AI may boost fortunes of a small modular reactor startup
X-energy, a startup developing small modular reactors (SMRs), sees an attractive market in slaking the energy thirst of the rapidly unfolding artificial intelligence boom.
Why it matters: The company's ambitions underscore AI's role as an emerging demand source — and atomic power's unique but underdeveloped position as one of world's carbon-free energy sources.
- The rise of AI is firmly on the radar of X-energy, a prominent player in the SMR field that's already talking with tech companies about supplying power.
The big picture: X-energy CEO Clay Sell called the round-the-clock needs of data centers a good fit for small reactors.
- "The most important thing when you're running 24-7 is reliability," Sell told Axios at X-energy's Rockville, Maryland, headquarters.
- AI will join electrification of the economy — think electric vehicles, for instance — in boosting power demand after many years of largely flat consumption, he said.
The intrigue: Sell, a top DOE official under George W. Bush, doesn't think political change in D.C. will hinder SMRs.
- "I don't want to sound too Pollyannish. But I do not regard the outcome of the presidential election, or the congressional election, to materially impact the nuclear agenda...It is deeply, deeply supported on both sides of the aisle."
- The company is backed by DOE's Advanced Reactor Demonstration Projects (ARDP), which began in the Trump era and first received major funding in the 2021 infrastructure law.
Catch up fast: While Sell riffed on serving AI needs, X-energy has projects further along with specific customers.
- It's working with Dow to deploy four reactors at the chemical giant's Seadrift Operations site in Texas by 2030, a project receiving up to $1.23 billion in DOE funding.
- X-energy is also working with Washington State-based utility Energy Northwest.
Reality check: SMRs face regulatory and financial challenges.
- Scaling new tech is hard — especially while grappling with supply chain inflation and cost of capital increases also hitting other industries.
- The SMR sector suffered a blow last year when NuScale's planned Idaho project with Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems collapsed under the weight of hefty cost increases.
- X-energy and Ares Management last year canceled plans to bring X-energy public via a SPAC deal. But weeks later, X-energy raised another $80M from backers, including Ares, to bring its series C round to $235M.
What's next: Sell still expects X-energy will go public — eventually.
- "I don't anticipate reviving a SPAC approach," he said. "I do anticipate in the future we will go to the public markets...in the classical IPO approach."