Many of the changes now underway at the NRC stem from the Accelerating Deployment of Versatile, Advanced Nuclear for Clean Energy (ADVANCE) Act, which President Joe Biden signed into law in 2024 after the Senate, in a rare show of bipartisan zeal, almost unanimously approved the bill. The statute overhauled the NRC’s mission statement for the first time, directing the agency to consider the threat of holding back nuclear power in the U.S. in addition to the risks associated with radiation. Work on Part 57 began under the previous administration.
Last May, President Donald Trump supercharged those efforts with a series of executive orders designed to defibrillate the flatlining nuclear sector as China’s industry runs laps around the U.S., and Russia dominates exports to newcomer countries seeking to build their first atomic power stations.
Among those orders was one to restructure the NRC, requiring the agency to do more, faster, with fewer staff and more direct oversight from the president. Presidents have always been able to appoint commissioners but have historically had little influence over the agency’s day-to-day workings. The White House directive raised alarms, particularly as Trump sought to bring previously independent agencies like the NRC and Federal Communications Commission under direct control. His decision to fire a Democratic NRC commissioner a month later only deepened fears.







