The new generation

Small modular reactors (SMRs)

For decades, nuclear meant big — gigawatt-scale plants built on-site over many years. Small modular reactors (SMRs) flip that idea: build smaller standardized units in a factory, ship them, and assemble them on location.

What makes an SMR different

The promise — and the caveats

The appeal is real: faster, cheaper, safer-by-design nuclear that's easier to finance because you're not betting everything on one giant project. The honest caveat is that most SMR designs are still moving from paper and prototypes toward commercial deployment. Costs at scale, supply chains, and regulatory approval are still being proven out.

How to read the hype. SMRs are one of the most promising ideas in clean, firm power — but "promising" isn't "proven at scale yet." This guide tries to convey genuine enthusiasm without overselling a timeline.
About the author — George Howell Ward is a long-time clean-energy advocate and early adopter, not a licensed engineer, energy professional, or scientist. He holds a B.S. in Civil Engineering from the University of California, Berkeley, and writes here as an enthusiast and technologist. These guides are educational, draw on legitimate science only, and avoid debunked claims. He is also involved with a nuclear-power-adjacent venture focused on integrating agentic AI into clean-power workflows — an informal, non-fee involvement in his own venture, described here only in general terms.
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