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Research/Nuclear Inspection — Go-to-Market Strategy
Last updated: March 19, 2026·Published

Nuclear Inspection — Go-to-Market Strategy

Last updated: March 2026 | Research by TARS subagent


Strategic Recommendation

Nuclear is a 3–5 year play, not Year 1. But start now to build relationships and credibility.

Nuclear has enormous contract values ($500K–5M+ per facility) but extreme barriers: NRC relationships, rad-hardening R&D, utility procurement cycles (18–36 months), and liability sensitivity. The right strategy is to enter through DOE national labs and SMR construction while building credibility, then expand to operating plants during license renewal cycles.


Market Entry Timeline

Phase 1 (Now – End of 2026): Credibility Building

  • Get into DOE national laboratory evaluation programs (Argonne, Oak Ridge, Idaho, Nevada)
  • Apply to EPRI for technology evaluation membership/program participation
  • Engage NRC ARCOP process (Advanced Reactor Construction Oversight Program) — comment periods, technical meetings
  • Target decommissioning contractors for characterization survey pilots

Phase 2 (2027): First Nuclear Revenue

  • Sign pilot with DOE facility or decommissioning contractor
  • Develop radiation detector payload (gamma + neutron sensing)
  • Submit for evaluation under EPRI framework
  • Engage TVA or Ontario Power Generation for BWRX-300 construction inspection planning

Phase 3 (2028–2029): Operating Plant Contracts

  • Target license renewal (10 CFR Part 54) aging management audits at plants 30–40 years old
  • Offer digital twin + characterization survey as tool for renewal documentation
  • Pursue initial operating plant pilot with utility (Duke Energy, NextEra, Exelon/Constellation)

Target Customer Segments

Segment 1: DOE National Laboratories (Fastest to Deploy)

  • Organizations: Argonne, Oak Ridge, Idaho, Pacific Northwest, Brookhaven, Nevada National Security Site
  • Budget: DOE has active robotics R&D programs; $200B+ nuclear cleanup liability
  • Decision-maker: Program Manager, Lab Liaison Officer
  • Why Drover: Labs actively seeking commercial robots for hazardous materials inspection — IV-DRIP program at NNSA (2024) uses commercial robots for nuclear material container inspection
  • Path: SBIR/STTR grants + direct evaluation contract

Segment 2: Nuclear Decommissioning Contractors

  • Companies: Holtec International (owns/decommissioning ~8 US plants), NorthStar Group, Orano, EnergySolutions, Accelerated Decommissioning Partners
  • Their need: Pre-demolition characterization surveys of contaminated structures; mapping radiation fields; digital as-built of structures before removal
  • Drover fit: 360 cameras + radiation detector + LiDAR + digital twin = characterization survey deliverable
  • Revenue potential: $100K–500K per facility characterization survey
  • Drover differentiator: Speed — cover entire building floor-by-floor in days vs. weeks of human survey work

Segment 3: SMR Construction Programs

  • TVA/BWRX-300 (Clinch River, TN): Construction permit under NRC review; prep/earthwork beginning 2026
  • TerraPower (Kemmerer, WY): Construction permit expected 2026; construction 2026–2031
  • X-energy/Dow (Seadrift, TX): Construction permit review underway
  • Drover opportunity: Construction inspection and progress monitoring (photogrammetry + digital twin of construction progress); NRC ITAAC inspection support
  • Entry: Contact project teams at TerraPower, TVA, X-energy; position as construction inspection technology partner

Segment 4: Operating Plant Aging Management (Year 3+)

  • US fleet: 93 operating reactors at ~55 sites; 35+ have pending or recent license renewal
  • Regulation: 10 CFR Part 54 requires aging management programs documented to NRC
  • Drover fit: Annual digital twin of safety-related structures (buildings, foundations, piping); change detection over time supports aging management documentation
  • Decision-maker: Plant Licensing Manager, Aging Management Program Coordinator
  • Sales cycle: 12–24 months through utility procurement

Nuclear-Specific Product Requirements

Must-Have for Nuclear Market Entry

  1. Radiation detector payload — gamma spectrometer + Geiger counter for dose mapping
  2. Decontaminable surfaces — smooth robot design with no crevices; important for minimizing radioactive contamination spread
  3. Emergency retrieval procedure — documented recovery procedure for every deployment route
  4. NRC documentation support — data formats that integrate with NRC-required records systems (plant computer, CMMS like Maximo)
  5. Radiation tolerance (balance-of-plant) — minimum 0.1–10 Gy/hr operational range

Nice-to-Have (Year 2+)

  • Hardened electronics for higher-dose environments
  • Underwater ROV mode for spent fuel pool
  • Tethered operation option

Pricing Model for Nuclear

Offering Price Range Notes
Characterization survey (decommissioning) $100K–500K/facility Full radiation mapping + 3D digital twin
Construction inspection (SMR) $50K–200K/project Progress monitoring + ITAAC support
Annual patrol subscription (operating plant) $200K–1M/year/site Turbine + auxiliary building routine patrol
DOE pilot/evaluation contract $250K–1M R&D funding vehicle
Digital twin aging management $50K–150K/year/plant 10 CFR Part 54 documentation support

Note: Nuclear contract values are large but procurement is slow. Budget for 12–24 month sales cycles. A single operating plant annual contract at $500K+ is worth the investment.


Key Organizations to Engage

Organization Role Why Engage
EPRI (Electric Power Research Institute) Industry R&D; all major utilities are members Evaluation program access; credibility with entire US fleet simultaneously
NRC (Nuclear Regulatory Commission) Regulator Participate in ARCOP SMR inspection framework development
IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) Global nuclear safety Favors robotic inspection; provides international credibility
ANS (American Nuclear Society) Technical community Technical credibility; publications
DOE Office of Nuclear Energy Funding; policy ARDP funding for advanced reactor support
Holtec International Decommissioning #1 decommissioning contractor in US; owns 8+ plants

Key Events

Event Date Location Purpose
ANS Annual Meeting June Various Technical audience; present early results
NRC Regulatory Information Conference (RIC) March Rockville, MD NRC staff engagement; SMR inspection framework
Waste Management Symposia March Phoenix, AZ Decommissioning/waste management community
EPRI Nuclear Maintenance Application Center Quarterly Various Utility maintenance engineering community
DOE NNSA Tech Transfer events Various DOE labs Lab partnership opportunities

Regulatory Strategy

Do not try to fight the NRC process — work within it.

  1. Engage ARCOP early — NRC is actively writing the inspection framework for SMRs. Getting Drover's capabilities into the ARCOP framework means it will be required (or approved) from day 1 of SMR operations.

  2. EPRI evaluation report — An EPRI evaluation report for Drover's nuclear inspection capabilities is the fastest path to utility acceptance. EPRI results are trusted by all member utilities.

  3. 10 CFR 50.59 evaluation — Utility safety review process for introducing new technologies to operating plants. Have a legal/nuclear engineering consultant ready to support this review.

  4. NRC source: NUREG-2165 — "Safety and Regulatory Considerations for the Application of Carbon Fiber Reinforced Polymers to Nuclear Power Plants" as example of NRC approving new materials/tech. Similar path for autonomous robots.


Sources