A Milestone in Advanced Nuclear Development
Oklo Inc., the California-based advanced nuclear energy company, has secured a significant regulatory milestone: the U.S. Department of Energy has approved a Nuclear Safety Design Agreement for the Groves Isotopes Test Reactor, a facility being developed by Oklo's wholly owned subsidiary Atomic Alchemy. The approval, made under DOE's Reactor Pilot Program, authorizes the company to advance into detailed safety design work — the technical phase that bridges concept development and construction authorization.
The agreement marks a concrete step forward in Oklo's effort to establish domestic radioisotope production capacity. Radioisotopes — radioactive versions of elements like technetium, lutetium, and actinium — are critical components of nuclear medicine, used for both imaging and therapeutic applications. They are also used in research, materials testing, and national security applications. The U.S. currently depends substantially on foreign suppliers for many medically important radioisotopes, a supply chain vulnerability that has attracted bipartisan concern in Congress.
What the NSDA Approval Means
A Nuclear Safety Design Agreement is a formal commitment between DOE and a reactor developer establishing the safety framework under which the reactor will be designed. Rather than the traditional Nuclear Regulatory Commission licensing pathway, which applies to commercial power reactors, DOE's Reactor Pilot Program provides an alternative authorization pathway specifically designed for innovative reactor concepts being developed in partnership with the department.
The NSDA approval means Oklo can now submit a Preliminary Documented Safety Analysis — a detailed technical document that describes the reactor's design, its safety systems, the hazards it poses, and the measures in place to prevent accidents. DOE will review that analysis before authorizing further development. The PDSA submission is the next formal milestone in the program.
Jacob DeWitte, Oklo's co-founder and CEO, described the approval as meaningful progress. This plant will help us gather critical data, refine our processes, and apply those lessons to subsequent licensing submissions and future deployments, he said in a statement alongside the announcement.




