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USD/BTC = $96,020 Block 923,772 TL:DR
The Lampson International LTL-2600 made 1,000-ton lifts at the Plant Vogtle jobsite in Burke County, GA.
The US government has struck up a partnership with the Canadian owners of Westinghouse Electric as part of a plan to build at least $80 billion worth of new nuclear reactors.
Westinghouse Electric’s owners, Canada-based Cameco, which supplies uranium and nuclear fuel services, and Brookfield Asset Management, confirmed the strategic partnership to accelerate the deployment of nuclear power in the US.
They said the move was in accordance with US President Donald Trump’s 23 May 2025 executive order that called for the construction of advanced nuclear reactors to power advanced computing infrastructure for artificial intelligence (AI).
Under the agreement, Westinghouse will deploy its AP1000 pressurised water reactors, capable of generating 1GW of electricity and its AP300 small modular reactors (SMRs).
The US government is expected to arrange financing and secure permits for the new nuclear plants in return for a 20% share of future profits, after Westinghouse has paid out profits of $17.5 billion to Brookfield and Cameco.
A national deployment of the reactors could generate 100,000 construction jobs, according to Brookfield.
Westinghouse would start project orders and initiate orders of critical equipment once the transaction is closed, and said it would leverage the nuclear industry supply chains established during the construction of the delayed Vogtle Units 3 and 4 in Burke County near Waynesboro in Georgia.
Units 3 and 4 began construction in 2009. Originally expected to be operation by 2016, Unit 3 was finally completed in 2023. The delays were partly down to the Fukushima nuclear accident in Japan in 2011, which resulted in revisions to the AP1000 design certification.
After a series of contractor changes on the project, Westinghouse, then owned by Toshiba, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2017, partly due to losses incurred on the Vogtle project. Toshiba sold Westinghouse’s holding company to Brookfield and its partners for $4.6 billion in 2018.
Dan Summer, interim CEO of Westinghouse, said, “Westinghouse is honoured to partner with the US government to meet this once in a generation opportunity to deliver nuclear power at scale in the United States and overseas. The AP1000 is ready to meet this mission, with a commercialized design, ready U.S. supply chain, highest capacity factor of any new reactor globally, and backed by cutting-edge AI tools that will transform construction into an efficient, repeatable process.”

My Thoughts 💭

Almost 1M BTC to do bring nuclear on line. A partnership with Canadian company is very fitting considering the trade war. But we need more energy so let’s go!
I'll see your "let's go!" and raise you an LFG!
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You are wayyyyyyyyyyyyyyy behind China.
Sure its worth trying to catch up, even at this late stage, but highly unlikely you can rebuild the complex integrated supply chains and and skills base required to even catch up with China now.
The USA simply does not have sufficient understanding of the crucial role strategic government investment plays in the building and maintaining of trade and power projection advantage.
The 'free markets fix everything' hype/bullshit of neoliberal Libertarians doctrines has reduced the wests ability to make things to a critical level of failure and vulnerability.
Governments play a crucial role in the wealth of nations.
Libertarian simplistic 'free markets fix everything' dogma is a dangerously flawed and discredited ideology.
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The US struggles to build anything these days. Its financialised itself into a state of near complete incompetence. It no longer has the industrial supply chains and skilled engineers and technicians to build strategic infrastructure like nuclear power. China took US nuclear designs, tweaked them and is not building Dozens of them at 1/6th the cost the US can. Electricity is the lifeblood of the modern industrial and post industrial (AI) economy and China has won hands down across power generation and efficiency. USA is a dying dinosaur. Trump deserve credit for trying to get the US back into the role of building actual useful things (instead of golf courses and endless bullshit financial derivatives) but decades of neglect leaves the USA wayyyyyyyy behind China in terms of its ability to build anything much in a competitive manner. It takes decades to build, or rebuild such capacity. Sure get started now, but I doubt it will be enough to head of the huge lead China now has.
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