January 08, 2024
By Mike Rogoway
Oregon nuclear power company NuScale
acknowledges layoffs, says 154 lost their jobs
A one-third-scale model Of NuScale Power's
50-megawatt reactor is perched in a
birdcage of steel girders in a nuclear test facility at Oregon State
University.TNS
Portland-based NuScale Power said Monday it has
laid off 154 employees, 28% of its staff, as it strives to find
commercial customers for its nuclear reactor technology.
That’s a substantial reduction in the workforce of the struggling
nuclear energy company but smaller than had been suggested by a report
Friday in HuffPost, which indicated up to 40% of NuScale workers had
lost their jobs.
The bulk of NuScale’s employees work in Oregon, mostly at its research
and engineering site in Corvallis. NuScale also has a small team at
its headquarters office in Southwest Portland. The company declined to
say how many Oregon workers lost their jobs but said it laid off fewer
than 50 people at any single location.
NuScale said the job cuts will save the company between $50 million
and $60 million annually, after paying severance costs of around $3
million.
NuScale pioneered a new class of nuclear plant known as a small
modular reactor, based on technology developed at Oregon State
University. The company says its reactors are more cost-effective and
safer than conventional nuclear plants, and NuScale had won key
regulatory approvals and $600 million in federal backing to develop
its technology.
While several other companies are working on their own small reactors,
too, utilities have been slow to adopt the technology. In November, a
coalition of Western utilities dropped plans to build a NuScale
reactor in Idaho, sending the company’s stock plunging.
NuScale’s shares fell 8% Friday, to $2.65. Shares fell another 2.9%
early Monday. The company had $117 million in cash at the end of
September, down from $268 million in cash and short-term investments
at the start of the year.
Projected costs for the Idaho project ballooned by 75% last year, to
$9.3 billion, and the target price for power from NuScale’s reactor
climbed by more than 50%. That made it less appealing to the utilities
seeking an affordable alternative to electricity generated by fossil
fuels.
NuScale said Monday that its layoffs represent a shift away from the
research stage of its operations toward commercialization of its small
modular reactors. But it did not announce any deals to actually deploy
reactors.
“Our U.S. Nuclear Regulatory-approved, industry-leading SMR technology
is already many years ahead of the competition,” John Hopkins,
NuScale’s CEO, said in a written statement. “Today, commercialization
of our SMR technology is our key objective, which includes near-term
deployment and manufacturing.”
Mike Rogoway | mrogoway@oregonian.com |
503-294-7699
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