NANO Nuclear (NNE) Teams Up With Super Micro to Power AI Data Centers With On-Site Reactors
Key takeaways
- NANO Nuclear (NNE) Teams Up With Super Micro to Power AI Data Centers With On-Site Reactors Neha Gupta Fri, May 15, 2026 at 10:46 PM GMT+7 2 min read NNE SMCI NANO Nuclear Energy Inc.
- The basis for the MoU is that the AI boom is creating an electricity demand crisis for data centers.
- NANO Nuclear’s lead product in this partnership is the KRONOS MMR Energy System.
NANO Nuclear (NNE) Teams Up With Super Micro to Power AI Data Centers With On-Site Reactors Neha Gupta Fri, May 15, 2026 at 10:46 PM GMT+7 2 min read NNE SMCI NANO Nuclear Energy Inc. (NASDAQ:NNE) is one of the best uranium stocks to buy according to Wall Street analysts. On May 6, NANO Nuclear Energy Inc. (NASDAQ:NNE) signed a non-binding Memorandum of Understanding (Mo U) with Super Micro Computer, Inc. (NASDAQ:SMCI) to explore powering next-generation AI data centers with on-site nuclear energy. Super Micro is a global leader in high-performance AI server and data center infrastructure.
The basis for the MoU is that the AI boom is creating an electricity demand crisis for data centers. These installations require constant, high-density power around the clock, which solar, wind, or grid connections alone struggle to provide at scale. As such, the MoU allows the two companies to explore deploying NANO Nuclear’s microreactors directly on data center campuses to provide dedicated, grid-independent nuclear power. These microreactors will integrate Super Micro’s AI server racks. The companies will also jointly develop go-to-market strategies targeting hyperscale cloud operators, enterprise customers, and edge data center operators. The MoU’s ultimate goal is a vertically integrated, self-powered AI infrastructure model where a customer buys compute power and the energy to run it as a single, bundled solution.
NANO Nuclear’s lead product in this partnership is the KRONOS MMR Energy System. This system is a stationary high-temperature gas-cooled microreactor designed to produce 15 megawatts of electricity. The system is currently in construction permit pre-application engagement with the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and the development is a collaboration with the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.