As of October 2023, there are 93 nuclear power reactors operating in the United States. These reactors are spread across 28 states, contributing approximately 20% of the country's electricity generation. The U.S. has the largest number of operational nuclear reactors in the world.
104 operating power reactors
104 operating reactors
104 operating reactors
As of 2021, there are 93 commercial nuclear reactors operating in 28 states in the United States. These nuclear reactors are spread across 56 nuclear power plants.
There are 100 nuclear power reactors operating in USA besides five under construction as of July 2014.
There are 104 commercial nuclear power reactors in the US. See the related question below.
There were 104 commercial nuclear power plants operating in the United States as of 2009.
There are three nuclear power plants in Michigan. Enrico Fermi, Donald C. Cook and Palisades have one, two and one operating reactors, respectively. As regards active nuclear reactors used for generating electric power, that's the list. The count is one plus two plus one, or four reactors.
104. See www.nrc.gov
See the list in link belowThere are six nuclear power stations in India, with a total of seventeen nuclear reactors in them. There are also six research and production reactors, but such reactors are not usually included in counts of reactors in a country because they are small and do not typically put power on the electric grid._______________________________________________________An updated AnswerThere are 21 operating power reactors in India (with total electric power 5308 MW) and 6 nuclear power reactors under construction (with total electric power 3907 MW) per the statistics of the International Atomic Energy Agency as of April 2004.
There were no nuclear power plants during World War II. The Chicago Pile, or CP-1, had a nuclear reaction going for about half an hour, but no energy was derived from it. The first electrical power generated by nuclear plant was at the EBR-I experimental station near Arco, Idaho, on December 20, 1951, six years after the end of WWII.
Sweden currently has 3 active nuclear power plants with 10 reactors.