In a single vote, the Senate tried to bend time: compressing the decades-long grind of nuclear development into a tighter, faster, cheaper pipeline. The promise is seductive—reactors that are smaller, safer, more flexible, and capable of delivering massive amounts of carbon-free power without the political fragility of wind and solar. For communities staring down blackouts, rising bills, and climate disasters, the idea of reliable, round-the-clock clean energy feels less like an option and more like a lifeline.
But every shortcut carries a shadow. Streamlined reviews could mean neighbors learning too late what’s being built in their backyard. Cheaper, quicker approvals could entrench nuclear for generations before waste, security, and accident risks are fully resolved. Biden’s signature would not simply enact a law; it would lock in a direction. The country isn’t just choosing an energy policy. It’s choosing what kind of risk it is willing to live with.
