United States | New nukes

America aims for nuclear-power renaissance

The Biden administration is pouring billions into the industry. The payoff isn’t certain

Joe Biden beside a nuclear symbol
Image: The Economist/Getty Images
|Idaho Falls

AFTER THE second world war, America’s new Atomic Energy Commission was on the hunt for a remote site where engineers could work out how to turn the raw power contained in a nuclear bomb into electricity. They settled on the desert shrubland of south-eastern Idaho. Towns in the area fell over themselves to compete for the headquarters of the reactor test site, seeing it as a catalyst for growth. Idaho Falls, then a city of 19,000, launched what it called “the party plan”. Locals wooed officials at lunches, cocktail parties and on city tours. The guest lists included women who were “as winsome as possible” to make the town seem attractive to the (male) engineer in charge of choosing.

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Going nuclear”

From the July 1st 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from United States

The White House has been fluid on gender for a decade

Trump’s order “restoring biological truth” will not be the last word

President Donald Trump talks to reporters after signing executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington.

A controversial idea to hand even more power to the president

Impoundment is about to come a step closer



Tom Homan, unleashed

America’s new border czar spent decades waiting for a president like Donald Trump

An unfinished election may shape a swing state’s future

A Supreme Court race ended very close. Then the lawyers arrived.

Donald Trump cries “invasion” to justify an immigration crackdown

His executive orders range from benign to belligerent