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06/08/2026
🔌 The nuclear industry just pulled off one of the most dramatic reversals in energy history — and it happened because of your ChatGPT queries.
Three Mile Island, the site of America's worst nuclear accident, is coming back to life.
Constellation Energy is spending $1.6 billion to restart the Pennsylvania plant (now renamed the Crane Clean Energy Center), backed by a $1 billion federal loan. Microsoft has signed a 20-year contract to buy its entire electricity output to power its data centers — part of the tech giant's push to achieve carbon-negative status.
This isn't your typical nuclear decommissioning story. This is about turning a site that became synonymous with nuclear danger into a cornerstone of America's clean energy future.
Why does this matter for the broader nuclear industry? For decades, aging nuclear plants faced a binary choice: expensive upgrades or permanent shutdown. Now, with AI driving unprecedented electricity demand, companies are finding new economic logic in keeping — or even reviving — nuclear assets. It's a trend being watched closely by utilities, regulators, and energy policy experts worldwide.
Nuclear waste management and nuclear site remediation remain critical challenges, but this revival signals something important: the conversation around nuclear power is shifting from "how do we phase it out" to "how do we scale it up."
The restart decision is expected by June 2025, with operations targeting 2026. Eight reactors are now under construction across North America, with 90 more in development — the largest nuclear building wave in decades.
What do you think — is reviving Three Mile Island a turning point for nuclear energy, or a risky bet on AI's insatiable appetite for power?
Learn more at https://kojie.works
Share your thoughts below! 👇
Kojie.works — Verified AI Systems for Nuclear, Engineering & Recruiting Four products on a verified-AI foundation: Kojie Tools (263 calculators), Guardian QS (MARSSIM nuclear D&D), Kojie Talent Scout (AI sourcing), and AutoSpec (automation engineering). Multi-agent consensus catches AI hallucinations.
06/08/2026
🛠 AI & Jobs In Russellville: Why This Is More Opportunity Than Threat 🚀
Let’s talk straight: people in Russellville and across the River Valley are asking,
“Is AI going to take my job?”
That fear is real — but it’s not the full story. The biggest risk isn’t AI itself… it’s **ignoring it.**
AI is already becoming a **competitive advantage** for everyday people here:
- 👩 Workers using AI to speed up reports, emails, and documentation — so they look like rockstars on the job.
- 🧾 Local businesses using AI to create ads, social posts, and customer replies in minutes instead of hours.
- 📊 Owners and managers using AI to analyze sales, spot trends, and make better decisions without hiring a big consulting firm.
In all of these cases, AI isn’t *replacing* anyone — it’s **augmenting** them. The person who knows how to use AI becomes *more valuable*, not less.
Here’s the mindset shift:
- ❌ “AI is coming for my job.”
- ✅ “AI is coming for my *tasks* — so I can move into higher‑value work.”
Our community has always been resilient and hard‑working. Now we have a chance to pair that work ethic with powerful new tools that can:
- Save time ⏱️
- Reduce burnout 😮💨
- Open doors to new roles, promotions, or side income 💡
If you live or work in Russellville or the River Valley and you’re wondering **where to even start**, that’s exactly what I’m here for.
💬 Comment with your industry below (ex: “teacher,” “electrician,” “retail,” “healthcare,” “small business”) and I’ll share specific ways AI can *help* in your world — not replace it.
The future of work in our area isn’t about humans vs. machines. It’s about **humans using better tools** to build stronger careers, stronger businesses, and a stronger River Valley. 🌟
AI Without Fear - Experience The Opportunity in 2026 - CPWE AI Discover how AI Without Fear helps employees and small business owners use artificial intelligence to work smarter, not worry harder. Start today.
06/05/2026
🧵 What if the most infamous nuclear site in American history became a symbol of our clean energy future?
That's exactly what's happening with Three Mile Island.
Constellation Energy is preparing to restart the former Unit 1 reactor — now renamed the Crane Clean Energy Center — in Pennsylvania, backed by a $1 billion federal loan and a 20-year power purchase agreement with Microsoft to supply electricity to AI data centers.
This isn't just a plant revival. It's a deliberate strategy by some of the world's largest tech companies to lock up carbon-free nuclear energy at massive scale. Microsoft alone has committed to matching its data center consumption with carbon-free power and achieving carbon-negative status. AI demand is exploding, and nuclear is uniquely positioned to deliver reliable, round-the-clock clean electricity without the intermittency of solar or wind.
The implications for nuclear decommissioning are significant. Three Mile Island Unit 2 was permanently shut after the 1979 accident and has been in long-term decommissioning for decades. The success or failure of restarting Unit 1 will shape how the industry approaches other retired sites — whether shuttered plants get a second life or continue through extended cleanup processes.
Nuclear plant cleanup, waste management, and site remediation are also evolving rapidly. New reactor designs like small modular reactors (SMRs) are making decontamination and decommissioning more feasible. The U.S. is also consolidating WWII-era nuclear facilities to improve safety and efficiency, as seen with the new High Explosives Science and Engineering facility at Pantex Plant.
The message is clear: nuclear energy is staging a major comeback, and the decisions being made right now about decommissioning and restart will define America's clean energy landscape for decades.
What do you think — is reviving Three Mile Island a smart move or a risky bet?
Learn more at https://kojie.works
Share your thoughts below! 👇
Kojie.works — Verified AI Systems for Nuclear, Engineering & Recruiting Four products on a verified-AI foundation: Kojie Tools (263 calculators), Guardian QS (MARSSIM nuclear D&D), Kojie Talent Scout (AI sourcing), and AutoSpec (automation engineering). Multi-agent consensus catches AI hallucinations.
06/03/2026
🚀 The Nuclear Renaissance Is Here — And AI Is Leading the Charge
Could a former disaster site power the future of artificial intelligence?
Three Mile Island — the site of the United States' worst nuclear accident — is making a dramatic comeback. Constellation Energy is preparing to restart Three Mile Island Unit 1 (now renamed the Crane Clean Energy Center) in Pennsylvania, backed by a $1.6 billion revival project and a $1 billion federal loan from the U.S. Department of Energy.
Here's what's remarkable: Microsoft has signed a 20-year agreement to purchase the plant's entire electricity output. The tech giant is using the nuclear power to supply its data centers, matching massive AI infrastructure needs with clean, round-the-clock energy — and working toward carbon-negative status.
This isn't just a single plant story. It's a signal of what's happening across the nuclear industry:
✅ Eight reactors are currently under construction across North America
✅ 90 more are in development, with many targeting startup by 2030
✅ Just last month, Kairos Power broke ground on Hermes 2 in Tennessee and TerraPower/Bechtel began construction on the Natrium reactor in Wyoming — within the same week
The U.S. nuclear sector is experiencing a true rebirth, driven by explosive electricity demand from AI, data centers, and decarbonization goals. Aging plants are being modernized, retired stations are being revived, and advanced reactor designs are finally moving from concept to construction.
Nuclear decommissioning and remediation work is evolving right alongside this resurgence — with new standards, new technologies, and massive federal investment in nuclear waste management and site cleanup operations.
The old nuclear industry of the 20th century is gone. The new nuclear era is cleaner, more technologically advanced, and more relevant than ever.
What do you think — is reviving Three Mile Island a stroke of genius or a risk we shouldn't take? Drop your thoughts below!
🔗 Learn more at https://kojie.works
Kojie.works — Verified AI Systems for Nuclear, Engineering & Recruiting Four products on a verified-AI foundation: Kojie Tools (263 calculators), Guardian QS (MARSSIM nuclear D&D), Kojie Talent Scout (AI sourcing), and AutoSpec (automation engineering). Multi-agent consensus catches AI hallucinations.
06/02/2026
What happens to a nuclear plant after it's decommissioned? Sometimes, it comes back from the dead.
That's exactly what's happening at Three Mile Island. The site of the United States' worst nuclear accident—the 1979 meltdown that permanently shut down Unit 2—is now at the center of a nuclear renaissance. Constellation Energy is preparing to restart Three Mile Island Unit 1, renaming it the Crane Clean Energy Center, with a $1.6 billion revival backed by a $1 billion federal loan from the U.S. Department of Energy.
But this isn't your typical nuclear plant restart. The entire output of the revived plant has been contracted to Microsoft for 20 years—a direct response to the explosive electricity demands of AI data centers. The tech giant needs massive amounts of round-the-clock carbon-free power to support its data center expansion and achieve carbon-negative status. Nuclear power, with its ability to produce reliable baseload electricity without carbon emissions, fits the bill perfectly.
This story highlights a fascinating shift in how we think about nuclear decommissioning and energy transition. Where once decommissioning meant tearing down and埋葬 (burying) nuclear infrastructure, now some plants are getting a second life. The convergence of AI-driven electricity demand, climate commitments, and advanced nuclear technology is reshaping the narrative around nuclear power.
The broader trends support this momentum. The Tennessee Valley Authority reports that nuclear energy now supplies 41% of its power—up from 31% just a year ago. Meanwhile, new uranium projects like Eagle Nuclear Energy's Aurora project (the largest measured uranium deposit in the U.S.) are advancing to support the nuclear fuel supply chain.
Whether you're focused on nuclear waste management, nuclear site remediation, or simply the future of clean energy, the Three Mile Island story is a compelling case study in how nuclear decommissioning is being redefined for the AI era.
What do you think—is reviving historic nuclear sites the right move for our clean energy future? Share your thoughts below!
Learn more at https://kojie.works
Kojie.works — Verified AI Systems for Nuclear, Engineering & Recruiting Four products on a verified-AI foundation: Kojie Tools (263 calculators), Guardian QS (MARSSIM nuclear D&D), Kojie Talent Scout (AI sourcing), and AutoSpec (automation engineering). Multi-agent consensus catches AI hallucinations.
06/01/2026
What if the same plutonium that once powered nuclear warheads could now fuel the reactors of tomorrow?
That's exactly what the U.S. Department of Energy is betting on. This week, the DOE announced it has selected five nuclear startups — including Oklo, Exodys Energy, SHINE Technologies, Standard Nuclear, and Flibe Energy — to enter advanced negotiations over converting 20 metric tons of surplus weapons-grade plutonium from Cold War-era nuclear warheads into reactor fuel.
This is a landmark moment for nuclear decommissioning and nuclear waste management. For decades, the U.S. government has struggled with how to safely store nearly 100 tons of Cold War-era plutonium. Now, instead of keeping it locked away in secure facilities indefinitely, this material could be transformed into clean energy.
The implications for nuclear site remediation are enormous. Programs like this one represent a new chapter in how we think about nuclear waste — not as something to bury and forget, but as a resource to harness. The spent nuclear fuel currently sitting in steel and concrete casks across America contains radioactive isotopes that can be reused for power.
As nuclear energy surges back into the spotlight — driven by data center demand tripling from 34.7 GW to 106 GW by 2035 — innovative approaches to nuclear plant cleanup and fuel development are becoming critical. Companies like Oklo are already partnering with European firms like newcleo to develop the fuel fabrication capabilities needed to make this vision a reality.
The challenge? Experts caution that plutonium is still extraordinarily dangerous, and the logistics of transporting and processing it require extremely strict safeguards.
Still, this development signals a major shift in nuclear decommissioning strategy — one that could reshape how the world approaches nuclear cleanup for decades to come.
Learn more at https://kojie.works
What do you think about turning old nuclear weapons into reactor fuel? Is this the future of clean energy — or a risk we shouldn't take? Share your thoughts below!
Guardian QS — AI Nuclear Decommissioning | Kojie.works MARSSIM-native nuclear D&D project management. 4-agent AI consensus, crypto-signed audit trail, DCGL tracking, and NRC-ready FSS report generation. Built by James Kojie Collins — CPWE AI.
05/29/2026
🚀 What happens when AI's appetite for clean energy meets America's most infamous nuclear site? The answer is reshaping the entire nuclear decommissioning conversation.
Three Mile Island—the site of the 1979 partial meltdown that triggered decades of nuclear fear—has been purchased by Microsoft and is now being revived as the "Crane Clean Energy Center." A $1.6 billion restoration project, backed by a $1 billion federal loan, will restart Unit 1 to supply data centers with carbon-free power for 20 years. Constellation Energy is leading the revival, and Microsoft has locked in the entire output.
Why does this matter for nuclear decommissioning? Because for decades, the playbook was simple: retire nuclear plants, decommission them, and walk away. Now, the script is being rewritten. Tech giants are willing to pay premium prices for reliable, clean electricity—and nuclear is the only scalable carbon-free source that can run 24/7 regardless of weather.
This isn't just about AI. It's about the future of nuclear waste management, nuclear site remediation, and how communities near retired plants feel about a second life. It raises critical questions about nuclear safety protocols, emergency preparedness, and who bears responsibility if a revived plant has issues decades after restart.
The nuclear decommissioning industry is watching closely. Every decision made at Three Mile Island—from spent fuel storage to reactor vessel inspections—sets precedent. If this revival succeeds, expect more retired plants to get a second look. If it struggles, it could freeze the nuclear renaissance before it truly begins.
What do you think—is reviving Three Mile Island a game-changer for clean energy, or are we playing with fire? Drop your thoughts below!
Learn more at https://kojie.works
Guardian QS — AI Nuclear Decommissioning | Kojie.works MARSSIM-native nuclear D&D project management. 4-agent AI consensus, crypto-signed audit trail, DCGL tracking, and NRC-ready FSS report generation. Built by James Kojie Collins — CPWE AI.
05/27/2026
What if we told you that America's most infamous nuclear disaster site is about to become a powerhouse—again?
Three Mile Island, the site of the 1979 partial meltdown that reshaped nuclear safety regulations forever, is making a stunning comeback. Constellation Energy is preparing to restart Unit 1—now rebranded as the Crane Clean Energy Center—in a landmark $1.6 billion revival project backed by a $1 billion federal loan from the U.S. Department of Energy.
Why? Artificial intelligence. Tech giants like Microsoft have struck 20-year deals to purchase the plant's entire output, locking in massive amounts of carbon-free electricity to power their insatiable data center demands. This isn't just a nuclear story—it's an AI story, an energy story, and an environmental story all at once.
But here's what makes this moment even more remarkable: while Three Mile Island is being brought back to life, hundreds of other nuclear sites across the country and around the world are in various stages of nuclear plant cleanup and decommissioning. The U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Environmental Management is currently grappling with an estimated $1.5 billion in nuclear waste facility repairs, with a recent Government Accountability Office report flagging significant data gaps in tracking these challenges.
Meanwhile, the Tennessee Valley Authority's nuclear fleet just hit 41% of its power supply—the highest in its history—as federal agencies push for clarity on new nuclear technologies. In South Korea, the government is expanding nuclear capacity from 25.6 GW today to 29.8 GW by 2035.
The message is clear: nuclear energy isn't dying—it's evolving. From decommissioning old sites to building new ones, from waste management to AI-driven power purchase agreements, the nuclear sector is undergoing a transformation that few saw coming.
This is the story of an industry reinventing itself at the intersection of AI, climate goals, and energy security.
What do you think—is nuclear power the answer to our clean energy future, or are there too many unresolved questions about waste and safety?
Learn more at https://kojie.works
Guardian QS — AI Nuclear Decommissioning | Kojie.works MARSSIM-native nuclear D&D project management. 4-agent AI consensus, crypto-signed audit trail, DCGL tracking, and NRC-ready FSS report generation. Built by James Kojie Collins — CPWE AI.
05/22/2026
🚨 What if the biggest threat to America's nuclear sites isn't radiation — but outdated data?
A recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) report just revealed something alarming: the Department of Energy's Office of Environmental Management — the agency responsible for cleaning up radioactive waste from nuclear weapons production and energy research — has been working with incomplete and inaccurate data to prioritize over $1.5 BILLION in nuclear waste facility repairs.
That's billion with a B.
Here's what this means in plain terms:
- Nuclear waste sites across the U.S. are being prioritized for repairs based on faulty data
- The information used to decide which facilities get fixed first is often "inaccurate or unsupported"
- With $1.5 billion on the line, the margin for error is essentially zero
This comes at a critical time for nuclear decommissioning efforts nationwide. As more nuclear plants reach end-of-life — from Diablo Canyon in California to aging facilities across the country — the need for precise, reliable data-driven decision making has never been greater.
Proper nuclear site remediation isn't just about safety. It's about protecting communities, groundwater, and ecosystems for generations to come. And it starts with knowing WHICH problems to fix FIRST.
The GAO's recommendation? The DOE needs to clean up its data act before it can clean up these sites. Without accurate baselines, we're essentially flying blind on nuclear waste management decisions that affect millions of Americans.
What do you think — should核 (nuclear) cleanup be held to higher data standards? Drop your thoughts below! 👇
Learn more insights on nuclear infrastructure and environmental management at https://kojie.works
🔗 Follow for more updates on energy, environment, and infrastructure news!
Guardian QS — AI Nuclear Decommissioning | Kojie.works MARSSIM-native nuclear D&D project management. 4-agent AI consensus, crypto-signed audit trail, DCGL tracking, and NRC-ready FSS report generation. Built by James Kojie Collins — CPWE AI.
05/21/2026
🔴 DID YOU KNOW? The U.S. government is spending $1.5 BILLION just to repair nuclear waste facilities — and they don't even have accurate data on what's broken.
A new Government Accountability Office (GAO) report reveals that the Department of Energy's Office of Environmental Management — the office responsible for cleaning up radioactive waste from nuclear energy research and weapons production — has been working with flawed, inaccurate, and unsupported data to prioritize over $1.5 billion in repairs.
In short: they're trying to fix a problem they can't even fully see.
This is a stark reminder of just how complex and costly nuclear decommissioning truly is. From managing nuclear waste at sites across the country to safely dismantling facilities that have operated for decades, the process requires precision, transparency, and serious investment.
The GAO's findings highlight a critical issue: when data fails, safety fails. And in the world of nuclear site remediation, there's zero room for error.
The U.S. has dozens of decommissioning projects underway or in the pipeline. Each one carries the weight of public safety, environmental responsibility, and taxpayer dollars. Without accurate data, we risk delaying cleanup efforts, wasting resources, and — most concerning — endangering communities near these sites.
The good news? Awareness is the first step. By demanding better oversight, stronger data practices, and more transparency, we can ensure that nuclear plant cleanup efforts are done right.
Want to understand more about what's really happening at nuclear sites across America? Visit https://kojie.works for in-depth insights and analysis on nuclear decommissioning, waste management, and energy policy.
💬 Share your thoughts below! Should the government be doing more to ensure accurate data in nuclear cleanup projects?
Guardian QS — AI Nuclear Decommissioning | Kojie.works MARSSIM-native nuclear D&D project management. 4-agent AI consensus, crypto-signed audit trail, DCGL tracking, and NRC-ready FSS report generation. Built by James Kojie Collins — CPWE AI.
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