World's first nuclear reactor that's able to be mass-produced just passed a key US safety approval test

Published on Feb 16, 2026 at 2:37 PM (UTC+4)
by Daisy Edwards

Last updated on Feb 16, 2026 at 5:36 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by Emma Matthews

The first-ever nuclear reactor that can be mass-produced took another step towards reality after it passed a major US safety approval test.

Radiant has secured a major green light from the US Department of Energy for its Kaleidos microreactor, pushing the futuristic power unit one step closer to the real world.

Instead of building enormous one-off plants that take years to complete, the company wants to roll these reactors out from an assembly line.

If all goes to plan, the first unit could fire up for testing at Idaho National Laboratory in 2026.

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Introducing the world’s first nuclear reactor that’s mass-produced

Radiant’s big tech idea is surprisingly simple: treat nuclear fusion reactors more like easily transportable products and less like megaprojects.

Kaleidos is a compact 1MW microreactor designed to be built in batches, shipped out, and switched on where power is desperately needed.

Picture remote communities, military bases, disaster zones, and industrial sites that currently rely on loud, fuel-hungry diesel generators.

Kaleidos is designed to run for several years without refueling, cutting down on the need for constant fuel deliveries and maintenance headaches. It is essentially nuclear power in a much smaller, more flexible package.

The company had already cleared an earlier safety milestone for testing at the National Reactor Innovation Center’s DOME facility in Idaho.

That site serves as a launchpad for next-generation reactor tech, so getting through those reviews was no small feat.

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It just passed a very important US safety approval test

The latest approval centers on a Preliminary Documented Safety Analysis review, which is a crucial box to tick before any reactor testing can begin.

The DOE signed off on Radiant’s safety documentation, confirming the design meets strict federal standards.

Only a handful of companies have made it this far under the DOE’s pilot microreactor pathway.

For Radiant, this approval is more than paperwork.

It is a serious vote of confidence in a nuclear reactor designed to be built faster, deployed smarter, and potentially reshape how nuclear energy is delivered.

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As a Content Writer since January 2025, Daisy’s focus is on writing stories on topics spanning the entirety of the website. As well as writing about EVs, the history of cars, tech, and celebrities, Daisy is always the first to pitch the seed of an idea to the audience editor team, who collab with her to transform it into a fully informative and engaging story.