Generation III+ Small Modular Reactor Pathway to Deployment
ID: 356731Type: Posted
Overview

Buyer

Headquarters (DOE-01)

Award Range

$1M - $800M

Eligible Applicants

Others

Funding Category

Energy

Funding Instrument

Other

Opportunity Category

Discretionary

Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement

Yes

Additional Information

https://oced-exchange.energy.gov/
Timeline
    Description

    The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is offering a funding opportunity titled "Generation III+ Small Modular Reactor Pathway to Deployment," aimed at advancing the deployment of Generation III+ Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) in the United States. This initiative seeks applications from U.S. commercial electric utilities, with the potential for collaboration with reactor vendors and engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contractors, to address barriers in the domestic nuclear industry and promote energy security and sustainable infrastructure. The program has a total funding allocation of $900 million, with up to $800 million available for first mover teams and an additional $100 million for supporting initiatives, and applications are due by January 17, 2025. Interested applicants can reach out to Farwa Nawaz at farwa.nawaz@hq.doe.gov or Patrick J. Martin at Patrick.martin@hq.doe.gov for further information.

    Point(s) of Contact
    Files
    Title
    Posted
    The U.S. Department of Energy's Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) DE-FOA-0003485 seeks applications for the Generation III+ Small Modular Reactor (SMR) Pathway to Deployment, with funding totaling $900 million over two tiers. Tier 1 allocates up to $800 million for the first mover teams in deploying Gen III+ SMRs, aiming for operational capacity by the early 2030s. Tier 2 provides up to $100 million for initiatives supporting design, licensing, and supply chain development for additional deployments, addressing barriers in the domestic nuclear industry. Eligible applicants must include U.S. commercial electric utilities and may collaborate with reactor vendors and EPC contractors. Funding is milestone-based, requiring projects to demonstrate significant progress in design and construction activities, with a contribution of no more than 50% from the DOE. The initiative promotes energy security, job creation, and sustainable infrastructure to enable a clean power sector by 2035, aligning with national goals on clean energy and emissions reduction. Applications are due by January 17, 2025, emphasizing the urgency of preparing for contributions to the advancing nuclear energy landscape in the U.S.
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