Executive Summary
Small modular reactors (SMRs) promise factory-built nuclear units that are cheaper, faster, and safer than traditional
gigawatt-scale plants. In 2026, dozens of designs are on slides, but only a handful have concrete poured. Governments are betting
billions on advanced nuclear as a complement to renewables, yet questions remain: Can SMRs really compete on cost?
What is a realistic deployment timeline? and Where do they actually fit in future grids? At
Energy Solutions,
we examine cost ranges, project pipelines, and policy frameworks to separate plausible pathways from pure hype.
- Only a small number of SMR projects are under concrete construction worldwide, with first-of-a-kind (FOAK) units
targeting operation in the late 2020s to early 2030s.
- FOAK SMR LCOE is likely to land in the $90–$160/MWh range, depending on financing and construction risk—above
today’s wind and solar, but potentially competitive with gas in some firm-power roles.
- Nth-of-a-kind (NOAK) cost projections drop to $50–$90/MWh, but require long production runs, stable policy, and
rigorous standardisation.
- SMRs are best positioned not as generic baseload, but for industrial heat, remote grids, and systems with constrained land or
transmission.
- By 2035, even optimistic scenarios have SMRs representing a modest share of new capacity compared to wind, solar, and
storage, but they could play an outsized role in specific regions and industrial clusters.
What You'll Learn
- SMR Basics: Designs, Sizes, and Safety Features
- Benchmarks: Cost, Size, and Timeline vs Large Reactors
- Economic Analysis: LCOE Ranges and Revenue Stacks
- Case Studies: Canada, UK, US, and Emerging Markets
- Global Perspective: Policy, Supply Chains, and Competition
- Devil’s Advocate: Risks, Delays, and Public Acceptance
- Outlook to 2030/2035: How Big Can SMRs Really Get?
- Deployment Guide: Where SMRs May Make Sense
- FAQ: Safety, Waste, and Integration with Renewables
SMR Basics: Designs, Sizes, and Safety Features
SMRs are nuclear reactors with nameplate capacities typically between 50–300 MW(e), designed for modular manufacturing and
simplified construction. Broad technology families include:
- Pressurised Water SMRs (PWR-based) – scaled-down versions of conventional light-water designs, often aiming for faster
licensing due to technology familiarity.
- Advanced SMRs – including high-temperature gas-cooled reactors (HTGR), molten salt reactors (MSR), and sodium fast reactors
(SFR), targeting higher outlet temperatures and industrial process heat.
- Microreactors – sub‑50 MW(e) units for remote communities, mines, or military applications.
Common design goals are:
- Passive safety – relying on natural circulation and gravity rather than active pumps and operator action.
- Modularity – factory fabrication, standardised components, and parallel deployment of multiple units at one site.
- Smaller site footprints – enabling brownfield co-location with retiring coal plants or industrial facilities.
Representative SMR Technology Families
| Type |
Typical Size (MW(e)) |
Coolant / Moderator |
Key Promise |
| PWR-based SMR |
50–300 |
Light water / light water |
Leverage existing experience and LWR supply chains. |
| HTGR |
50–200 |
Helium / graphite |
High outlet temps (≥700 °C) for hydrogen and industrial heat. |
| MSR |
50–300 |
Fluoride or chloride salt |
Low-pressure operation, flexible fuel cycles. |
| Microreactor |
1–50 |
Various |
Transportable units for remote grids and defence. |
Benchmarks: Cost, Size, and Timeline vs Large Reactors
Historically, large nuclear projects have suffered from cost overruns and schedule delays. SMRs aim to reverse this by
delivering smaller, repeatable units with more off-site construction. Table 2 compares stylised benchmarks for FOAK SMRs and large reactors.
Illustrative Benchmarks: FOAK SMR vs Large Nuclear (2026 View)
| Metric |
SMR (FOAK) |
Large Reactor (Recent Builds) |
| Unit size (MW(e)) |
≈ 75–300 |
≈ 1,000–1,600 |
| Overnight cost ($/kW) |
$5,000–$10,000/kW |
$6,000–$12,000/kW |
| Construction time (core build) |
4–7 years (after licensing) |
7–12 years |
| Typical FOAK LCOE |
$90–$160/MWh |
$80–$150/MWh |
Stylised Overnight Cost and LCOE – FOAK SMR vs Large Nuclear
While SMRs do not magically escape nuclear’s capital intensity, their smaller project size can lower absolute investment risk
and allow modular build-out—useful for countries and utilities that cannot finance 1+ GW units in a single tranche.
Economic Analysis: LCOE Ranges and Revenue Stacks
The viability of SMRs depends not only on pure LCOE but also on revenue stacking. Potential value streams include:
- Firm low-carbon power to complement high-renewables grids.
- Industrial heat for refineries, chemicals, steel, and hydrogen production.
- Grid services such as inertia, voltage support, and black-start capability.
- Co-location with retiring coal plants, reusing sites and transmission.
Indicative LCOE Ranges by Technology (Mid-2030s, Selected Markets)
| Technology |
Typical LCOE Range |
Notes |
| Onshore wind |
$25–$55/MWh |
Good sites, excluding firming. |
| Utility solar PV |
$20–$45/MWh |
Best resource regions. |
| Gas CCGT (without CCS) |
$50–$90/MWh |
Fuel and carbon price sensitive. |
| SMR (NOAK, optimistic) |
$50–$90/MWh |
Requires serial production, low financing costs. |
Relative LCOE Index – SMR vs Other Firm and Variable Resources
In most scenarios, SMRs will not beat wind and solar on pure cost. Their business case lies in providing low-carbon, high-capacity-factor
output that can anchor industrial clusters and balance variable renewables in systems where gas is constrained or carbon priced.
Case Studies: Canada, UK, US, and Emerging Markets
Canada – Utility-Backed SMR at Existing Nuclear Site
Canadian utilities are targeting a first SMR unit at an existing nuclear site, leveraging experienced regulators and skilled labour. The goal is
to replace retiring baseload and provide clean power to industry and hydrogen projects. Key features include staged deployment
(one unit then a second) and heavy public funding for FOAK risk.
United Kingdom – SMRs as Part of Nuclear Fleet Renewal
The UK is exploring SMRs to diversify away from very large EPR units and to use former coal sites. Government programmes aim to
select a small number of designs and move them through a standardised approval process, though timelines remain uncertain.
United States – Advanced Reactors for Industrial Heat
Several US projects focus on high-temperature reactors for industrial customers, especially hydrogen hubs and refineries.
Developers see process heat and cogeneration as a more defensible niche than pure grid power in markets with cheap gas and strong renewables.
Global Perspective: Policy, Supply Chains, and Competition
SMR deployment will be shaped by:
- Policy support and guarantees – including contracts for difference (CfDs), regulated asset base (RAB) models, and
loan guarantees.
- Supply chain readiness – heavy forgings, specialised steels, and quality control capacity are already stretched by
large nuclear projects.
- Competition from renewables + storage – ever cheaper solar, wind, and batteries raise the bar for SMR economics.
Energy Solutions Insight
Our tracking suggests a large gap between announced SMR capacity and realistic 2035 commissioning. While gigawatts of
projects are on paper, only a subset have credible sites, funding, and regulatory pathways. Investors should treat vendor roadmaps as
scenarios, not commitments.
Devil’s Advocate: Risks, Delays, and Public Acceptance
Advanced nuclear faces familiar and new challenges:
- Regulatory complexity – new designs require extensive safety cases and sometimes new rulebooks.
- First-of-a-kind risk – FOAK units almost always cost more and take longer than expected.
- Public acceptance – concerns around accidents, waste, and proliferation remain politically potent.
- Opportunity cost – capital tied up in long nuclear timelines could fund near-term decarbonisation via efficiency,
renewables, and storage.
SMRs may mitigate some risks (e.g., smaller evacuation zones, passive safety), but they do not erase the need for robust governance
and community engagement.
Outlook to 2030/2035: How Big Can SMRs Really Get?
We model three broad trajectories for SMRs through 2035:
- Demonstration-heavy, slow scale – a few FOAK units in OECD markets, limited replication, global SMR capacity <10 GW.
- Clustered growth – successful pilots in 3–4 countries drive clusters near industrial hubs, reaching perhaps 20–40 GW
of SMR capacity.
- Accelerated, policy-driven – strong carbon pricing and gas constraints push some systems towards larger SMR fleets,
but this still requires unprecedented execution.
Illustrative Global SMR Capacity Scenarios by 2035
| Scenario |
Installed SMR Capacity |
Share of Global Generation |
| Demonstration-heavy |
5–10 GW |
<1% |
| Clustered growth |
20–40 GW |
1–3% |
| Accelerated |
60–80 GW |
3–5% |
Deployment Guide: Where SMRs May Make Sense
For policymakers and large energy users, SMRs are not a one-size-fits-all solution. They are most compelling when:
- Existing nuclear sites and communities can host new reactors with established acceptance.
- There is strong demand for high-temperature industrial heat or hydrogen near the site.
- Land or transmission is constrained, making large renewable build-outs difficult.
- Long-term policy and regulatory frameworks can support multi-decade investments.
Contexts Where SMRs Are More vs Less Attractive
| Context |
SMR Fit |
Comment |
| Industrial cluster with high heat demand |
High |
Cogeneration and hydrogen production improve economics. |
| Remote grid with high diesel dependence |
Medium–High |
Microreactors may compete with imported fuels. |
| Region with cheap gas & abundant renewables |
Low–Medium |
SMRs face stiff cost competition. |
FAQ: Safety, Waste, and Integration with Renewables
Are SMRs safer than existing large reactors?
Many SMR designs use passive safety features and smaller cores, which can reduce the risk of large releases.
However, safety ultimately depends on design, regulation, and operations—not just size. Strong oversight remains essential.
Do SMRs solve the nuclear waste problem?
No. SMRs still produce high-level waste that requires long-term management. Some designs may reduce waste per
MWh or enable recycling, but they do not eliminate the need for repositories and robust waste policies.
How do SMRs interact with high-renewables grids?
SMRs can provide firm, low-carbon capacity and grid services, but they must be flexible enough to ramp with
variable wind and solar. Designs that can cycle output without large economic penalties will fare better.
When should investors start taking SMRs seriously?
Investors should monitor first-of-a-kind project performance, supply chain build-out, and regulatory progress.
Once a design demonstrates on-time, on-budget delivery and multi-year operation, it becomes a more credible addition to
long-term portfolios.
Will SMRs dramatically change the 2030 decarbonisation picture?
Unlikely. Most 2030 decarbonisation will still be driven by efficiency, wind, solar, and storage. SMRs are a
potential tool for the 2030s and 2040s, especially for hard-to-abate sectors and regions with specific constraints.