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You Can’t Have True Energy Independence Without Nuclear Energy

Nuclear power is crucial for ensuring clean, reliable, and affordable power to the American people, and for our national defense strategy.

Energy.gov

August 21, 2020
minute read time

By Dan Brouillette, U.S. Secretary of Energy

In order to secure the economic and security benefits of a true “all-of-the-above” energy agenda, the United States must be at the forefront of nuclear innovation. This is crucial not only for ensuring clean, reliable, and affordable power to the American people, but for our national defense strategy as well. The great State of Pennsylvania plays a vital role in our energy independence strategy for several reasons, and its uniqueness in our national landscape deserves special attention.

Under the previous Administration, the U.S. squandered its potential to produce its own nuclear fuel, thereby threatening our national interest and national security. More alarmingly, America has been on a decades-long descent from its competitive global position as the world leader in nuclear energy and technology, losing ground to state-owned enterprises, including those in Russia, China, and other competitor nations that are aggressively moving to surpass the United States.

Under the Trump Administration, we are putting nuclear energy back at the forefront. We are pursuing every avenue possible to ensure reliable production of this vital energy resource. Nuclear energy is necessary for true energy independence.

In 2019, President Donald J. Trump issued an Executive Memorandum, forming the Nuclear Fuel Working Group. The Working Group is comprised of government agencies and tasked with crafting a plan for re-asserting U.S. nuclear energy dominance.

In response to those efforts, in April 2020, the Department of Energy (DOE) announced the Strategy to Restore American Nuclear Energy Leadership, a comprehensive plan mapping out our recommendations for how the U.S. can regain its competitive advantage in nuclear energy. The strategy calls for reviving capabilities in the uranium mining, milling, conversion, and enrichment industries, restoring and maintaining U.S. technology supremacy, and driving U.S. exports, while assuring consistency with U.S. nonproliferation objectives and strengthening national security.

Through our Strategy to Restore American Nuclear Energy Leadership we will:

  • Take immediate and bold action to strengthen the uranium mining and conversion industries and restore the viability of the entire front-end of the nuclear fuel cycle.
  • Utilize American technological innovation and advanced nuclear research, development, and demonstration (RD&D) investments to consolidate technical advances and accelerate the regaining of American leadership in the next generation of nuclear technologies.
  • Ensure that there will be a healthy and growing nuclear energy sector to which uranium miners, fuel cycle providers, and reactor vendors can sell their products and services.
  • Take a whole-of-government approach to supporting the U.S. nuclear industry in exporting nuclear technology in competition with state-owned enterprises.

Secretary of Energy, Dan Brouillette, recently visited The Susquehanna Steam Electric Station in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania to applaud the plant on helping us accomplish those goals.

Even as we are strengthening our energy security through nuclear power, we are also strengthening our national security through modern, flexible, and resilient nuclear capabilities. To that extent, DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA) core mission is to ensure the U.S. maintains a safe, secure, and reliable nuclear stockpile through the application of unparalleled science, technology, engineering, and manufacturing.

Nuclear power can provide reliable energy to Americans and is a crucial part of our all-of-the-above strategy. In the face of a manmade attack or natural disaster, it is vital that we are not reliant upon just one form of energy. Pennsylvania helps ensure America’s energy security thanks not only to its richness in coal, natural gas, and other resources, but also its willingness to pursue nuclear energy at sites like Susquehanna Steam Electric Station.

Dan Brouillette

Dan Brouillette, Former Secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy

Deputy Secretary of Energy Dan Brouillette

Dan Brouillette served as the 15th Secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy. Secretary Brouillette has three decades of experience in both the public and private sector. Most recently he was the Deputy Secretary of Energy.

He also served as the Senior Vice President and head of public policy for USAA, the Nation’s leading provider of financial services to the military community. Before joining USAA, Secretary Brouillette was a Vice President of Ford Motor Company, where he led the automaker’s domestic policy teams and served on its North American Operating Committee.

At Ford and USAA, he was part of senior management teams that helped bring to market innovative technologies like auto collision avoidance and remote deposit capture, a technology invented by USAA that allows the use of smart devices to deposit funds into our banking accounts. 

Before his transition into the private sector, Secretary Brouillette held numerous positions in government.  He was Chief of Staff to the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce, which has broad jurisdictional and oversight authority over five Cabinet-level Federal agencies.  He also served as Assistant Secretary of Energy for Congressional and Intergovernmental Affairs from 2001 to 2003.  In addition, he is a former state energy regulator, having served as a member of the Louisiana State Mineral and Energy Board from 2013 to 2016.

Secretary Brouillette and his wife, Adrienne, are both U.S. Army veterans and have been married for 28 years. They hail from San Antonio, TX, and have nine children.

Tags:
  • Nuclear Energy
  • Energy Security
  • Nuclear Security
  • National Labs
  • Energy Policy

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