Microsoft and Nvidia announce AI partnership to fast-track nuclear power plants

midian182

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What just happened? If you've ever thought to yourself that what the world really needs is a slew of nuclear power plants to meet the enormous energy demands of AI data centers, here's some good news: Microsoft and Nvidia have announced an AI partnership designed to boost development and deployment of nuclear facilities.

Before anyone starts picturing Copilot sitting in a control room, the companies say this is mostly about speeding up the slow work that comes before a reactor ever goes live.

According to the company's post, Microsoft's new "AI for nuclear" initiative combines its Azure-based permitting tools with Nvidia's simulation stack to tackle licensing, plant design, construction planning, and ongoing operations.

The biggest target is the permitting process. Microsoft says nuclear licensing can take years, cost hundreds of millions of dollars, and involve tens of thousands of pages of documentation.

The pitch is that generative AI can draft paperwork, run gap analysis against historical permits, and flag inconsistencies before they become expensive delays. In theory, that leaves human experts and regulators to focus on safety rather than hunting formatting errors across a mountain of PDFs.

Nvidia's part of the deal leans heavily on digital replicas. Using Omniverse, Earth 2, Isaac Sim, PhysicsNeMo, and other tools, developers can build a virtual version of a plant before the first shovel hits the dirt.

Microsoft says 4D and 5D simulations add scheduling and cost tracking on top of 3D models, helping teams catch clashes, delays, and rework earlier. It's the same "build it twice, once digitally and once for real" idea Nvidia has been pitching for factories and AI infrastructure.

This isn't a first-use case. Microsoft says Aalo Atomics cut its time-intensive permitting workload by 92% using the company's Generative AI for Permitting tools, saving an estimated $80 million annually.

Southern Nuclear is also using Microsoft Copilot agents across engineering and licensing workstreams, while Idaho National Laboratory is applying AI to assemble safety analysis reports and standardize review methods.

Because of the enormous power demand from the increasing number of AI data centers, tech companies are no longer just buying GPUs -- they're chasing the power plants to run them.

Microsoft's is aiming to restart Three Mile Island to supply more than 800 megawatts of carbon-free power for its data centers. There's also been a proposal to repurpose retired Navy reactors for AI facilities.

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Great news!

However, if someone thinks AI (or anything else) can speed up a process that involves government bureaucracy - they are sorely mistaken.
Only the government can do something about its own bureaucracy. We need the old bureaucracy dismantled, and completely new rules - e.g if a request is not answered within 2 weeks, it's granted automatically.
 
Great news!

However, if someone thinks AI (or anything else) can speed up a process that involves government bureaucracy - they are sorely mistaken.
Only the government can do something about its own bureaucracy.
I agree. Lawsuits and red tape are the issues with nukes, not actually designing the things. China has built hundreds of them without issue. AI fixes none of this.
We need the old bureaucracy dismantled, and completely new rules - e.g if a request is not answered within 2 weeks, it's granted automatically.
I cannot even begin to list all the reasons this is an awful idea without having an aneurism.
 
What a biased intro to the article lol. Opinion was interjected with two unanswered questions and further research wasn’t done to substantiate or address these questions. Let me highlight them here:
[W]ho wouldn't want AI involved in the nuclear planning process?

If you've ever thought to yourself that what the world really needs is a slew of nuclear power plants to meet the enormous energy demands of AI data centers, […]
Isn’t the primary complaint about AI data centers that it does reduce supply? If AI can also be used to address the energy supply problem, then yes that is what should be happening. As for AI in the permitting process, I’d be interested in learning about any issues here but this article didn’t provide any information here. Maybe one of the commenters is more resourceful.
 
Amazon, Microsoft, Google, the state of Indiana...

People thought I was crazy when I claimed "electric vehicles were the future".

Said: "the infrastructure would never support it".

Guess what: NUCLEAR POWER.

I've positioned myself in several stocks and commodities to take advantage of the "Great Reset".

Been driving electric vehicles since 2024 - completely ignoring the rise in gas/oil prices. Planning to take my house solar with battery backups and reverse auto charging in event of emergency.

Invested in all of the major tech companies to take dividends during the stock's growth.

Microsoft, Meta, Micron, apple, AMD, Amazon, Nvidia, Google, Oil/Gas companies, TSM, Tesla, etc...

And of course: banks and credit card stocks - as homeowners continue to go deeper and deeper into credit card debt.
 
Nuclear power plants aren't really something that should be fast tracked, they should be slow tracked to make sure every safe guard possible is taken into account and that those safeguards will be effective if needed. We don't need any Fukushima's on America soil.
 
Great news!

However, if someone thinks AI (or anything else) can speed up a process that involves government bureaucracy - they are sorely mistaken.
Only the government can do something about its own bureaucracy. We need the old bureaucracy dismantled, and completely new rules - e.g if a request is not answered within 2 weeks, it's granted automatically.

We tried that, it was called DOGE. And between hatred for anything the orange man does, and the love of government grift and wasteful spending, it went nowhere fast.

Government isn't interested in efficiency or saving the taxpayers money. There's no profit in it.
 
What annoys me the most is that this AI craze stopped any other kind of development, it is impossible to buy servers and improve your services, and I assume rise in energy prices could also hinder progress to any non AI related service.
 
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