Green Energy and Small Modular Reactors: Regulatory Approvals and Funding Flows in the U.S., U.K., and Canada
Over the past 72 hours, regulatory approvals and funding initiatives for small modular reactors (SMRs) have advanced in the U.S., U.K., and Canada, indicating increased momentum in green energy infrastructure development and nuclear technology deployment.
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission accepted NuScale’s VOYGR SMR combined license application, marking the first post-design-certification COLA for an SMR in the country, while the U.K. shortlisted six SMR vendors for next-stage due diligence, signaling acceleration toward 2030 deployment goals.
Rolls-Royce secured an additional £30 million in equity from Qatar Investment Authority and Legal & General, bringing total funding to £490 million, which strengthens its financial position ahead of U.K. procurement phases. Ontario Power Generation confirmed that the Darlington SMR remains on schedule for 2029, with civil works 25% complete, supporting Canada’s timeline for commercial SMR deployment.
The U.S. Department of Energy announced an extra $150 million loan authority to bolster the domestic SMR supply chain, aiming to de-risk component manufacturing and support infrastructure scaling. Poland’s Orlen Synthos Green Energy applied for a site permit for three BWRX-300 units, representing the first formal SMR site application in Central Europe. The IAEA reported over 80 SMR designs under development worldwide, with 12 in licensing stages, reflecting rapid diversification and internationalization of SMR pipelines.
These signals collectively demonstrate an increasing regulatory and financial commitment to SMRs, advancing nuclear energy infrastructure and supporting the globalization of SMR technology development.
These developments suggest that capital flows and infrastructure scaling for green energy and nuclear innovation are gaining momentum, with regulatory approvals and funding flows indicating a shift toward commercial deployment and international project diversification in the SMR sector.
The dataset does not specify detailed licensing timelines beyond the current approvals or the specific allocation of funding across different projects, which limits comprehensive assessment of project readiness or investment impact.
SEOHASHTAGS: #GreenEnergy #SmallModularReactors #SMR #NuclearInfrastructure #EnergyFunding #RegulatoryApproval #EnergyInnovation #EnergyInvestment #NuclearDevelopment