Canada Terrestrial Energy, a Canadian-based company, is developing a DMSR design called the
Integral Molten Salt Reactor (IMSR). The IMSR is designed to be deployable as a
small modular reactor (SMR). Their design currently undergoing licensing is 400MW thermal (190MW electrical). With high operating temperatures, the IMSR has applications in industrial heat markets as well as traditional power markets. The main design features include neutron moderation from graphite, fueling with low-enriched uranium and a compact and replaceable Core-unit. Decay heat is removed passively using nitrogen (with air as an emergency alternative). The latter feature permits the operational simplicity necessary for industrial deployment. Terrestrial completed the first phase of a prelicensing review by the
Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission in 2017, which provided a regulatory opinion that the design features are generally safe enough to eventually obtain a license to construct the reactor. Moltex Energy Canada, a subsidiary of UK-based Moltex Energy Ltd, has obtained support from New Brunswick Power for the development of a pilot plant in Point Lepreau, Canada, and financial backing from IDOM (an international engineering firm) and is currently engaged in the Canadian Vendor Design Review process. The plant will employ the waste-burning version of the company's
stable salt reactor design.
China (
Thorium
Molten
Salt
Reactor) project logo, from the
Chinese Academy of Sciences China initiated a thorium research project in January 2011, and spent about 3 billion yuan (US$500 million) on it by 2021. China then accelerated its program to build two 12 MW reactors underground at
Wuwei research facilities by 2020, beginning with the 2 megawatt
TMSR-LF1 prototype. The project sought to test new corrosion-resistant materials. In 2021, China stated that Wuwei prototype operation could start power generation from thorium in September, with a prototype providing energy for around 1,000 homes. Further work on commercial reactors was announced with the target completion date of 2030. Chinese government plans to realize similar reactors in deserts and plains of western China as well as up to 30 in countries involved in China's "
Belt and Road" initiative.
Denmark Copenhagen Atomics is a Danish molten salt technology company developing mass manufacturable molten salt reactors. The Copenhagen Atomics Waste Burner is a single-fluid, heavy water moderated, fluoride-based, thermal spectrum and autonomously controlled molten-salt reactor. This is designed to fit inside of a leak-tight, 40-foot, stainless steel shipping container. The heavy water moderator is thermally insulated from the salt and continuously drained and cooled to below . A molten lithium-7 deuteroxide () moderator version is also being researched. The reactor utilizes the thorium fuel cycle using separated plutonium from spent nuclear fuel as the initial fissile load for the first generation of reactors, eventually transitioning to a thorium breeder. Copenhagen Atomics is actively developing and testing valves, pumps, heat exchangers, measurement systems, salt chemistry and purification systems, and control systems and software for molten salt applications.
Seaborg Technologies is developing the core for a compact molten-salt reactor (CMSR). The CMSR is a high temperature, single salt, thermal MSR designed to go critical on commercially available
low enriched uranium. The CMSR design is modular, and uses proprietary NaOH moderator. The reactor core is estimated to be replaced every 12 years. During operation, the fuel will not be replaced and will burn for the entire 12-year reactor lifetime. The first version of the Seaborg core is planned to produce 250 MWth power and 100 MWe power. As a power plant, the CMSR will be able to deliver electricity, clean water and heating/cooling to around 200,000 households.
France The
CNRS project EVOL (Evaluation and viability of liquid fuel fast reactor system) project, with the objective of proposing a design of the molten salt fast reactor (MSFR), released its final report in 2014. Various MSR projects like FHR, MOSART, MSFR, and TMSR have common research and development themes. The EVOL project will be continued by the EU-funded Safety Assessment of the Molten Salt Fast Reactor (SAMOFAR) project, in which several European research institutes and universities collaborate.
Germany The German Institute for Solid State Nuclear Physics in Berlin has proposed the
dual fluid reactor as a concept for a fast breeder lead-cooled MSR. The original MSR concept used the fluid salt to provide the fission materials and also to remove the heat. Thus it had problems with the needed flow speed. Using 2 different fluids in separate circles is thought to solve the problem.
India In 2015, Indian researchers published a MSR design, as an alternative path to thorium-based reactors, according to
India's three-stage nuclear power programme.
Indonesia Thorcon is developing the
TMSR-500 molten-salt reactor for the Indonesian market.
National Research and Innovation Agency, through its
Research Organization for Nuclear Energy announced its renewal of interest on MSR reactor research on 29 March 2022 and planned to study and develop MSR for
thorium-fueled nuclear reactors.
Japan The
Fuji Molten-Salt Reactor is a 100 to 200
MWe LFTR, using technology similar to the Oak Ridge project, but the project seems to lack funding. Fuel salt circulates only inside of reactor through fuel channel in the moderator and the down comer gap between moderator and reactor vessel. Since the heat generated in the core can be transferred to the heat removal media flowing outside of the vessel via the reactor outside surface, available heat generation is limited to about a few 10 MWth. However the simplified configuration enables quite small fabrication cost of the reactor. The small sized reactor component and the external electricity generating component based on gas turbine are suitable for factory made and road transportation for mass-production at short term production. This type of "Internal Circulating Surface Heat Transfer Molten Salt Reactor" is investigated even outside of Japan such as Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary. A concept combining UNOMI and accelerator neutron source as ADS is studied in Venezuela. Malaysia pays attention to the use of thorium in liquid fuel reactors (MSR) including UNOMI. EKSTU (D. Serikbayev East Kazakhstan technical university) of Kazakhstan presented UNOMI for demonstrating possibility of using Kazakhstan's abundant thorium resources during OSKEMEN EXPO 2014.
Russia In 2020, Rosatom announced plans to build a 10 MWth
FLiBe burner MSR. It would be fueled by
plutonium from reprocessed
VVER spent nuclear fuel and fluorides of
minor actinides. It is expected to launch in 2031 at
Mining and Chemical Combine.
United Kingdom The Alvin Weinberg Foundation is a British non-profit organization founded in 2011, dedicated to raising awareness about the potential of thorium energy and LFTR. It was formally launched at the
House of Lords on 8 September 2011. It is named after American nuclear physicist
Alvin M. Weinberg, who pioneered thorium MSR research. Moltex Energy's
stable-salt reactor design was selected as the most suitable of six MSR designs for UK implementation in a 2015 study commissioned by the UK's innovation agency,
Innovate UK. UK government support has been weak, but the company's UK arm,
MoltexFLEX, launched its FLEX small modular design in October 2022.
United States Idaho National Laboratory designed a molten-salt-cooled, molten-salt-fuelled reactor with a prospective output of 1000
MWe. Kirk Sorensen, former
NASA scientist and chief nuclear technologist at
Teledyne Brown Engineering, is a long-time promoter of the
thorium fuel cycle, coining the term
liquid fluoride thorium reactor. In 2011, Sorensen founded Flibe Energy.
Transatomic Power pursued what it termed a waste-annihilating molten-salt reactor (WAMSR), intended to consume existing
spent nuclear fuel, from 2011 until ceasing operation in 2018 and open-sourcing their research. In January 2016, the
United States Department of Energy announced a $80m award fund to develop
Generation IV reactor designs. One of the two beneficiaries,
Southern Company will use the funding to develop a molten chloride
fast reactor (MCFR), a type of MSR developed earlier by British scientists. In February 2024 DOE and Kairos Power signed a $303M Technology Investment Agreement to support the design, construction, and commissioning of the reactor. The company is to receive fixed payments upon completing project milestones. Also in 2021, Southern Company, in collaboration with
TerraPower and the U.S. Department of Energy announced plans to build the Molten Chloride Reactor Experiment, the first fast-spectrum salt reactor at the Idaho National Laboratory.
Abilene Christian University (ACU) has applied to the NRC for a construction licence for a 1MWt molten-salt research reactor (MSRR), to be built on its campus in Abilene, Texas, as part of the Nuclear Energy eXperimental Testing (NEXT) laboratory. ACU plans for the MSRR to achieve criticality by December 2025. == See also ==