Allseas’ small modular reactor (SMR) technology could generate up to $150 million billion in economic value for the Netherlands and create as many as 40,000 new jobs by 2050…
Allseas’ small modular reactor (SMR) technology could generate up to $150 million billion in economic value for the Netherlands and create as many as 40,000 new jobs by 2050, according to an impact study released on Monday by the offshore engineering group.
The study, conducted by consultancy Roland Berger, found that deploying the company’s 25 MWe / 70 MWt high-temperature gas-cooled SMR could also help cut grid congestion, strengthen energy security and deliver major emissions reductions across Dutch industry and the global maritime sector.
Allseas launched a five-year plan in June 2025 to develop and deploy its SMR on offshore vessels and onshore industrial sites. The reactor is being developed with NRG PALLAS, TU Delft and other partners, with the first units targeted for operation by 2030.
The report said the compact and scalable design makes the reactor suitable for offshore operations, commercial vessels, port areas and industrial clusters such as chemical plants, steel facilities, refineries and data centers. It can also supply autonomous power for defense infrastructure and high-demand growth sectors including semiconductors, AI, quantum technology and supercomputing.
Roland Berger estimates potential for installing up to 110 SMRs on land in the Netherlands and 700 in the global maritime sector.
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