Economics
Capital cost, construction, operating economics, and market competition.
Core concepts
Why nuclear costs what it costs
ContestedCapital-heavy but fuel-light: once built, a reactor delivers some of the cheapest, most reliable power on the grid for 60–80 years. The build cost is a solvable, not inherent, problem.
Vogtle & the AP1000: a real-world cost case study
ContestedAmerica proved it can still build large reactors. First-of-a-kind costs were high, but the second unit was faster and cheaper — exactly the learning curve a sustained program would ride down.
Most substantial articles
Common misconceptions
Myth: Nuclear is inherently too expensive to build.
Reality: It's capital-heavy, but costs fall sharply where reactors are built in series.
Myth: Fuel cost makes nuclear expensive.
Reality: Fuel is a tiny share of cost — the expense is up-front construction and financing.
From Nucleation Capital
Source: Nucleation Capital✓ Active recall
1. What dominates the lifetime cost of a nuclear plant?
2. What is the status of Vogtle 3 and 4 today?