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First molten-salt reactor in the desert — China’s 2030 bet on safer nuclear power

by Edwin O.
October 16, 2025
in Energy
molten salt reactor

Credits: Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA/GSFC

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China is leading the development of revolutionary nuclear technology with an unparalleled method in the process of atomic power generation that has the potential to revolutionize the way the world produces energy. The Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics has reviewed innovative reactor designs, which are more secure than conventional nuclear power plants. This grandiose project is a drastic change to the traditional considerations based on water-cooled nuclear systems of the industry over the decades.

Highly safe thorium power plants include other unique safety characteristics

Molten salt reactors use liquid salt as a fuel medium and a coolant medium instead of water systems under pressure, as in the conventional nuclear power plant. These new designs remove the high-pressure dependence of conventional reactors and significantly reduce catastrophic meltdown risks, which are the same as those at Fukushima and Chernobyl power stations.

The thorium fuel source has different properties from uranium, which produces shorter-lived radioactive waste and is more difficult to weaponize for military use. China is estimated to have 280,000 tons of proven reserves of thorium (second only to India’s 340,000 tons), enough fuel to supply energy to the country’s vast population for an estimated 20,000 years.

These reactors have been described as “inherently safer” because of safety features such as meltable plugs of frozen salt that are designed to melt under any possibility of overheating. These plugs, when activated, melt the molten salt, which then drains into cooling reservoirs where it freezes over and automatically shuts down the nuclear reactions.

Construction lead time reduces for commercial deployment

Construction will start in 2025 near Wuwei in China’s northern Gansu Province, and it is expected to have full generation capacity by 2030. The plant will produce 60MW of thermal power, which will be used to produce 10MW of electricity and hydrogen, as part of a sustainable renewable energy research centre in the Gobi Desert area.

Prototype success validates commercial viability prospects

Based on a 2MW prototype on the same site, which had entered criticality in October 2023, the project is based on the first sustained thorium fission in the United States since the 1969 abandonment of such research. This development shows that Chinese researchers have successfully addressed important technical obstacles that in the past rendered thorium MSB for commercial use infeasible.

Very short environmental assessment reports (EIA reports) issued by the Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics had disclosed the full information about the projects before they were taken off public record. The advantages documented included being inherently safe, having a lower level of nuclear waste generation, Indian physical non-proliferation, and superior economic performance as compared to conventional systems.

Key Technical Specifications:

  • Fuel: Less than 20% U-235 enrichment
  • Thorium reserve: Approximately 50 kg
  • Coolant: FLiBe (lithium fluoride and beryllium fluoride mixture)
  • Conversion factor: 0.1

A desert location offers Operational and environmental benefits

The Gobi Desert site offers the perfect conditions for molten salt reactor implementation, as there is no need for water to carry out the cooling process.  Thorium molten salts are the most economical option for nuclear power now available, and China’s success could help speed the adoption of this technology around the world, with a number of countries, such as India and Indonesia, being interested in similar initiatives. Private companies such as Bill Gates’ TerraPower are working on similar molten salt designs, although the designs use different fuel constituents and cooling systems.

China’s molten salt reactor project could be an inflection point in nuclear energy development. This ideology could provide a large amount of clean power while overcoming the challenges in safety and disposal of nuclear waste. The twenty-year horizon positions China as the global leader in next-generation nuclear technology, with implications for everything from national energy security to force balancing in the international community, and even environmental sustainability.

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