The Power Charter

Cheap, clean, ours — and no one dies because the power went out

The promise: Energy sovereignty built on standard-design nuclear, home solar and batteries, regional battery banks and tidal — with Utilico bills that show every component honestly. The first three years are the foundation, not the finish.

The plan, plainly

The safety rule (the air gap): every reactor is physically cut off from all outside networks — no internet, WiFi, Bluetooth, cellular, or remote control path. The dashboard watches the plant through a one-way data diode; it can never control it.

By Years 8–10: full fleet online, tidal scaling, a national battery network, most homes with solar, Britain a net energy exporter, and household bills materially lower than before.

No more dying because the power went out.


The charter above is the plain-English promise. Below is the original brief in full — reconstructed archive document, with the costed detail.

NRSA Distributed Nuclear Energy Plan

Three-Year Model

Status: Reconstructed archive document
Purpose: Early energy-sovereignty plan combining standardised nuclear build with distributed resilience.


1. Objective

Deliver energy sovereignty by combining:

The three-year model is not full completion. It is the foundation required for the Year Four to Year Ten energy transition.


2. Year One: Design and Groundwork

Nuclear

Utilico Energy

Save Power, Save Lives

Priority Services Register households receive:

Principle:

No more dying because the power went out.


3. Year Two: Build and Resilience

Nuclear Construction

Battery Banks

Distributed Solar


4. Year Three: Acceleration

Nuclear

Tidal

Utilico Coverage


5. Safety Doctrine

Air Gap

Every reactor and critical energy site is operationally disconnected from all external networks.

Dashboard receives status through one-way data diode only. The dashboard observes. It does not control.


6. Dashboard Metrics


7. Long-Term Target

By Years 8–10:


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