Decommissioned reactors United States •
Clementine was the first fast reactor, built in 1946 at
Los Alamos National Laboratory. It used plutonium metal fuel, mercury coolant, achieved 25 kW thermal and used for research, especially as a fast neutron source. •
Experimental Breeder Reactor I (EBR-I) at Argonne West, now
Idaho National Laboratory, near
Arco, Idaho, in 1951 became the first reactor to generate significant amounts of power. Decommissioned in 1964. •
Fermi 1 near
Detroit was a prototype fast breeder reactor that powered up in 1957 and shut down in 1972. •
Experimental Breeder Reactor II (EBR-II) at
Idaho National Laboratory, near
Arco, Idaho, was a prototype for the Integral Fast Reactor, 1965–1994. •
SEFOR in Arkansas, was a 20
MWt research reactor that operated from 1969 to 1972. •
Fast Flux Test Facility (FFTF), 400 MWt, operated flawlessly from 1982 to 1992, at
Hanford Washington. It used liquid sodium drained with argon backfill under care and maintenance. •
SRE in California, was a 20
MWt, 6.5 MWe commercial reactor operated from 1957 to 1964. •
LAMPRE-1 was a molten plutonium fueled 1 MWth reactor. It operated as a research reactor from 1961 to 1963 at Los Alamos national Lab.
Europe •
Dounreay Loop type Fast Reactor (DFR), 1959–1977, was a 14 MWe and
Prototype Fast Reactor (PFR), 1974–1994, 250 MWe, in
Caithness, in the
Highland area of
Scotland. •
Dounreay Pool type Fast Reactor (PFR), 1975–1994, was a 600 MWt, 234 MWe which used mixed oxide (MOX) fuel. •
Rapsodie in
Cadarache, France, (20 then 40 MW) operated between 1967 and 1982. •
Superphénix, in France, 1200 MWe, closed in 1997 due to a political decision and high costs. •
Phénix, 1973, France, 233 MWe, restarted 2003 at 140 MWe for experiments on transmutation of nuclear waste for six years, ceased power generation in March 2009, though continuing in test operation and research programs by CEA until the end of 2009. Stopped in 2010. • KNK-II, in Germany a 21 MWe experimental compact sodium-cooled fast reactor operated from Oct 1977 – Aug 1991. The objective of the experiment was to eliminate nuclear waste while producing energy. There were minor sodium problems combined with public protests which resulted in the closure of the facility.
USSR/Russia • Small lead-cooled fast reactors were used for
naval propulsion, particularly by the
Soviet Navy. • BR-5 – was a research-focused fast-neutron reactor at the Institute of Physics and Energy in Obninsk from 1959 to 2002. •
BN-350 was constructed by the Soviet Union in Shevchenko (today's
Aqtau) on the
Caspian Sea, It produced 130 MWe plus 80,000 tons of fresh water per day. • IBR was a research-focused pulsed fast-neutron reactor at the Joint Institute of Nuclear Research in Dubna (near Moscow) put into operation in 1984 till 2006. • RORSATs – 33 space fast reactors were launched by the Soviet Union from 1989 to 1990 as part of a program known as the Radar Ocean Reconnaissance Satellite (RORSAT) in the US. Typically, the reactors produced approximately 3 kWe. •
BES-5 – was a sodium cooled space reactor launched as part of the RORSAT program which produced 5 kWe. •
BR-5 – was a 5 MWt sodium fast reactor operated by the USSR in 1961 primarily for materials testing. •
Russian Alpha 8 PbBi – was a series of lead-bismuth cooled fast reactors used aboard submarines. The submarines functioned as killer submarines, staying in harbor then attacking due to the high speeds achievable by the sub.
Asia •
Monju reactor, 300 MWe, in
Japan, was closed in 1995 following a serious sodium leak and fire. It was restarted on May 6, 2010, but in August 2010 another accident, involving dropped machinery, shut down the reactor again. As of June 2011, the reactor had generated electricity for only one hour since its first test two decades prior. •
Aktau Reactor, 150 MWe, in
Kazakhstan, was used for plutonium production, desalination, and electricity. It closed 4 years after the plant's operating license expired.
Never operated •
Clinch River Breeder Reactor, United States •
Integral Fast Reactor, United States. Design emphasized fuel cycle based on on-site electrolytic reprocessing. Cancelled in 1994 without construction. •
SNR-300, Germany
Active • IBR-2 – a pulsed fast-neutron reactor at
Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in
Dubna. Located at the Laboratory of Neutron Physics (FLNP) named after. I.M. Frank as part of
JINR. From 2006 to June 2011 it underwent modernization. It is the only nuclear reactor in the world with a movable reflector. Commissioned on February 10, 1984. •
BN-600 – a pool type sodium-cooled fast breeder reactor at the
Beloyarsk Nuclear Power Station. It provides 560 MWe to the Middle Urals power grid. In operation since 1980. •
BN-800 – a sodium-cooled fast breeder reactor at the Beloyarsk Nuclear Power Station. It generates 880 MW of electrical power and started producing electricity in October, 2014. It reached full power in August, 2016. •
BOR-60 – a sodium-cooled reactor at the
Research Institute of Atomic Reactors in
Dimitrovgrad, Russia. In operation since 1968. It produces 60MW for experimental purposes. •
FBTR – a 40MWt,13.2MWe experimental reactor in India which focused on reaching significant burnup levels. •
China Experimental Fast Reactor, a 60 MWth, 20 MWe, experimental reactor which went critical in 2011 and is currently operational. It is used for materials and component research for future Chinese fast reactors. •
KiloPower/KRUSTY is a 1–10 kWe research sodium fast reactor built at Los Alamos National Laboratory. It first reach criticality in 2015 and demonstrates an application of a Stirling power cycle.
Under repair • , 1977–1997 and 2004–2007, Japan, 140 MWt is an experimental reactor, operated as an irradiation test facility. After an incident in 2007, the reactor was suspended for repairing, recovery work was planned to be completed in 2014. Joyo (Japan's only experimental fast reactor) is expected to be restarted at the end of 2026. The reactor will contribute towards research of medical radioisotopes production for cancer treatment and research on radiotoxicity of radioactive waste.
Under commissioning •
PFBR, India's 500 MWe Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor achieved criticality on April 7, 2026. It is a sodium fast breeder reactor.
Indian prime minister Modi was present for initial core loading in March 2024.
Under construction •
CFR-600, China's 600 MWe Experimental Fast Reactor (CEFR) (experimental) and CFR‑600 (under construction at
Xiapu / Fu’an) — CFR‑600 intended as a commercial‑scale fast reactor design if completed. •
MBIR Multipurpose fast neutron research reactor. The Research Institute of Atomic Reactors (NIIAR) site at Dimitrovgrad in the Ulyanovsk region of western Russia, 150 MWt. Construction started in 2016 with completion scheduled for 2027. •
BREST-300, Seversk, Russia. Construction started at 8 June 2021
In design •
BN-1200, another, higher-power, addition to
Beloyarsk Nuclear Power Station near
Yekaterinburg, Russia. Its construction is expected to start in 2027. •
Toshiba 4S was planned to be shipped to
Galena, Alaska (USA) but progress stalled (see
Galena Nuclear Power Plant) • KALIME is a 600 MWe project in South Korea, projected for 2030. KALIMER is a continuation of the sodium-cooled, metal-fueled, fast-neutron reactor in a pool represented by the Advanced Burner Reactor (2006),
S-PRISM (1998-present),
Integral Fast Reactor (1984-1994), and
EBR-II (1965-1995). •
Generation IV reactor (
helium·
sodium·
lead cooled) US-proposed international effort, after 2030. • JSFR, Japan, a project for a 1500 MWe reactor began in 1998, but without success. •
ASTRID, France, canceled project for a 600 MWe sodium-cooled reactor. • Mars Atmospherically Cooled Reactor (MACR) is a 1 MWe project, planned to complete in 2033. MACR is a gas-cooled (carbon dioxide coolant) fast-neutron reactor intended to provide power to proposed Mars colonies. •
Elysium Industries is designing a fast spectrum molten salt reactor. •
ALFRED (Advanced Lead Fast Reactor European Demonstrator) is a lead cooled fast reactor demonstrator designed by Ansaldo Energia from Italy, it represents the last stage of the ELSY and LEADER projects. •
Aurora nuclear reactor, Idaho
Planned • Future FBR, India, 600 MWe, after 2025. FBTR (Fast Breeder Test Reactor, experimental) and the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR, 500 MWe) at Kalpakkam — PFBR has been in late commissioning phases.
Charts International Atomic Energy Agency. (n.d.). PRIS — Power Reactor Information System. International Atomic Energy Agency. https://pris.iaea.org/PRIS/home.aspx World Nuclear Association. (n.d.). Fast neutron reactors. World Nuclear Association. https://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/current-and-future-generation/fast-neutron-reactors.aspx Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporation. (n.d.). Beloyarsk nuclear power plant (BN‑600 / BN‑800). Rosatom. https://rosatom.ru/en/production/facilities/beloyarsk-npp/ Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd. (NPCIL). (n.d.). Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR). https://www.npcil.nic.in/content/pfbr.aspx Japan Atomic Energy Agency. (n.d.). Jōyō experimental fast reactor. https://www.jaea.go.jp/english/04/joyo.html Notes and guidance IAEA PRIS is the primary authoritative database for reactor operational status, commissioning dates, and unit details; search by plant/unit name for up‑to‑date status. World Nuclear Association provides regularly updated overviews and is useful for summaries of international fast reactor programs (China, India, Russia, historical European projects). National operator/agency pages (Rosatom, NPCIL, JAEA, CNNC/CGN) provide project‑level news and technical summaries; cross‑check with IAEA PRIS for official operational classifications. ==See also==