Companies developing small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs) have raised more than $1.5 billion in the past year, as tech companies hunger for power to train AI models and governments decide to commit to the industry.
For example, X-energy raised $700 million this month, and Paris-based Newcleo raised $151 million last year, and one would be remiss to not mention the $700 million invested into Oklo, NuScale and Nano Nuclear for similar projects in the U.S.
While nuclear fusion still looks relatively far away, SMRs are todayās hot atomic property.Ā So itās significant that SMR startup ValarĀ Atomics has raised $19 million in a seed funding round to develop its first test reactor. The financing was led by Riot Ventures, with AlleyCorp, Initialized Capital, Day One Ventures and Steel Atlas participating.Ā
Valarās SMR technology is based on a helium-cooled, high-temperature gas reactor. These will be built out of a nuclear equivalent of a āgigafactoryā (where batteries are built), except Valar calls them āgigasitesā.Ā By effectively creating a production line of SMRs, Valar hopes to drastically reduce the costs associated with building nuclear reactors, which are traditionally bespoke projects.
Valarās co-founder and CEO, Isaiah Taylor, told TechCrunch that the constraint on building reactors isnāt the technology as much as how itās deployed. He hopes Valarās āgigafactoryā approach could fix that by being āindustrialā instead of āartisanal.ā
The company plans to build hundreds of SMRs at predominantly off-grid sites to power data centers and industrial plants. It has an initial contract with the Philippines Nuclear Research Institute to build a reactor in the country. Under the contract,Ā ValarĀ plans to pilot a test-scale reactor, and build two full-scale reactors before the first integrated reactor comes online.
āWeāre going to make the first one, the second one, the third one, and that will organically evolve into a factory,ā he said.
Valarās underlying technology uses helium gas to reach temperatures up to 900Ā°C ā triple that of conventional nuclear reactors. This means Valar could also produce hydrogen efficiently and combine it with captured CO2 to create low-carbon synthetic fuels for vehicles and infrastructure.
āIf you can get a nuclear reactor that hot, you can produce hydrogen very cheaply, and you unlock all sorts of things. One of those things being synthetic fuels. We want to be able to make that process cheap and make the reactors cheap, too,ā said Taylor.
āWe designed, engineered, and constructed our thermal test unit in a period of about 10 months. Itās possible ā after all, the first nuclear reactor ever was built in eight months, in 1943,ā he added.
Taylor, whose grandfather was, coincidentally,Ā a nuclear physicist on the Manhattan Project, dropped out of high school at 16, and went on to study software systems as well as found startups. The companyās technical efforts are led by its chief nuclear officer,Ā Mark Mitchell (the former president of modular reactor firm Ultra Safe Nuclear Corporation (USNC), and leader of the worldās first small modular reactor project at South Africaās Pebble Bed Modular Reactor). The startupās team also has several folks from USNC, including its head of mechanical engineering, Willem van Rooyen.
While the companyās plans are ambitious, there seem to be ample tailwinds for such nuclear projects. TheĀ U.S.ā Inflation Reduction ActĀ has unlocked private investment into clean energy infrastructure, while China isĀ also investing $440 billionĀ in new nuclear plants. Plus,Ā 14 of the worldās largest banksĀ have expressed support for tripling nuclear energy by 2050.