Integrating Public Perspectives in Microreactor Facility Design
Abstract
Current approaches to the design and regulation of nuclear energy facilities offer limited opportunities for public input, particularly for host communities to shape decisions about a facility's aesthetics, socioeconomic, and environmental impacts, or even levels of safety. In this paper, we propose a community-engaged approach to designing microreactors. In a participatory design workshop, we invited community members to work with engineers to create designs for hypothetical microreactor facilities for Southeast Michigan as a way to understand their hopes, concerns, and preferences. Our findings reveal a desire for local energy infrastructure to not just provide a service (energy) but also to be a central and accessible feature of the community. Community members articulated several specific ways in which the hypothetical facilities could be designed, with particular focus placed on the well-being of local families as well as employment opportunities. These findings call into question current microreactor design trajectories that seek to achieve high levels of automation. Our findings also suggest a need for contextual design that may be at odds with the logics of standardization currently being pursued by reactor designers. We call on microreactor developers to carry out such participatory design engagements in other places as a way to build a more comprehensive, place-based understanding of local preferences for community-embedded energy infrastructure.