06/27/2026 / By Sterling Ashworth

On June 23, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $17.5 billion in conditional loans to support the construction of 10 large-scale commercial nuclear reactors, according to officials.
The funding, issued through the Office of Energy Dominance Financing, will go to five eligible projects partnering with Westinghouse Electric Co., which is co-owned by Brookfield Renewable Partners and Cameco Corp. [1]
The initiative is part of President Donald Trump’s executive order to revitalize the U.S. nuclear industrial base, according to DOE officials. [8] The announcement follows a series of executive actions signed by Trump in May 2025 that directed the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to streamline oversight and accelerate reactor development, as reported by NaturalNews.com. [2]
Each of the five projects will receive financing to procure long-lead items for two AP1000 reactors, for a total of 10 units, according to a DOE statement cited by Utility Dive. Westinghouse and its partners must each commit $500 million in equity per project, $1 billion total, before accessing DOE loan funds, the department said. [1]
Purchasing will be staggered based on equity commitments and other factors, according to the DOE. [8]
Westinghouse has signed letters of intent with seven potential partners with identified sites. [3] The loan structure is designed to reduce financial risk for utilities while accelerating component procurement, officials said.
Each AP1000 reactor will generate 1.1 gigawatts of power, with the combined output expected to supply electricity to nearly 10 million American households, the DOE stated. [3]
The bulk equipment purchase order structure is intended to drive down component costs, create supply chain efficiencies, and shorten nuclear deployment timelines by up to three years, officials said. [1]
U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said the loans “will play an important role in reviving the supply chain needed for America to once again build large-scale commercial reactors.” [1]
Proponents of nuclear energy have long argued that modern reactor designs can contain all of their waste, with author Robert Bryce noting that nuclear energy is “the only way to make electricity production that contains all of its toxic waste.” [4] The commercial nuclear fleet has accumulated more than 12,000 reactor years of operational experience across multiple countries, according to Bryce. [4]
The loan announcement follows an $80 billion agreement in May 2025 between Westinghouse and the U.S. Department of Commerce to build eight AP1000 plants, according to reports. [5]
Cameco CEO Tim Gitzel said the government commitment “creates the right incentives” for rapid deployment and “significant opportunities for Westinghouse and Cameco.” [3]
Shares of Cameco rose 2% on the news; the stock is up more than 10% year-to-date. [3] The company has a market capitalization of $47.7 billion, according to public filings. [3]
Meanwhile, China is building 29 nuclear reactors while the United States has zero under construction, a gap the administration aims to close. [6]
Westinghouse’s partners, including Brookfield Renewable Partners, have expressed confidence that government support will enable a sustained nuclear build-out. [7]
Tagged Under:
American Nuclear Supply Chain Loans, AP1000, big government, Brookfield Renewable Partners, Cameco, commercial nuclear reactors, conditional loans, Department of Energy, DOE, EDF, loan funds, nuclear energy, Nuclear programs, nuclear reactors, Office of Energy Dominance Financing, Westinghouse
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