X-energy Shares Surge 27% in Nasdaq Debut as Investors Bet on Nuclear Power for AI Data Centers
Nuclear startup valued at $11.5B after IPO, with Amazon planning to purchase up to 5 gigawatts of capacity
Quick Look
- X-energy's stock surged 27% in its Nasdaq debut, closing at $29.20 with an $11.5B valuation.
- The nuclear startup's 80-megawatt modular reactor design targets AI data centers, with Amazon planning to purchase up to 5 gigawatts of capacity over the next decade.
- Dow will receive the company's first power plant.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Nuclear power in the US has faced challenges with cost overruns and delays, with two Georgia plants costing around $30 billion. The industry was haunted by these issues in the late 2010s and early 2020s. About 18% of US electricity comes from nuclear power, but reactor costs have risen significantly in recent decades.
X-energy's stock popped in its debut on the Nasdaq, opening at $30.11 before closing at $29.20, up 27% over its initial public offering of $23 per share. Investors can't get enough nuclear power, apparently. Even the initial share price had been revised upward from the $16 to $19 target floated by the company during its investor roadshow. At close, the company was valued at $11.5 billion. Just five years ago, such interest in a nuclear startup would have come as a surprise to many. Back then, the nuclear industry was haunted by delayed projects and massive cost overruns at recently completed reactors. Two power plants were completed in Georgia — one in the late 2010s and another in the early 2020s. In total, they cost around $30 billion to build. Nuclear startups in the early 2020s were in their infancy, and at least one frontrunner had run into significant regulatory problems, sparking fears that the industry hadn't been able to put its past behind it. Now, investors appear optimistic that X-energy and its peers have figured out a way around the challenges. Much of the momentum can be traced to the AI-driven data center boom. GPUs need tremendous amounts of electricity, and while solar, wind, batteries, and natural gas have been filling the need today, tech companies have been hoping to diversify. Nuclear power is one of the many options they've been exploring, hoping that the compact form factor will be an ideal fit for their sprawling data centers. Nuclear power has long had more potential to power the U.S. grid than it has been able to deliver. Today, about 18% of electricity in the country comes from nuclear power. But reactor costs have risen in recent decades. Nuclear power might be one of the most reliable sources of electricity in the U.S., but it's also one of the most expensive. X-energy's 80-megawatt reactor design is an order of magnitude smaller than many existing nuclear power plants. The company is betting that modularity can help bring costs down, and data center operators are hoping that a single campus can be powered by a fleet of reactors, providing the sort of redundancy and stability they prize. Amazon has said it will buy up to 5 gigawatts worth of capacity from X-energy over the next decade or so, but chemical maker Dow will receive the startup's first power plant. Construction is underway at X-energy's fuel facility, and while the company has yet to start construction of a power plant, investors appear bullish that the company will be able to break nuclear power free from its decades-long malaise.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
X-energy will begin construction on its first power plant within 18-24 months
Likely · Within months
More tech companies will announce nuclear power agreements for data centers
Very likely · Within months
X-energy stock will maintain elevated valuation pending construction milestones
Likely · Within months
Open Questions
- When will X-energy break ground on its first power plant?
- What regulatory approvals are still needed?
- Can modular reactors truly deliver cost savings?
- How will Amazon and Dow's deployments proceed timeline-wise?






