
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In the 1970s, the U.S. launched an ambitious plan to solve its growing nuclear waste problem: reprocess spent fuel into usable energy. The result was the Barnwell Nuclear Fuel Center—an ultra-secure, state-of-the-art complex in South Carolina designed to handle the nation’s radioactive leftovers. But despite half a billion dollars invested and near-complete construction, it never processed a single gram of fuel. What happened?
In this episode, we dive deep into the rise and fall of Barnwell—how Cold War optimism collided with nuclear non-proliferation fears, and how a symbol of energy innovation turned into one of America’s most expensive abandoned facilities. From political fallout to urban legends, the site’s story is stranger than fiction—and not quite over.
By Ryan Socash5
22 ratings
In the 1970s, the U.S. launched an ambitious plan to solve its growing nuclear waste problem: reprocess spent fuel into usable energy. The result was the Barnwell Nuclear Fuel Center—an ultra-secure, state-of-the-art complex in South Carolina designed to handle the nation’s radioactive leftovers. But despite half a billion dollars invested and near-complete construction, it never processed a single gram of fuel. What happened?
In this episode, we dive deep into the rise and fall of Barnwell—how Cold War optimism collided with nuclear non-proliferation fears, and how a symbol of energy innovation turned into one of America’s most expensive abandoned facilities. From political fallout to urban legends, the site’s story is stranger than fiction—and not quite over.

11,522 Listeners

2,967 Listeners

368,705 Listeners

10 Listeners

4,515 Listeners

12,855 Listeners