Limited Time Sale| Management number | 219247538 | Release Date | 2026/05/03 | List Price | $90.00 | Model Number | 219247538 | ||
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Small modular reactors are changing the way we think about nuclear power—and about the future of energy itself. Small Modular Reactors is a deeply informed and evocatively written cultural history of this transformation. More than a guide to new reactor designs, it is a reckoning with the systems—technical, institutional, and ethical—that determine whether energy infrastructure can truly be trusted across generations. With clarity, restraint, and a rare sense of narrative control, Bill Johns takes readers beyond promotional optimism or regulatory caution, into the heart of what makes modular nuclear power both promising and profoundly complex.Drawing on more than two decades in the nuclear sector—including regulatory consulting, cybersecurity audits, engineering documentation, and safety culture evaluation—Johns brings to the page an insider’s knowledge tempered by independence. His argument is not that SMRs are flawless, nor that their success is assured. It is that their very design logic demands a different kind of scrutiny: one that understands modularity not as simplification, but as a redrawing of complexity. These reactors are not merely smaller. They are embedded in digital architectures, transnational supply chains, and licensing ecosystems that stretch across borders and decades. And what they make visible—often for the first time—is how fragile, distributed, and dependent our energy governance has become.Yet this is not a cynical book. On the contrary, Small Modular Reactors is grounded in the belief that well-designed systems, backed by procedural rigor and institutional transparency, can earn public trust. Johns explores how safety can be encoded in geometry, how digital twins might enhance operational insight, and how design standardization could finally enable repeatable excellence in nuclear deployment. But he also asks the deeper questions: What happens when memory decays faster than infrastructure? What does resilience mean when the core is sealed, the software proprietary, and the vendor gone? And most critically: can we build nuclear systems that remain understandable—not just by today’s experts, but by tomorrow’s stewards?Structured as a narrative journey—from the submarine logic of early compact reactors to the geopolitics of reactor export and the ethics of risk communication—the book reads as both history and inquiry. Chapters move with precision through core design typologies, licensing evolutions, the challenges of siting and fabrication, and the shifting balance between public oversight and private initiative. Each section builds on the last, assembling a framework in which the SMR is not just a reactor, but a mirror reflecting the institutional character of the societies that build and license it.At its heart, this is a book about responsibility. Not as a bureaucratic category, but as a lived practice—structured through inspection regimes, software assumptions, maintenance protocols, and the stories we tell about what infrastructure is supposed to do. The SMR, Johns argues, will succeed not because it is small, but because it is disciplined. Not because it avoids legacy, but because it chooses which legacies to carry forward—engineering vigilance, yes; institutional opacity, no.Readers will come away with a richer vocabulary for understanding the future of nuclear power. But more importantly, they will come away with a renewed sense of what matters in the design of critical systems: transparency, traceability, and the humility to admit what we do not yet know. If you care about energy, infrastructure, climate resilience, or the quiet architecture of public trust, this book belongs on your shelf.Small Modular Reactors is not just a work of technical nonfiction. It is a narrative of hope—cautious, grounded, and earned. Read it for the clarity. Stay for the insight. Carry it forward for the future. Read more
| XRay | Not Enabled |
|---|---|
| Edition | 3rd |
| Language | English |
| File size | 1.6 MB |
| Page Flip | Enabled |
| Word Wise | Not Enabled |
| Print length | 764 pages |
| Accessibility | Learn more |
| Screen Reader | Supported |
| Part of series | American Infrastructure: Engines of Belonging |
| Publication date | July 2, 2025 |
| Enhanced typesetting | Enabled |
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