Our joint venture with @Brookfield represents a new chapter in American nuclear history. We’re excited and ready to build the future of nuclear, together.
https://t.co/BLLlO7aJ6g
Our Powerhouse team has the proven ability to scale from a single site to an entire utility fleet. We deepen relationships by delivering results that expand our scope.
Calling all problem solvers, builders, cybersecurity experts, data scientists and anyone interested in the future of American clean energy.
We're recruiting a cohort of 15 elite AI engineers to join our DC office. As a team, you'll contribute to developing our Nuclear Operating System, the product for one of the most consequential clean energy buildouts in America.
Learn more at https://t.co/jibuFd4eJy
.@TheNuclearCo has launched NOS Security, a next-generation, integrated cybersecurity platform designed specifically for the #nuclear industry https://t.co/gwjrOvDkjl
"Other companies send workers with minimal knowledge. TNC’s services provided the expertise to support our team. They played a large role in the success of our workload." — Plant Maintenance
Our services business covers the full nuclear lifecycle — from reactor engineering and AI-powered cyber security, to commissioning, testing, start-up, operation, maintenance, and workforce augmentation across all trades.
A joint venture established by global investment firm @Brookfield and #nuclear project development and delivery company @TheNuclearCo is to project manage the completion of the two VC Summer AP1000 units in South Carolina https://t.co/We0EjDHYaI
Catawba. Oconee. Hatch. Vogtle. Cooper. Our Powerhouse team is trusted across the U.S. nuclear fleet for services including outage execution, workforce augmentation, and emergency response.
#nuclearenergy
Brookfield Asset Management has agreed to form an atomic power-plant development company with startup The Nuclear Company, which will initially focus on potentially restarting an abandoned project in South Carolina https://t.co/ye3n3shCYX
Great momentum for nuclear.
Brookfield and The Nuclear Company are teaming up to scale Westinghouse technology.
America needs more nuclear, faster. We love to see it.
Boom!💥 #Canada's Brookfield & US @TheNuclearCo are forming a new company to accelerate deployment of Westinghouse AP1000 & AP300 #Nuclear reactors "at speed and scale"🏎️ starting with 2 x 1.1GW AP1000s at VC Summer in #SouthCarolina 🇺🇸⚛️🏗️👷🇨🇦🤠🐂#Uranium https://t.co/r5r1BO7rFc
Proud to announce our partnership with Brookfield to deploy Westinghouse technology. Our team was built on the field of Vogtle and on some of the most complex energy projects in the world. We know what it takes to deliver nuclear. What’s been missing is a model that brings together the people, the capabilities, and the capital to do it at speed and scale. It's time to built at fleet scale.
Breaking: Brookfield and The Nuclear Company teaming up to deliver GW-scale nuclear
Proud to announcing a joint venture between The Nuclear Company and Brookfield to deliver Westinghouse reactors, including to manage the completion of AP1000s in South Carolina.
From the day I discovered nuclear energy my goal has been to build as much of it as possible for the world. Today, with my team at @thenuclearco, we're taking a huge step towards that. It's been an honor to work as Chief of Staff for proven builder-CEO @JonathanWebbKY alongside our legendary Chief Nuclear Officer @TheNuclearJoe as we build the team and technology that can finally fix the nuclear plant deployment problem in the West.
I've been an advocate for nuclear energy long enough to see the revolution in public appreciation for this wondrous technology, but just being popular isn't enough. We have to be able to build on-time, on-budget, with proven designs that are repeated over and over with an experienced and disciplined project management team using the best emerging tech.
That is precisely what we're doing at The Nuclear Company. I'll be sharing more going forward as we deliver on the awesome potential unlocked by today's announcement.
Jonathan Webb, The Nuclear Company
America built over 100 nuclear reactors between 1960 and 1990. We’ve built just two since then.
Nuclear construction didn't just slow. It nearly died. The nation that first split the atom and put men on the moon somehow forgot how to pour concrete and weld steel at scale. Projects that should have taken five years stretched to fifteen. Budgets exploded from billions to tens of billions. The belief that we could build anything, anywhere, at any speed, the faith that defined American industry, evaporated.
We built The Nuclear Company to reverse this decline. We’re building an AI-powered deployment platform with technology-enabled systems that will allow our frontline teams to deliver America’s next hundred reactors. The result will be low-cost, resilient, plentiful energy. And we’re doing it by empowering the people who build them.
Consider what passes for normal in nuclear construction today. At the Vogtle plant in Georgia, the two reactors built over the last 30 years, more than 10,000 people worked at peak plant construction. Those workers often sat idle. Waiting on parts and materials. Waiting on engineering changes. Waiting on documentation. Just waiting. When documents did arrive (sometimes by wagons or wheelbarrows), the volumes of paperwork lacked specifics. Metal joints misaligned went undetected for weeks, forcing costly and lengthy rework. Workers knew problems were mounting. They could feel it, but they lacked the tools to see patterns fast enough to intervene. One told me: "We knew things were going wrong. We just couldn't see it fast enough to stop it." Our frontline workers are brilliant, but the tools they’ve had can't keep pace.
We’re building AI-enabled software that allows workers to command the build, not just survive it. We’re building it for the foreman on site at 4am, not just executives in boardrooms. AI agents trained on tens of thousands of pages of project documents identify problems in hours instead of months. Drones scan construction sites and catch misalignments within a millimeter, alerting workers through earpieces: "Please check that weld." That's giving American workers capabilities they've never had before.
This isn't automation replacing workers. It's augmentation elevating them. Kids with high school diplomas, people with two-year degrees. AI will help bring out their irreplaceable talents.
We run our company from Middle America. Not New York City or San Francisco. As we build these facilities, we’ll create some of the highest-paying construction jobs in the country and generate tax revenue for communities that need it most. Not for a few years, but for a century.
What we need is to make sure that our teammates can do their jobs. That's why we're giving them the tools they deserve, so building America's energy future doesn't break the people building it.