Exclusive: Anthropic in Talks With Samsung to Manufacture Custom AI Chip Save 25% to unlock this story

Sign in
Subscribe

    Data Tools

    • About Pro
    • The Executives Leading the Data Center Race
    • The Next GPs 2026
    • The Next GPs 2025
    • The Rising Stars of AI Research
    • Leaders of the AI Shopping Revolution
    • Enterprise Software Startup Takeover List
    • Org Charts
    • The Information 50 2025
    • Generative AI Takeover List
    • Generative AI Database
    • AI Chip Database
    • AI Data Center Database
    • Tech IPO Tracker
    • Tech Sentiment Tracker
    • Gigafactory Database

    Special Projects

    • The Information 50 Database
    • VC Diversity Index
    • Enterprise Tech Powerlist
  • Org Charts
  • Deep Research
  • Tech
  • Finance
  • Weekend
  • Charts
  • Events
  • TITV
    • Directory

      Search, find and engage with others who are serious about tech and business.

    • Forum

      Follow and be a part of discussions about tech, finance and media.

    • Brand Partnerships

      Premium advertising opportunities for brands

    • Group Subscriptions

      Team access to our exclusive tech news

    • Newsletters

      Journalists who break and shape the news, in your inbox

    • Video

      Catch up on conversations with global leaders in tech, media and finance

    • Partner Content

      Explore our recent partner collaborations

      XFacebookLinkedInThreadsInstagram
    • Help & Support
    • RSS Feed
    • Careers
    Sign in
  • About Pro
  • The Executives Leading the Data Center Race
  • The Next GPs 2026
  • The Next GPs 2025
  • The Rising Stars of AI Research
  • Leaders of the AI Shopping Revolution
  • Enterprise Software Startup Takeover List
  • Org Charts
  • The Information 50 2025
  • Generative AI Takeover List
  • Generative AI Database
  • AI Chip Database
  • AI Data Center Database
  • Tech IPO Tracker
  • Tech Sentiment Tracker
  • Gigafactory Database

SPECIAL PROJECTS

  • The Information 50 Database
  • VC Diversity Index
  • Enterprise Tech Powerlist
Deep Research
TITV
Tech
Finance
Weekend
Charts
Events
Newsletters
  • Directory

    Search, find and engage with others who are serious about tech and business.

  • Forum

    Follow and be a part of discussions about tech, finance and media.

  • Brand Partnerships

    Premium advertising opportunities for brands

  • Group Subscriptions

    Team access to our exclusive tech news

  • Newsletters

    Journalists who break and shape the news, in your inbox

  • Video

    Catch up on conversations with global leaders in tech, media and finance

  • Partner Content

    Explore our recent partner collaborations

Subscribe
  • Sign in
  • Search
  • Opinion
  • Venture Capital
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Startups
  • Market Research
    XFacebookLinkedInThreadsInstagram
  • Help & Support
  • RSS Feed
  • Careers

Scale confidently.Scale confidently.

Learn more
Featured Partner
PwC logo
Why Trump Officials and VCs Love This Nuclear Power Startup’s Brute-Force ApproachWhy Trump Officials and VCs Love This Nuclear Power Startup’s Brute-Force ApproachArt by Clark Miller; YouTube
The Big Read

Why Trump Officials and VCs Love This Nuclear Power Startup’s Brute-Force Approach

Valar Atomics plans to turn on its first nuclear reactor in the Utah desert in the next few weeks. The company is the poster child of a new breed of nuclear startup built on aggressive claims and breakneck timelines.

By
Jemima McEvoy
[email protected]Profile and archive

On a cloudy day in late March, Isaiah Taylor, the 27-year-old founder and chief executive of Valar Atomics, a Hawthorne, Calif.–based nuclear energy startup, led me into a large black tent at the Utah San Rafael Energy Lab in the middle of the Utah desert. Dozens of construction workers and beeping forklifts buzzed around the nearly 40-foot-tall reactor rising from the center of the tent, with an enormous American flag in the background.

Outside, Taylor gestured around to the empty landscape surrounding the site, which Valar is leasing from the state of Utah. “Six months ago, this looked like that field out there,” he said, pointing to the untouched beige ground stretching toward the mountains. “We built this in six months.”

Six months ago is around the time Valar was selected as one of 11 startups in a Department of Energy pilot program aimed at getting nuclear power startups to reach criticality—the point at which their reactors produce power through self-perpetuating chain reactions—by July 4. Carrying out orders from President Donald Trump’s White House, the agency coupled this program with a sweeping overhaul of its regulatory process and safety rules to make it easier and faster to build reactors.

Recommended