This Alaskan Air Base Will Host An Experimental Mini Nuclear Reactor

excalibur

Diamond Member
Mar 19, 2015
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Small and mini reactors are the way to go. Particularly with the insanity of EV's being forced on people.

You cannot run a grid on wind and solar. You cannot run a grid off of battery storage.


The U.S. Air Force recently announced that it has picked Eielson Air Force Base in Alaska as the base to host a new small nuclear reactor as part of a pilot program. The U.S. military, as a whole, together with the Department of Energy has been increasingly looking into micro-reactor designs as possible ways to meet ever-growing electricity demands, including for units on the battlefield, as well as to help cut costs and improve general operational efficiency by reducing reliance on fossil fuels.

The Department of the Air Force announced the selection of Eielson as the host facility for this pilot reactor on Oct. 18, 2021. The base is situated deep within the interior of Alaska near the city of Fairbanks and is around 110 miles south of the Arctic Circle. It is home to the active-duty 354th Fighter Wing, which flies F-35A Joint Strike Fighters and F-16 Viper aggressor jets, as well as the Alaska Air National Guard's 168th Air Refueling Wing with its KC-135 tankers, among other units.

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It is not clear exactly what the specifications might be for the reactor that is now set to be constructed at Eielson, which will be Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) certified and contractor-owned and operated, or when it might first go critical or reach its full expected power output. The Air Force did say that the project in question had been initiated in response to language in the annual defense policy bill, or National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), for the 2019 Fiscal Year and that the goal is for the micro-reactor to be fully operational by the end of 2027.

This would seem to indicate that this reactor is the one that the Office of the Secretary of Defense's Strategic Capabilities Office (SCO) is leading the development of as part of an effort known as Project Pele. The goal of that project, which started in 2019 and that you can read more about here, is to demonstrate a small reactor capable of producing between one and five megawatts of power. By comparison, typical civilian nuclear power plants generate hundreds or even thousands of megawatts. The microreactor Project Pele is seeking is small in terms of power generation even compared to the compact designs used in nuclear-powered submarines, such as the 40-megawatt class S9G used in the U.S. Navy's Virginia class boats.

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President Trump issued an Executive Order on January 12 that aims to promote small, modular nuclear reactors for defense and space exploration applications. According to a press statement issued by the White House, the order will “further revitalize the United States nuclear energy sector, reinvigorate America’s space exploration program, and produce diverse energy options for national defense needs.”

The order instructs NASA's administrator to prepare a report within 180 days that will define NASA’s requirements and foreseeable issues for developing a nuclear energy system for human and robotic exploratory missions through 2040. The order also calls for a "Common Technology Roadmap" between NASA and the Departments of Energy, Defense, Commerce, and State for implementing new reactor technologies. The full text of the Executive Order can be read at WhiteHouse.gov.

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You cannot run a grid on wind and solar.

Actually, in theory, you can meet all the energy needs of the country with just one massive gigantic solar panel farm in Nevada and a huge wind farm in the Dakotas. Or so I've been told. I don't remember the sizes but I think you could see them from low orbit.

Then, all you'd need to do to take out the USA is to sabotage one of them!
 
Should this prove viable, it would pave the way to having small town level power generation stations which would reduce our grid's vulnerability to disruption.
 
"The investigation by the Office of the Inspector General of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) was launched after unnamed whistleblowers stated that "most, if not all” Nuclear power plants in the US used "fake, fraudulent and suspicious items."
"They refer to equipment that has been "altered to mimic a legitimate product”" "misrepresented with intent to mislead”" or that "does not meet the intended product specifications."

It's scary to even imagine what Westinghouse is doing now in Ukraine to maximize profits...
 

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