03/12/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/12/2026 15:12
Washington, D.C. - Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Ranking Member of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, filed a public comment on the Department of Energy's (DOE) "categorical exclusion" (CE) for advanced nuclear reactors, which creates a pathway for such reactors to be exempted from detailed environmental review otherwise required by the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The leniency of DOE's advanced reactor CE-coupled with the dramatic changes to DOE's safety, health, and environmental requirements for reactors that were recently been made public-introduces unnecessary, avoidable risks that threaten to undermine America's hard-won nuclear leadership.
DOE justifies its CE by claiming that advanced reactors have inherent improvements in safety and environmental impacts. However, Senator Whitehouse notes, "it is circular logic to claim that a project will achieve the safety characteristics of an advanced reactor simply because it intends to. New, untested nuclear reactor designs cannot be assumed to be inherently safe by virtue of being 'advanced reactors.'"
The advanced reactor CE is the first and only DOE CE for a nuclear fission facility. Only two of DOE's existing CEs specifically relate to nuclear materials, both of which cover only limited operational activity. Beyond these CEs, every reference to nuclear equipment, fuel, or waste in DOE's CEs is to exclude nuclear materials from existing CEs.
The scope of the advanced reactor CE, Senator Whitehouse notes, "is significantly greater than those of existing CEs for energy activities. It contains no restrictions on project size, meaning even commercial-scale projects could be included. It covers full lifecycle activities (authorization, siting, construction, operation, reauthorization, and decommissioning) and contains no limitation on project duration, meaning that a project could operate permanently for decades. It also permits inclusion of multiple reactors within a single facility under the CE, multiplying the potential environmental impacts of a single reactor."
DOE has also dramatically weakened safety, health, and environmental impact mitigation and reporting requirements in its internal policies. In his comment, Whitehouse documents the changes, which include:
Whitehouse's full comment is available here.