Why America’s Nuclear Revival Might Be More About Power Than Energy

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In Amarillo, Texas, bulldozers hum and churn as Rick Perry’s vision of a “nuclear America” begins to take shape.

The slogan “Make America nuclear again” rings with patriotic conviction, but behind the bulldozers and glossy press releases lies a deeper, more provocative question:

Is America really reigniting nuclear energy for the planet’s future or for control over its own?

For decades, the word nuclear sat in the shadows of fear. The disasters at Chernobyl, Fukushima, and Three Mile Island taught the world to tread carefully with the atom. But now, as the energy race runs toward self-sufficiency, and as artificial intelligence threatens to outgrow the world’s electricity grids, America’s nuclear ambitions have been reborn only this time, they look less like power plants and more like data fortresses.

Rick Perry’s new venture, Fermi America, aims to create the world’s largest energy and data-centre complex 11 gigawatts of power, a sprawling fusion of natural gas, solar panels, and both conventional and small modular reactors.

It’s a project that sounds visionary but also symbolic. Because in the 21st century, energy is no longer just about keeping the lights on. It’s about who owns the switch.

Each new AI model, every quantum computing, demands an exponential rise in power. The tech empires OpenAI, Google, Nvidia are racing to create intelligence and also racing to feed it.

In this world, whoever controls energy controls the future of AI, finance, and even national defense.

That’s what makes Fermi America’s blueprint so telling. The promise of clean nuclear energy is wrapped in the architecture of data control energy plants doubling as data-centres, glowing servers powered by uranium cores. What we are witnessing is an energy revolution, and a digital land grab disguised as sustainability.

Perry’s nuclear dream represents American resilience a return to innovation, sovereignty, and industrial strength. But, it looks like history repeating itself by creating a new frontier for private power under the flag of patriotism.

Because behind the rhetoric of national rebirth lies a familiar tension. The U.S. government abandoned much of its nuclear infrastructure decades ago. Now, billionaires and private investors are stepping into the void, shaping what the “new nuclear” looks like.and who profits from it.

The question is not whether nuclear is making a comeback. It’s who will own the reactors when it does.

Nuclear energy could, without doubt, help save the planet. It’s clean, powerful, and consistent, a quality that solar and wind have yet to fully match. But if the current wave of projects merges energy with data monopolies, the result might not be a greener world, but a more centralized one.



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