection of the public and the environment from radiologic threats) ability to effectively regulate the nuclear industry.

Two disturbing reports emerging in the past several days strongly argue that assuming even this questionable standard for radiation protection may no longer be warranted.

In a lengthy and in-depth article — The Trump administration’s reckless attack on radiation protection will have long-term consequences for public safety published on May 27 in the highly respected Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, legendary physicist Dr. Frank von Hipple argues that Trump Administration actions to weaken radiation standards is “reckless,” and concludes that “the Trump administration has now, in effect, set the value of American lives to zero in regulatory protections against nuclear-radiation-caused cancer.”

This dire analysis is followed today by an equally sobering article from Linda Pentz Gunter, director of Beyond Nuclear, a national safe-energy advocacy/anti-nuclear organization.  In this article, Breaking Nuclear Law. The Risks Are Immeasurable, Pentz compiles a well-documented case that recent Trump Administration efforts to “fast-track” nuclear reactor licensing, weaken radiation standards, and even provide plutonium to private corporations (what could possibly go wrong?) are all – surprise, surprise! – breaking the law. She concludes, “Nuclear power is simply too inherently dangerous a technology to operate outside the law. Ignoring those dangers will put millions of Americans at risk of another catastrophic nuclear accident.”

As the highly speculative rush to nuclear driven by the equally speculative data center phenomenon continues largely without proper deep analysis, Illinois’ officials should recognize that their initial naïve assumption of “safe nuclear” has been shattered.  They would be wise to consider a new nuclear moratorium – on BOTH unbridled development of data centers AND proposed large-scale and so-called “small modular” and “micro” reactors in Illinois proposed to power them  —  at least until the Klown Kar Trump Administration passes nuclear regulation back to the adults.

– – 30 –

Breaking Nuclear Law. The Risks Are Immeasurable

By Linda Pentz Gunter

Remember – you’re moving forward when jumping off a cliff, too.
Feb. 18, 2026

The curtain has finally and unequivocally been ripped back: Read more

LEGISLATURE CONFRONTS THE NUCLEAR PANDORA’S BOX  (Original title)

13 October 2025

According to the legend, an overly curious but ill-informed Pandora opened a container she was warned not to, in the process unleashing all the ills of the world upon mankind.  In fairness and her defense, one has to admit she was not informed about the contents of the container.

That seems to be the principal difference between Pandora and the Governor and Illinois Legislature today. In the Fall Session it is expected that the Legislature will be voting on the potential repeal of the 1987 nuclear power moratorium, which if it occurs, would take the lid off of construction of more nuclear reactors.

Unlike Pandora, Illinois officials are well aware of the ills of nuclear power, which are many and well known: huge construction costs and overruns; lengthy and often delayed construction times; attraction for official corruption (think Illinois, Ohio and South Carolina); continued generation of high-level radioactive wastes (HLRW) with no place for permanent disposal; difficulty operating in a market system without some form of eventual bailout; and “black-swan” but always present potential for severe nuclear accident.  It only takes one bad day at the nuclear office to turn Illinois into the Belarus of the United States.

As bad as these nuclear attributes are, the ones that the Legislature has consistently refused to address, coupled with newer issues created by the Trump Administration are equally concerning, and argue forcefully to keep Illinois’ nuclear moratorium in place:

  • Adding even more HLRW to the 11,000+ metric tons current reactors have already created (and which add ~250 tons/year), all with no place for permanent disposal;
  • Providing inadequate to non-existent “just-transitions” safeguards for reactor communities and workers to protect local tax bases, economies, and jobs from the negative economic hit that eventual reactor closure will create (as already occurred in Zion, IL);
  • Inadequately advancing preparations to operate reactors safely in an increasingly climate disrupted world, where future required water availability may be uncertain and volatile, facility-threatening weather events more severe, and conditions for power interruptions increasing in new and unexpected ways;
  • Ignoring the environmental justice implications of expanding nuclear power, from uranium mining on Indigenous lands, to siting an environmentally responsible and legally required HLRW permanent disposal facility.

While this list of neglected, unsolved nuclear problems is daunting enough, the last thing to leave today’s nuclear-Pandora’s Box is not “hope.”  It is a series of Trump Administration executive orders, issued in May, that deprioritize the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s mission to protect the public; reduce NRC staff; call for weakening radiation standards; and require a DOGE sign-off on new reactor designs – all while quadrupling the number of U.S. reactors by 2050.  Former NRC Chairman Dr. Gregory Jaczko remarked, “President Trump’s executive order shows he is committed to further lawlessness, more nuclear accidents, and less nuclear safety.”

The 1987 Moratorium was initially enacted to protect Illinois from radioactive waste abuse.  Its presence has at least helped minimize the numerous other problems with nuclear power.  Moratorium repeal only guarantees their continuation and worsening.

Just as in the original Pandora legend, once these nuclear ills are legislatively loosed upon the world, there will be no means to put them back in the box.

Now is clearly NOT the time to be considering new reactors.

The Nuclear Moratorium repeal should be rejected.

Numerous recent articles regarding nuclear power, and introduction of legislation (SB1527 & HB3604) Read more

In a move paralleling his decision to remain a candidate for President, on Wednesday July 10th President Joe Biden signed the “ADVANCE Act,” Read more

CHICAGO—In a lopsided 88-2 vote (with 10 not voting, including Sen. Richard Durbin), the Senate passed S.870 – the so-called ADVANCE Act, a bill which quite literally takes the lid off of the nuclear safety box, both domestically and internationally. Read more

As a courtesy to our colleagues at the INSTITUTE FOR ENERGY ECONOMICS AND FINANCIAL ANALYSIS (IEEAFA) , we provide the recent press release regarding a new study showing that renewable energy is far and away superior to new nuclear power as a means of addressing the climate crisis.

Read more

NEIS FIGHTS FOR INCREASED PUBLIC VOICE ON NEW REACTORS!

Witness slips needed Monday 3/11/24 to support HB5630

NEIS received word that a bill introduced by Rep. Lilian Jimenez (D.-4) —  HB 5630Read more

NEIS Statement on the Legislature’s Partial Repeal of Illinois’ Nuclear  Construction Moratorium, and Embrace of Small Modular Reactors

Nov. 10, 2023

“Who is so deafe, or so blynde, as is hee, that wilfully will nother heare nor see.”  —  writer John Haywood, 1546 Read more