Oklo plans two plants in Southern Ohio
Oklo says the power plants will provide up to 30 MW of electric power and 50 MW of heating. Oklo obtained a site use permit from the Department of Energy for its first reactor at the Idaho National Laboratory site in 2019 and its aim is for that to become the first commercial advanced reactor deployed in the USA, by 2026.
Jacob DeWitte, co-founder and CEO of Oklo, said: "Oklo is accelerating our commercialisation plans with sites for two more plants confirmed, building on our commercial deployment at Idaho. Our business model, and use of mature, demonstrated reactor technologies allow us to provide power to customers who want the reliable, clean and affordable energy we can provide."
Kevin Shoemaker, SODI legal counsel, said the development "will help reinvigorate the local communities surrounding the site, paving the way for a cleaner and more resilient energy infrastructure and long-term and high-tech economic benefits to the region". The site is being "evaluated for potential future manufacturing or industrial facilities".
Oklo's Aurora design is a fast neutron reactor that uses heat pipes to transport heat from the reactor core to a supercritical carbon dioxide power conversion system to generate electricity. The Aurora 'powerhouse' uses metallic high-assay low-enriched uranium, or HALEU, fuel to produce about 1.5 MWe as well as producing usable heat.