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David Jordan's avatar

While satellite imagery provides a clear snapshot of physical ground-breaking, this report fundamentally overlooks the most critical value drivers for a project of this scale: Regulatory Moats and Supply Chain Integrity.

In the nuclear and utility-scale AI sectors, a project’s worth is measured in permits and partnerships long before the first reactor vessel arrives. By focusing solely on "dirt piles," this analysis ignores three massive pillars:

The Licensing Moat: The NRC’s fast-track EIS (Environmental Impact Statement) and COL progress are monumental regulatory milestones. Securing a site that is federally recognized for nuclear deployment is a generational asset that doesn't show up on a satellite feed but is the primary requirement for DOE loans and institutional financing.

Energy Optionality (TCEQ Permits): Ignoring the 11GW of TCEQ Air Quality Permits (6GW secured + 5GW in progress) for natural gas backup is a major oversight. This gives the project immediate viability and power-gen rights in the ERCOT grid, providing a bridge to nuclear operations that stabilizes the project's financial outlook.

Global Strategic Alliances: You cannot build a project of this magnitude without a world-class supply chain. The strategic commitment from Doosan Enerbility (one of the few global forges capable of producing AP1000 components) and Hyundai E&C (a leader in nuclear EPC) provides a level of technical backing that far outweighs the current state of on-site construction.

A project like Matador is won or lost in the regulatory and procurement phase. To judge a 60-billion-dollar nuclear-AI infrastructure play solely by its current brick-and-mortar footprint is to fundamentally misunderstand how modern energy-megaprojects are developed.

The real story isn't just what's happening on the ground—it's what's happening in the "invisible" layers of federal licensing and global supply chain alignment.

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