Hadron Energy Unveils “Powering What’s Next” Video on Halo Micro-Modular Reactor

New video highlights the company's commitment to proven light-water technology, scalable factory manufacturing, and rapid deployment for data centers and heavy industry. (Image Credit: Business Wire)
New video highlights the company's commitment to proven light-water technology, scalable factory manufacturing, and rapid deployment for data centers and heavy industry. (Image Credit: Business Wire)

Hadron Energy, Inc. (Nasdaq: HDRN), an advanced nuclear technology company developing the 10-megawatt electric (10MWe) Halo Micro-Modular Reactor (MMR), recently announced the release of a new video titled “Powering What’s Next.” It provides Hadron’s vision for its engineering philosophy, commercialization strategy, and the target markets its technology is being designed to serve.

Viewers will see how Hadron approaches the global demand for continuous, emission-free power. By identifying the limitations of intermittent renewable sources, full-scale power plants, and legacy fossil fuels, the company positions the Halo MMR as a scalable, reliable solution. Targeting commercial deployment in 2032, Hadron plans to leverage centralized manufacturing to produce the 10MWe reactors, building them as repeatable, precision-engineered products and shipping them to be installed at the site rather than decade-long construction projects.

(Logo Credit: Business Wire)

Hadron highlights the use of proven light-water reactor technology and shares design targets for the Halo MMR. Light-water reactors power all 94 operating commercial nuclear plants in the United States today. This enables a predictable regulatory and licensing pathway with the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) since light-water reactors are the only reactor type with commercial approval by the agency. The scalability of the 10MWe modular units is a key feature which allows MMRs to be clustered together and meet the high power demands of artificial intelligence data centers, military bases, and heavy industry. Finally, the reactor’s capability to deliver process heat up to 300 degrees Celsius for chemical processing, paper mills, and desalination plants, alongside a planned 60-year service life that features a streamlined decommissioning and replacement process.

“Our world requires new energy solutions to meet unprecedented power demand. We believe that distributed power, like the Halo microreactor, will be a key enabler for future generations,” said Sam Gibson, Hadron Energy Founder and Chief Executive Officer. “The vast majority of military installations require less than 20MWe which represents the perfect deployment opportunity for Hadron. With this video, we are displaying Hadron’s vision about how our light-water reactor technology aims to deliver safe, predictable, and clean energy without the full-scale complexities of traditional on-site assembly.”

Technical and regulatory leaders also share their perspectives throughout the footage. Drawing on their prior experience at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and within commercial reactor operations, team members explain their preference for proven technology. Choosing light-water over exotic cooling or fuel concepts ensures resilient uptime and helps build community trust.

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