Three companies, Newcleo, Fincantieri and Rina, have signed an agreement to develop mini-nuclear reactors to be installed on board commercial ships to help reduce their carbon footprint, the companies announced on Tuesday, AFP quoted.

Prototype of the installation with small modular reactors (Small Modular Reactor – SMR)Photo: Rolls-Royce SMR/Covers/INS/INSTAR Images/Profimedia

According to the terms of the agreement, Anglo-Franco-Italian nuclear start-up Newcleo and Italian companies Fincantieri (shipyards) and Rina (ship certification) have joined forces to “jointly carry out a feasibility study for nuclear applications in the maritime transport sector, in particular for Small Modular Lead Cooled Reactor (SMR) technology.”

This fourth-generation reactor technology, proposed by Newcleo, aims to use nuclear waste as fuel.

“The deployment of Newcleo’s innovative Lead Fast Reactor (LFR) for marine propulsion involves placing a mini-reactor on board ships in the form of a small nuclear battery that produces 30 MW of electricity,” the companies explained in a joint statement.

This equipment will require infrequent refueling (only once every 10-15 years), very limited maintenance, and “light” end-of-life replacement, the partners explain.

A far cry from today’s high-powered nuclear reactors (which are 1,000 MW or more), SMRs are at the center of a global development race, but none have yet materialized.

Using nuclear power to power the ships will help “rapidly decarbonize a sector facing huge fossil fuel consumption and associated greenhouse gas emissions,” the companies said, although they did not provide a timeframe.

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