Big Tech invests billions in nuclear power to meet surging AI data center energy demands

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Major technology companies are reshaping nuclear energy funding as AI demand drives unprecedented power needs. Meta, Amazon, and Google have signed deals worth billions to develop small modular reactors, offering nuclear startups both funding and revenue certainty. But financing and development challenges remain as the industry races to commercialize next-gen nuclear power.

Big Tech Reshapes Nuclear Power Funding Landscape

AI demand is driving Big Tech to fundamentally reshape how next-gen nuclear power gets funded, as major technology companies pour billions into developing small modular reactors to satisfy the voracious energy appetite of AI data centers

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Source: Reuters

Source: Reuters

In January, Meta agreed to help fund the development of two Terrapower units capable of providing as much as 690 MW of power, while also signing a deal with Oklo to develop a 1.2 GW nuclear technology campus in Ohio

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. Amazon is working with X-energy to bring online more than 5 GW of small modular reactors in the U.S. by 2039, and Google has signed an agreement with Kairos Power, aiming to bring online its first small modular reactor by 2030

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Surging Electricity Demands Drive Nuclear Investment

U.S. electricity use is poised to increase by 1% this year and 3% next year, according to the Energy Information Administration, driven largely by data center demand

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. This surge in power requirements is giving fresh momentum to advanced nuclear power technologies that have struggled with financing constraints and first-of-its-kind risks. "They create the revenue certainty that commercial banks will require for the construction debt," said Shioly Dong, senior analyst at BMI, a unit of Fitch Solutions, explaining how tech giants introduce their top-rated corporate balance sheets into a sector historically reliant on regulated utility rate bases

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Small Modular Reactors Emerge as Financeable Alternative

Small modular reactors are emerging as more financeable nuclear alternatives because their modular scale and shorter construction timelines reduce upfront capital exposure, according to Tim Winter, portfolio manager of the Gabelli Utilities Fund at Gabelli Funds, who is closely monitoring companies like NuScale and Oklo

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. The prospect of long-term power buyers is drawing interest from institutional investors to the sector, which has historically depended on government support and venture capital funding. "We have started to hear that banks are getting excited and interested in deal-making in the space, which would be a big development," said Tess Carter, associate director of the energy and climate practice at Rhodium Group

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Financing and Development Challenges Persist

Despite growing interest, the advanced nuclear industry still faces significant hurdles including high construction risks and technology risks, due to which institutional investors remain cautious about stepping into the sector at scale

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. A looming skills shortage and competition with other industries—including data centers themselves—for workers like electricians and pipefitters could become a chokepoint as the industry looks to scale up, according to a recent report by the Nuclear Scaling Initiative

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. "The industry needs 'someone' to take on the risks of cost overruns and delays. The degree the hyperscalers are willing to do that will determine just how much of a boost these agreements give the sector," Winter noted.

Commercialization Depends on Execution Across Multiple Fronts

While funding from major technology companies provides crucial support, commercialization and large-scale deployment still depend on execution across licensing, fuel supply, construction and financing, according to Oklo spokesperson Bonita Chester

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. The company's agreement with Meta includes funding to help secure nuclear fuel and advance the first phase of its Ohio project, demonstrating how AI demand is prompting customers to enter into long-term agreements that can support project development. Several U.S. firms are developing new modular reactors that are smaller, more advanced and scalable than conventional nuclear plants, but none have begun commercial electricity production yet

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