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Nuclear power stocks opened the post-holiday week broadly lower on Monday, with shares of Oklo (NYSE: OKLO) falling 6.3% through 10:45 a.m. ET, Constellation Energy (NASDAQ: CEG) down 6.5%, and Nano Nuclear Energy (NASDAQ: NNE) faring worst of all -- down 10.8%. Hydrogen power stocks are also suffering, with Plug Power (NASDAQ: PLUG) down 11.8%, one notable loser.
And why? To learn the answer to that, you need to look back to the other side of the three-day weekend. On Thursday, you see, The Wall Street Journal reported on "dramatic cuts" to "nearly $10 billion in federal funding for clean-energy projects" that the U.S. Department of Energy is said to be contemplating.
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DOGE strikes again... or does it?
As the WSJ reports, the Elon Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency government advisory office is at the root of these cuts, which propose slashing spending on everything from hydrogen to carbon capture to energy storage to "other technologies" -- which may include nuclear energy.
Thousands of jobs in the Department of Energy, of employees administering the programs, are said to be at risk, albeit the DOE says "no final decisions have been made and multiple plans are still being considered" -- a statement that matches verbatim a similar statement, about similar plans, floated earlier in the month.
More than two weeks later, though, the talk about cutting is still ongoing. And with as much as $10 billion in federal funding potentially on the chopping block, you can understand why investors are feeling nervous.
Why nuclear power might be safer than you think
That being said, I'm not certain investors should be panicking about this. As WSJ points out, one of the few clean-energy programs that has received funding under the Biden-era Inflation Reduction Act green energy program, which Trump is said to be targeting, is in fact a nuclear project: the Palisades nuclear plant restart in Michigan.
Plus, while Trump has been very public in his disdain for other green energy programs, such as "big ugly windmills" for example, he's been less vocal in criticizing nuclear power programs. That's not necessarily good news for more esoteric energies such as hydrogen, or Plug Power stock. On the other hand, as recently as February, industry experts were predicting that the nuclear industry might actually enjoy a "renaissance" under the new administration.