Virginia is advancing a coordinated strategy to support the deployment of advanced nuclear technologies, pairing state funding, federal alignment, and stakeholder collaboration across public and private sectors.
In April 2023, the Virginia Department of Energy and GO Virginia Region One supported a small modular reactor (SMR) site feasibility study in the LENOWISCO region, identifying potential siting options in Southwest Virginia.
That year, the General Assembly also passed a bill creating the Virginia Power Innovation Fund (VPIF) and Virginia Power Innovation Program (VPIP) to support energy innovation, including advanced nuclear. The fund provides up to $3 million in grants for research, workforce development, and future SMR site planning.
In May 2025, Governor Glenn Youngkin announced $1.2 million in support for nuclear innovation and workforce readiness through these programs—reinforcing Virginia’s commitment to expanding its nuclear energy ecosystem through targeted investment and coordination. This funding will support:
- The development of a Virginia Research & Education Reactor Facility (VA-RERF)—a proposed micro-scale research reactor for materials testing, workforce training, and simulation; and
- The establishment of the Virginia Center for Nuclear Materials and Reliability (VA-CNMR) to study material degradation in environments relevant to Gen-IV reactors.
The Virginia Innovative Nuclear (VIN) Hub manages these efforts, coordinating applied research, academic partnerships, and federal engagement. The VIN Hub is led by Jeff Whitt, former president of Framatome U.S. Government Solutions, who brings technical and federal program expertise to the initiative.
In 2024, Virginia launched the Virginia Clean Energy Innovation Bank (VCEIB) in the Virginia Energy’s State Energy Office with $10 million in funding to mobilize public and private capital for clean energy projects, including SMRs and fusion. Since its establishment, the Bank has:
- Funded a full-scale SMR control room simulator at George Mason University to support workforce training;
- Provided support for the world’s first planned commercial fusion power plant, to be developed by Commonwealth Fusion Systems in Chesterfield County, which led to the world’s first fusion power deal as Google committed to buying 200 MW from CFS’s forthcoming plant.
- Partnered with GO Virginia, Wise County, UVA Wise, and the Virginia Innovative Nuclear Hub (VIN Hub), and the LENOWISCO Planning District Commission and provided $100k in support for an initiative to prepare Southwest Virginia to apply for private investment and federal funding to bring advance nuclear to the region.
The Virginia Nuclear Energy Consortium (VNEC) and the Virginia Nuclear Energy Consortium Authority (VENCA) continue to convene stakeholders across industry, academia, and government to shape public policy and promote nuclear as a strategic energy asset.
Additionally, multiple SMR and microreactor deployment opportunities are being actively explored:
- Dominion Energy and Amazon are evaluating SMR deployment at the North Anna site to support data center load;
- Appalachian Power has announced plans for a small reactor in Campbell County;
- Dominion Energy and the U.S. Navy are assessing the feasibility of a microreactor-powered microgrid at Naval Weapons Station Yorktown and North Cheatham Annex. The project would serve both the base and surrounding communities, utilizing roughly 20 square miles of federally owned land.
Virginia’s initiatives mirror recent federal executive orders focused on small reactors, microreactors, HALEU fuel, and clean energy for AI and defense applications. Ongoing partnerships with the U.S. Department of Energy, Department of Defense, and the Navy position the state to compete for early federal siting and demonstration opportunities.
Relevant Recent Legislation and Governor’s Actions