Consulting Report
14 Oct 2024

The economic contribution of the US nuclear power industry

Commissioned by the Nuclear Energy Institute

The US nuclear power generation industry provided approximately 19% of the electricity output of the electric power sector in 2022. To generate this electricity, the nuclear power industry directly employed 73,832 workers, including 48,252 employees working at nuclear power plants themselves. But the full economic contribution of the nuclear power industry extends further. Altogether, the total (direct, indirect, and induced) economic contribution of the US nuclear power industry in 2022 totaled 256,849 workers and $63.8 billion of GDP. This activity generated $15.9 billion in federal, state, and local taxes.

The states with the largest economic contribution from nuclear power were Illinois ($5.9 billion in GDP), Pennsylvania ($4.8 billion), South Carolina ($3.9 billion), and California ($3.6 billion). On average, each of the 52 US counties which house the nation’s 54 nuclear power plants had 1,758 workers whose job was supported by nuclear power, and an average GDP contribution from nuclear power of $770 million.

Nuclear power has a number of positive sustainability characteristics. Unlike electricity generated by burning fossil fuels like gas or coal, nuclear power generates no significant emissions of air pollution. Nuclear power’s land use footprint is the smallest of any electricity generating technology, less than one-fiftieth that of ground-installed solar, and one three-hundredth that of on-shore wind, per unit of electricity produced. Working at a nuclear power plant is one of the safest jobs in America, with zero fatal accidents since 2017, and a rate of non-fatal accidents one-seventh that of the electric power industry as a whole.

The experts behind the research

Our Economic Consulting team are world leaders in quantitative economic analysis, working with clients around the globe and across sectors to build models, forecast markets and evaluate interventions using state-of-the art techniques. Lead consultant on this project was:

Dan Martin

Lead Economist, Economic Impact

You might be interested in

The economic impact of bp in the UK

This report quantifies the economic impact that bp supported in both the UK national and regional economies in 2023.

Find Out More
What CTOs Think; Navigating the Path to the AI Enterprise

"What CTOs Think: Navigating the Path to the AI Enterprise” is a report that explores how CTOs are approaching this current era of digitalization and offers recommendations for a successful transformation to an AI-powered enterprise. The survey, conducted in collaboration with Oxford Economics, covers 2,000 C-suite leaders, including 509 CTOs, across nine countries and 18 sectors, including Aerospace, Automotive, Energy, Life Sciences, and Technology.

Find Out More
Rising demand fuels surge in US data centre construction

The demand for data centres in the United States is rapidly increasing, driven primarily by the continued rise of cloud computing and the emergence of artificial intelligence (AI).

Find Out More
Freshly rebuilt US chemicals sector poised to outgrow Europe

The chemical industries in the US and EU are at the precipice of a major divergence. We believe that a structural advantage for the US, borne initially of the shale gas boom of the 2010s and more recently from the shift of European consumption towards LNG, will create a growing wedge between the two regions over the medium term. This applies directly to basic chemicals, which use natural gas directly as a feedstock and for industrial heating purposes, with ramifications for more specialised chemicals production which are themselves downstream of basic chemicals.

Find Out More