First, the U.S. should double down on technologies where we can innovate quickly to define the future instead of chasing where China already has scale. Advanced nuclear is a key technology area where U.S. companies are rapidly innovating small modular reactors (SMRs), microreactors, fusion machines and more. By some estimates, the market for new nuclear generation could reach about $380 billion annually by 2050, presenting a huge strategic and commercial opportunity for American innovators. Enhanced geothermal systems present another technology area where the U.S. currently holds genuine technological superiority over China and Russia with advanced drilling techniques adapted from the oil and gas industry. The International Energy Agency forecasts that geothermal could meet up to 15 percent of global electricity demand growth through 2050. These are not niche technologies. They are high-potential platforms for American leadership.
Second, energy innovation only matters if the technology can be built at speed and scale. That means modernizing permitting, strengthening domestic manufacturing and putting steel in the ground for the infrastructure needed to support rising electricity demand. In this environment, slow approvals for transmission lines, reactors, mines and pipelines are not just frustrating. They are a competitive disadvantage. If it takes America too long to build, our competitors will pass us by and the world will buy from someone else.
Third, for American innovators to win in global energy markets, tools like the U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM), the International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) and the Trade and Development Agency (USTDA) can help level the playing field if they are used with a clear strategic purpose. American innovation should not stop at our borders. It should power a stronger global demand for clean, affordable and reliable U.S. energy. But our economic policy tools must be fit for purpose. Reauthorizing and modernizing EXIM this year would be an important step forward. With the right enhancements, EXIM can help scale advanced nuclear, geothermal, LNG infrastructure and other strategic clean energy systems in markets that are growing rapidly. Just as important is better coordination across EXIM, DFC and USTDA, along with closer partnerships with allies. Concepts like Energy Security Compacts offer a practical path by aligning diplomacy, project development, financing and exports into a unified approach.
This strategy is focused on ensuring that America shapes the next generation of global energy systems. The countries that finance and deploy these technologies will do more than win market share. They will build alliances, set standards and strengthen their position in the world all while reducing global emissions.
As Republicans, we should be confident in making that case. Supporting strategic clean energy systems is a practical extension of conservative principles. It means backing innovation, strengthening domestic industry, expanding exports and reducing dependence on adversarial supply chains. It means understanding that energy dominance and global energy leadership go hand in hand.
Jeremy Harrell is the CEO of ClearPath, a conservative energy organization whose mission is to accelerate American innovation to reduce global energy emissions.