The Department of Energy Ends ALARA
The Department of Energy Ends ALARA
By ending the ALARA principle, DOE opens the door to science-based radiation regulation that could restore nuclear power’s competitiveness.
Last fall, Energy Secretary Chris Wright told the audience at Senator John Curtis’ (R-UT) conservative climate summit that “nuclear is going to become sexy again.” For policy wonks and proponents of modernizing outdated nuclear regulation, there may be nothing sexier than reforming the As Low As Reasonably Achievable (ALARA) principle.
The Linear No-Threshold (LNT) model and the ALARA principle are two elements that have guided US radiation standards for decades. While well-intentioned, outdated radiation standards have imposed unnecessary costs, slowed innovation, and reinforced public fear for years, while providing little to no benefit to the environment or public health. Reform is not merely desirable; it is a strategic necessity and essential for improving the economic outlook for nuclear power.
This week, E&E News reported that the Department of Energy (DOE) will end the use of the ALARA principle. The timing is critical because the United States is striving to meet growing energy needs, accelerate the deployment of advanced reactors, and maintain global leadership in energy innovation. A welcome next step would be for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to follow DOE’s lead.
Background on Radiation Standards in the United States
The LNT hypothesis emerged from experiments on fruit flies in 1927 conducted by Hermann Muller, which showed radiation can induce heritable mutations. Interpreted amid Cold War fears of fallout and atomic weapons, this research shaped the belief that any dose of ionizing radiation increases cancer risk in a linear fashion. In 1956, the Biological Effects of Atomic Radiation (BEAR) report from the National Academy of Sciences institutionalized LNT as the foundation for radiation protection.
Introduced by the NRC in 1975, the ALARA principle was initially meant to apply LNT pragmatically by requiring exposures to be kept “as low as reasonably achievable” while factoring in cost and feasibility.
Over time, however, ALARA lost its balancing intent. Regulatory enforcement increasingly pushed operators to minimize exposures well below natural background radiation levels, regardless of the benefits. These reductions became mandatory for licensing and compliance, fueling a culture of regulatory absolutism.
Trusting the Science
The LNT model is deeply flawed and rife with scandal and deception. Importantly, modern research fundamentally challenges the assumption that risk increases linearly at low doses. Radiobiology shows that cells are not passive victims of radiation damage; they possess complex repair systems and adaptive responses that mitigate low-dose effects.
Epidemiological evidence supports this shift. Populations in Kerala, India, exposed to natural radiation levels up to 80 times higher than average, show no increased cancer rates. Studies of nuclear shipyard workers also reveal no significant increase in risk at low exposures. Reports from the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) conclude that applying linear risk models at these doses is scientifically unjustified and may significantly overestimate risk.
As Emily Caffey, a radiation health physicist and assistant professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told E&ENews, “ALARA has been misapplied across the board in a lot of different areas, and it has cost taxpayers a lot of money, and it has caused a lot of unnecessary fear in the public by saying, ‘Well, any little bit of radiation dose is going to give you a cancer,’ which is just fundamentally not true.”
ALARA Makes Nuclear Unnecessarily More Expensive
Maintaining ultra-conservative standards is enormously costly as compliance with ALARA balloons construction and operating budgets of nuclear power plants. Similarly, expenditures for decommissioning and waste management projects are driven by thresholds disconnected from actual health risk.
The Department of Energy has repeatedly faced cost escalations in cleanup projects, where only marginal reductions were achieved, but at disproportionate expense. More efficient processes and rightsized regulations could save nuclear plant operators billions of dollars, making them more competitive with other forms of energy generation.
Critically, ALARA increases costs and could stunt the deployment of innovative small modular reactors (SMRs), delaying or prohibiting the use of emissions-free, affordable power. By erecting a costly barrier to entry, new reactor companies must spend more precious capital on regulatory compliance for no meaningful health benefit.
For example, Jack Devanney, founder of advanced nuclear company ThorCon,
points out that ALARA standards for tritium—an isotope that emits low levels of radioactivity and would have to be ingested at a high rate to pose a health hazard—raise operational costs for molten salt reactors (MSRs). While these reactors can be designed more efficiently than pressurized water reactors (PWRs), MSRs emit 60 times more tritium than PWRs. This forces MSR designers to ‘employ an expensive extra loop, cutting their economic advantage over the PWR and creating another set of fault points.’
Sayonara, ALARA
By moving from outdated fear-based models to proportionate, risk-informed regulation, the United States can lead the next era of safe, reliable, clean, and globally competitive nuclear energy. DOE’s removal of ALARA is a welcome first step, but the NRC and Congress must follow suit to align radiation regulation with prevailing science. Doing so will protect public health without imposing undue economic burdens on nuclear energy, ratepayers, and taxpayers.
About the Author: Nick Loris
Nick Loris is the executive vice president of Policy at C3 Solutions. Loris studies and writes on topics related to energy and climate policies, including natural resource extraction, energy subsidies, nuclear energy, renewable power, energy efficiency, as well as the ways in which markets will improve the environment, reduce emissions, and better adapt to a changing climate.
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