Naval Reactors
Naval Reactors is an umbrella term for the U.S. government office that has comprehensive responsibility for safe and reliable operation of the United States Navy's nuclear propulsion program. A single entity, it has authority and reporting responsibilities within both the United States Department of the Navy, and the United States Department of Energy.
Program responsibilities are delineated in , and prescribed by Public Laws 98-525 of October 19, 1984, and 106-65 of October 5, 1999.
History
Soon after his U.S. Navy service during World War II, Captain Hyman G. Rickover became an early advocate of nuclear marine propulsion. Assigned to the Bureau of Ships in September 1947, Rickover received training in nuclear power at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and worked with the Bureau to explore the possibility of nuclear ship propulsion. In February 1949 he received an assignment to the Division of Reactor Development, United States Atomic Energy Commission and then assumed control of the Navy's effort as Director of the Naval Reactors Branch in the Bureau of Ships.The office was originally a joint activity of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and the U.S. Navy's Bureau of Ships. When the AEC was abolished, Naval Reactors became a joint effort of the Navy and the Energy Research and Development Administration, which partly replaced the AEC. In 1977, ERDA was combined with the Federal Energy Administration to form the U.S. Department of Energy. On the Navy side of the organization, the Bureau of Ships has transitioned since the 1950s to become the Naval Sea Systems Command, within which NR is Code 08, usually abbreviated NAVSEA 08 or SEA 08.
Within seven years of its inception, the organization that developed from this concept would put into operation the nation's first power reactor. The following four years would see three more nuclear submarines and two reactor plant prototypes operating and another seven ships and two prototypes being built. To date, more reactors have been built and safely operated by the NR program than any other US program.
Hyman G. Rickover parlayed an impressive personal publicity effort and intensive links with the United States Congress into an unprecedented tenure situation as head of Naval Reactors whereby he could not be relieved by conventional military procedures. He was promoted successively, partially as a result of Congressional involvement, until he reached the rank of full Admiral and held the position for over 30 years from 1949 to February 1, 1982.
The history of nuclear propulsion and Rickover's influence and involvement is substantial. Due to the transcendent importance and impact of nuclear power, the AEC commissioned the creation of two related historical records to capture important facts of both naval nuclear propulsion and the Shippingport commercial reactor. Both of these official documents necessarily contain a good deal of information on Rickover's choices, methods and technical philosophy in the development of practical nuclear power, but are not biographies. While Rickover cooperated to provide real-time access to facilities, people and records, according to the authors he did not edit; Rickover was in-fact deceased before the second document was completed. These are: Nuclear Navy, 1946-1962 by AEC staff historians Richard G. Hewlett and Francis Duncan, and Rickover and the Nuclear Navy: The Discipline of Technology by Francis Duncan. The AEC makes both of these documents directly available to the public in digital form.
The Director of Naval Reactors also concurrently serves as a Deputy Administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration.
Start | End | Director |
Feb 1949 | Feb 1, 1982 | Admiral Hyman G. Rickover |
Feb 1, 1982 | Oct 22, 1988 | Admiral Kinnaird R. McKee |
Oct 22, 1988 | Sept 27, 1996 | Admiral Bruce DeMars |
Sept 27, 1996 | Nov 5, 2004 | Admiral Frank "Skip" Bowman |
Nov 5, 2004 | Nov 2, 2012 | Admiral Kirkland H. Donald |
Nov 2, 2012 | Aug 14, 2015 | Admiral John M. Richardson |
Aug 14, 2015 | Present | Admiral James F. Caldwell, Jr. |