Though most existing and planned nuclear power plants are large and light water-cooled units, Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) represent a complementary solution to such power plants. SMRs could also contribute to the decarbonisation of hard to decarbonise sectors such as transport, chemical and steel industry, and district heating.
The Commission’s priority is that these new designs under development ensure that nuclear energy is used only with the highest standards of safety, radiation protection for workers and citizens, responsible management of radioactive waste and spent fuel, and a reliable non-proliferation regime, which ensures that nuclear material is not diverted from its intended use.
Benefits and challenges
SMRs present several potential benefits, ranging from improved safety features, such as passive safety systems, better financing options due to reduced construction schedules, lower investment needs, fewer components and smaller plant footprints per unit. For EU countries which choose to include nuclear in their energy mix, SMRs could also be a promising option for replacing old coal power plants and complementing as well as facilitating the increasing penetration of renewables. They can be flexibly used for district heating, desalination, generation of process heat for energy-intensive industries and production of hydrogen.
At the same time, challenges still exist in validating the business case for SMRs, assuring predictable and streamlined licensing processes and frameworks, developing global supply chains to ensure profitability, identifying suitable nuclear sites and achieving a transparent dialogue model between the concerned stakeholders.
EU leadership and strategic independence for SMRs
In June 2021, as part of its continuous support for initiatives to help EU countries decarbonise their energy systems, the Commission organised the first-ever EU workshop on small modular reactors.
European SMR Industrial Alliance
The European Industrial Alliance on SMRs was launched in February 2024. Its primary goal is to accelerate the development, demonstration and deployment of concrete SMR projects in Europe in the early 2030s by
- identifying the most promising, advanced, safe and cost-effective SMR technologies eligible for support
- strengthening the European supply chain (including fuel and raw materials)
- identifying investment barriers, analysing funding opportunities and exploring new financial options for SMR development
- identifying future needs for research on SMRs and advanced modular reactors, as well as gaps in skills and human-capacity
- involving potential end-users such as energy-intensive industries, low-carbon hydrogen producers and municipalities
The Industrial Alliance on SMRs is an inclusive and transparent platform open to all public and private legal entities that meet specific eligibility criteria. Interested stakeholders were invited to join the alliance between February and mid-April 2024. To promote the call for membership, a dedicated dissemination event was organised on 22 March 2024. More than 300 applications were received from a diverse range of entities, confirming EU interest in innovative nuclear technologies.
The alliance’s first general assembly took place on 29-30 May 2024 to establish the governing board and launch the relevant technical and project-based working groups.
Research and training on SMRs
The Commission has also actively supported SMR safety research via the Euratom Research and Training Programme, with an EU contribution of EUR 16 million. New projects for SMRs and advanced modular reactors, with a total budget of EUR 27 million will complement this action already in 2023.
The declaration on EU small modular reactors, signed on 4 April 2023 by the Commissioner for Innovation, Research, Culture, Education and Youth, Mariya Gabriel and EU nuclear stakeholders, was prepared as a follow-up to a high-level European nuclear roundtable, held in March 2022. It confirms the EU’s intention to continue to lead research, innovation, education and training for the safety of European SMRs.
SMRs at international level
The EU and the United States share a rich history of mutually beneficial cooperation on nuclear energy and an EU-US high-level forum on SMRs was organised in Brussels in 2019 to examine the challenges and opportunities associated with using SMR technologies, as part of the future energy systems.
To ensure coherence and complementarity of the efforts, the Commission is also maintaining close links with the new IAEA ‘Nuclear Harmonisation and Standardisation Initiative (NHSI)’ and with other relevant initiatives at the level of the OECD-NEA.
Interest in SMRs is growing at international level in the context of discussions about moving to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions. The below list includes links to recent SMR publications and platforms.
- At COP28 in December 2023, many organisations and countries signed up to the nuclear pledge.
- The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has launched the SMR Platform and Nuclear Harmonization and Standardization Initiative and the Technical Working Group on Small and Medium Sized or Modular Reactors. In its 2022 report Advances in Small Modular Reactor Technology Developments, the IAEA counts more than 80 SMR designs currently under development.
- The Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA) has established an Experts Group on SMRs together with the OECD, and launched the NEA SMR Dashboard to have stock of readiness level for the different SMRs designs.
- The US have launched Project PHOENIX for the Conversion of Coal fired power plants to Small Modular Reactor, not only in the US, but world-wide.
- The UK plans to expand its nuclear energy capacity by 2050, with a fleet of SMRs as a key part of that strategy. Great British Nuclear (GBN), an arms-length body set up to help deliver that extra capacity, began the selection process for which SMR technology to use.
- China, Korea, Japan, the U.S and Russia are at the forefront of nuclear technology and are focusing their efforts on SMRs development and deployment.
Related links
- Small Modular Reactors explained
- News: Commission to ally with industry on Small Modular Reactors (9/2/2024)
- Declaration on EU Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) 2030: Research & Innovation, Education & Training (April 2023)
- Conclusions from the second high-level nuclear roundtable (15 March 2022)
- First EU Workshop on Small Modular Reactors (29 June 2021)
- EU-US high-level forum on small modular reactors (21 October 2019)
- Small modular reactors (Joint Research Centre)
- The SMR Platform and Nuclear Harmonization and Standardization Initiative (NHSI), IAEA
- The NEA Small Modular Reactor Dashboard, NEA, OECD
- European SMR pre-Partnership, nucleareurope