To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to modify certain investment credit rules with respect to nuclear facilities.
Summary
H.R. 8482 would extend clean energy investment tax credits (Section 48E/45Y) to nuclear facilities, improving the economics of existing nuclear plants and new builds. The bill is in early stage but has bipartisan sponsorship (9 cosponsors). If passed, nuclear-heavy utilities like $CEG, $NEE, and $DUK stand to benefit from lower capital costs, while suppliers $GEV and $BWXT could see increased demand for nuclear equipment and services.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.H.R. 8482 would make nuclear facilities eligible for clean electricity investment/production tax credits (Section 48E/45Y), a major policy shift.
- 2.Primary beneficiaries are nuclear plant operators ($CEG, $NEE, $DUK) and equipment suppliers ($GEV, $BWXT).
- 3.Bill is early-stage (referred to Ways and Means); passage probability is moderate given bipartisan support and clean energy tailwinds.
Market Implications
The bill directly enhances the economics of nuclear generation, which is increasingly valued for its 24/7 carbon-free output. If enacted, utilities with nuclear fleets may see upward earnings revisions as they optimize capital spending to capture credits. Equipment suppliers will benefit from an extended replacement cycle. Investors should watch committee markups as a key catalyst. However, given the early stage, market impact is currently muted.
Full Analysis
Intelligence Surface
Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures
No confirming evidence found yet from contracts, insider trades, or congressional activity
What the bill does
Tax credit eligibility expansion: allows nuclear facilities to elect out of public utility property limitation for investment credits and removes progress expenditure limitation, making them eligible for Section 48E clean electricity ITC or Section 45Y PTC.
Who must act
Nuclear facility owners and operators (like Constellations Energy) that plan new investments or upgrades after Dec 31, 2026.
What happens
Reduces after-tax cost of capital for new nuclear investments and upgrades by up to 30% (ITC rate) or provides production credits for electricity generated, improving project IRRs by 2-5 percentage points.
Stock impact
CEG operates the largest nuclear fleet in the US (~23 GW). The bill directly lowers the cost of extending plant licenses, uprating capacity, or building small modular reactors, potentially adding hundreds of millions in annual after-tax cash flow from credit monetization.
What the bill does
Same mechanism as above: removal of public utility property limitation for nuclear facilities under Section 48E.
Who must act
NextEra Energy's nuclear operations (NextEra Energy Resources and Florida Power & Light) which own/operate nuclear plants.
What happens
Allows NextEra to claim ITC for nuclear investments (e.g., uprates, license renewals) and potentially transfer credits, improving project economics.
Stock impact
NEE's nuclear fleet (~5 GW) could access credits for capital upgrades. While nuclear is a smaller part of NEE's mix, the credit enhances returns on any future SMR investments through its subsidiary.
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2027
Energy Emergency Leadership Act
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Geothermal Ombudsman for National Deployment and Optimal Reviews Act
Commerce, Justice, Science; Energy and Water Development; and Interior and Environment Appropriations Act, 2026
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