“The re-envisioned Hermes 2 gets us closer to the commercial fleet sooner and could only be made possible by close collaboration with TVA and Google, and a supportive local community,” Laufer said in the statement.
Google’s global head of data center energy, Amanda Peterson Corio, said the TVA–Kairos pact “will accelerate the deployment of innovative nuclear technologies“ and will bring ”firm carbon-free energy to the electricity system.”
Kairos began construction of its Hermes Low-Power Demonstration Reactor in July 2024 at the former Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant after securing a $303 million grant from the Department of Energy (DOE) in a joint project with Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Idaho National Laboratory, Electric Power Research Institute, and Materion Corporation.
“The deployment of advanced nuclear reactors is essential to U.S. AI dominance and energy leadership,” he said.

Tennessee Legacy
Kairos’s Hermes 2 plant is the first “Generation IV” reactor approved for construction by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the first non-light-water reactor permitted in the United States in more than 50 years.Gen IV reactors include many of the new or revived reactor technologies reaching demonstration stages to assess commercial viability.
The designation includes natrium-cooled reactors—such as Kairos’s Hermes 2—“fast neutron” reactors, helium-cooled reactors, lead-bismuth reactors, and sodium-cooled reactors, often with advanced fuel cycles and designed as “plug-in” small modular reactors that can be mass-produced and portable.
“Lessons from the development and operation of the Hermes 2 plant will help drive down the cost of future reactors, improving the economics of clean firm power generation in the TVA region and beyond,” Google’s Peterson Corio said.
However, most were built between 1970 and 1990 and average more than 40 years in service. The only new reactor to come online in the United States since 2016 is Vogtle’s fourth reactor in Georgia.
Under current NRC regulations, it takes 10 to 12 years to license and permit a new nuclear reactor in the United States.
Dramatically accelerating those timelines is among the primary aims of Trump’s May orders seeking to “reinvigorate” the nation’s nuclear energy industry,
Tennessee U.S. Sens. Bill Hagerty and Marsha Blackburn contributed congratulatory statements to the joint announcement, both noting Tennessee’s key role in developing the nation’s nuclear energy and nuclear weapons deterrence capacities.
“Advancing nuclear technology is essential to unleashing American energy and driving a nuclear renaissance that secures our competitive edge in the global market. This agreement is a critical step toward this goal,” Hagerty said. “Cutting-edge innovation has a home in Tennessee, and I intend to see that our state remains at the forefront of developing transformative technologies to maintain America’s lead in the all-important energy sector.”
Other states, especially in the Appalachians, could do that, too, he said.
“Obviously, these areas were served by coal for quite some time, but the reality is, it’s a very fertile environment for new nuclear,“ Fleischmann said. ”Let’s face it, Appalachia has been traditionally underserved. But what tremendous potential—wonderful people, great schools. We need everybody in the game.”







