KEY POINTS
  • The nation's top regulatory body for nuclear power plants and other nuclear materials, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, has officially voted to regulate nuclear fusion differently than fission.
  • The decision is being cheered by the fusion industry as a win.
  • Companies working to commercialize fusion have raised more than $5 billion to build and scale, but until the decision was handed down from the NRC, there hadn't been any certainty in how the nascent industry was going to be regulated in the United States.
Physicist Stephen Wukitch stands next to the partially disassembled now defunct fusion reactor core at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Plasma Science & Fusion Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on January 25, 2023. - The lab is working with partners to build a new fusion reactor testing core.

The top regulatory agency for nuclear materials safety in the U.S. voted unanimously to regulate the burgeoning fusion industry differently than the nuclear fission industry, and fusion startups are celebrating that as a major win.

As a result, some provisions specific to fission reactors, like requiring funding to cover claims from nuclear meltdowns, won't apply to fusion plants. (Fusion reactors cannot melt down.)