**Westinghouse Plans 10 New Nuclear Reactors Following Trump’s Executive Orders**
Westinghouse Electric Company is moving forward with plans to build ten large nuclear reactors in the United States, following a series of executive orders signed by former President Donald Trump in May 2025. These orders aim to accelerate the approval process for new nuclear power plants and dramatically expand the country’s nuclear energy capacity.
Trump’s directive sets a target to quadruple U.S. nuclear capacity by 2050, increasing it from the current 100 gigawatts to 400 gigawatts. The plan calls for at least ten new large reactors to be constructed by 2030, with Westinghouse’s AP1000 reactor design at the center of the initiative.
Westinghouse CEO Dan Sumner confirmed that the company is in active discussions with federal officials and is seeking financial backing through the Department of Energy’s loan guarantee programs. The project is expected to cost more than $75 billion, with additional support from private investors under consideration.
The company highlights its recent success completing AP1000 reactors in Georgia as evidence of its readiness. However, the plan faces several challenges, including high construction costs, complex state-level regulations, and skepticism over nuclear energy’s role in a changing energy market.
Despite these hurdles, Westinghouse is pushing forward, positioning itself as the leader in a renewed U.S. nuclear push at a time when geopolitical concerns and energy security are driving a shift back to reliable, domestic power sources.