'General Atomics' is a nuclear physics and
defense contractor headquartered in
San Diego, California. Among other things, it is the manufacturer of the
Predator unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV).
History

The TRIGA nuclear reactor was one of the first General Atomics projects
General Atomics was conceived in
1955 at
San Diego,
California for the purpose of harnessing the power of nuclear technologies for the benefit of the
United States of America. It was founded on
July 18, as the General Atomic division of
General Dynamics.
It was sold in
1967 to
Gulf Oil and renamed Gulf General Atomic.
In
1973 it was renamed General Atomic Company when
Shell was a partner in the company. Shell left the venture in
1982 and Gulf named it GA Technologies Inc.
Chevron purchased Gulf in
1984.
In
1986 it was sold to a company owned by
Neal Blue and
Linden Blue when it assumed its current name.
The initial projects were the
TRIGA nuclear reactor and
Project Orion.
In
2007, General Atomics was developing a next generation nuclear power plant design, the
Gas Turbine Modular Helium Reactor (GT-MHR).
Business groups
Business groups include:
★ Advanced Technologies Group
★
★ Advanced Process Systems Division
★
★ Electromagnetic Systems Division
★
★ Systems Engineering Division
★
★ Nuclear Waste Management
★ Energy Group
★
★ Controlled Fusion
★
★ Power Reactors
★
★ Photonics
★ Nuclear Fuels Group
Affiliated Companies

The Predator UAV is made by General Atomics affiliate General Atomics Aeronautical Systems
★ General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI)
★
★ Aircraft Systems Group
★
★ Reconnaissance Systems Group
★ General Atomics Electronic Systems (GA-ESI)
★ ConverDyn
★
Cotter Corporation
★ Heathgate Resources Pty, Ltd.
★ Nuclear Fuels Corporation
★ Rio Grande Resources Corporation
★ TRIGA International (with
CERCA, a subsidiary of
Areva)
★ General Atomics Power Inverters
Controversy
Government influence
General Atomics was the single biggest corporate underwriter of Congressional trips between January 2000 and June 2005, according to a nine-month study of congressional travel disclosure forms. The company spent more than $660,000 on 86 trips taken by members of Congress, their aides and families. Most of that was spent on overseas travel related to the unmanned Predator spy plane made by General Atomics Aeronautical Systems.
The company said it had sponsored travel for members of Congress and their staffs "to promote enhanced understanding of General Atomics' technology research and product development." The company also noted that excursions were reviewed by "the appropriate Congressional ethics committees prior to travel."
In April 2002, for example, the company paid for Letitia White, who was then a top aide to Representative
Jerry Lewis, and her husband to travel to Italy. White left Lewis' office nine months later, to become a lobbyist at Copeland Lowery. The next day, she began representing General Atomics. Lewis, her former boss, was at the time chairman of the House Defense Appropriations subcommittee.
[1] (see
Jerry Lewis - Lowery lobbying firm controversy)
Other controversy
In 2001 the company was sued for allegedly overcharging the U.S. government for projects between 1992 and 2001.
[2]
See also
★
Patents assigned to General Atomics
★
General Atomics Affiliates
★
List of nuclear reactors
★
Tokamak
★
MQ-1 Predator
★
MQ-9 Reaper
★
General Atomics Altus
★
GNAT-750
★
HT3R
References
1. "Report: Trips buy 'access that you and I can't get'"
2. "General Atomics: Color It Blue"
External links
★
General Atomics
★
about General Atomics
★
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems