Microsoft just inked a 20-year power purchase agreement with Constellation Energy to restart the Three Mile Island Unit 1 nuclear reactor in Pennsylvania. The deal will funnel roughly 835 megawatts of carbon-free electricity into the grid that powers Microsoft’s data centers, and it carries a price tag of approximately $1.6 billion to get the plant humming again.
For anyone who remembers Three Mile Island as the site of America’s worst commercial nuclear accident in 1979, yes, that Three Mile Island. Though it’s worth noting Unit 1, the reactor being restarted, was the one that operated safely for decades. It was Unit 2 that had the partial meltdown. Unit 1 kept running until September 2019, when it was shut down for economic reasons, not safety ones.
Why a tech giant needs a nuclear reactor
The revamped facility has been rebranded as the Crane Clean Energy Center. Commercial operations are targeted for 2028, though some reports suggest the timeline could be accelerated to 2027. In June 2026, regulators granted a waiver to allow faster grid connection. The project is expected to create around 3,400 jobs and generate more than $3 billion in state and federal tax revenues over the life of the agreement.









