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Kernenergie

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India approves construction of 12 more nuclear reactors

India has approved the construction of 12 new nuclear power reactors. 10 will be indigenous Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors with a capacity of 700 MW each and two will be Russian Light Water Reactors. Two PHWRs each will be set up in Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka and Haryana, while four will be established in Rajasthan. The two LWRs each having a capacity of 1,000 MW will be built at Kudankulam in Tamil Nadu.

Currently there seven nuclear power projects are being constructed in India with a combined capacity of 5300 MW of capacity.

Besides work for the construction of two nuclear reactors with total capacity 1,400 MW at Gorakhpur in Haryana has commenced.

Source : Next Big Future
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Wood brings space technology to nuclear decommissioning

Wood is leading research to make nuclear decommissioning safer, faster and more cost-effective by innovatively applying new technologies developed in space exploration, car production and medicine. The company has secured approximately GBP 1.5 million funding from the UK’s government’s Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority and Innovate UK after winning a prestigious competition to find the best new ideas.

Wood and its supply chain will combine new data and control systems with state-of-the-art robotics to design a demonstrator system for cleaning and dismantling highly radioactive rooms or ‘cells’ at Sellafield in Cumbria, UK, Europe’s most complex nuclear site.

The technologies used in Wood’s project include novel material handling solutions to reduce the risks of working at height, mixed reality headsets, a multi-fingered gripper allowing robots to grasp different objects, and a navigation system designed for missions to Mars that enables autonomous mapping where human access is impossible.

Mr Bob MacDonald, CEO of Wood’s Specialist Technical Solutions business, comments that “Our innovative proposal for a fully remote solution removes the operator from a hazardous environment and is adaptable enough to tackle different tasks, many of which present unique challenges. Wood’s role is as an innovation integrator, bringing together ingenious ideas from industry and academia to define a new approach to the nuclear decommissioning challenge.”

Ms Melanie Brownridge, the NDA’s head of technology, said the response from suppliers and academic institutions had been so promising, that the total amount available to the five chosen projects has been increased from £3m to GBP 8.5 million.

She added that “We were all incredibly excited by the quality and diversity of the submissions, which came from established nuclear organisations as well as industries working with us for the first time – such as space and defence sectors.”

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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Britse energiereus zet kerncentrales te koop

Gepubliceerd op 22 feb 2018 om 09:16 | Views: 902

WINDSOR (AFN/BLOOMBERG) - Centrica gaat zijn belang in Britse kerncentrales van de hand doen. De grootste energieleverancier van Groot-Brittannië maakte dat donderdag bekend bij de presentatie van de jaarcijfers. Het bedrijf heeft een belang van 20 procent in de Britse kerncentrales van het Franse EDF.

Centrica had te kampen met een tegenvallende winst als gevolg van moeilijke marktomstandigheden voor zijn Amerikaanse dochter. Ook pogingen in het Verenigd Koninkrijk om energierekeningen voor huishoudens te beperken en concurrentie van nieuwe, kleine aanbieders zitten het bedrijf dwars.

Als reactie verhoogde Centrica zijn kostenbesparingsdoelen naar 1,3 miljard pond (bijna 1,5 miljard euro) in 2020. De verkoop van het belang in EDF past in dat beleid. Daarnaast worden nog eens 4000 banen geschrapt bij de onderneming, waarvan een kwart dit jaar. Daarmee komt het totale banenverlies bij Centrica sinds 2015 op 10.000, wat een kwart van het personeelsbestand is. Inmiddels zijn de kosten met 750 miljoen pond per jaar verlaagd.
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Czechs eye shortlist of global nuclear vendors

Radio CZ reported that ?EZ cancelled the tender to build new nuclear reactors in the Czech Republic in April 2014 saying that the project more or less did not economic sense given the government’s refusal to give guarantees that might make it work. Then, US nuclear construction company Westinghouse was in the driving seat in that tender ahead of the Russians with the French out of the game having failed to file the proper paperwork.

Four years down the line the nuclear market is dramatically different and ?EZ and the Czech government are attempting a different tack on the construction question. Westinghouse is now in bankruptcy administration. France’s Areva has morphed into a new state energy company amidst its own problems. But the Russians are still there and are joined by other companies and countries with fast developing levels of nuclear know-how and experience.

Mr William Freebairn, the senior managing editor of global nuclear publication Nucleonics Week, said that ?Certainly Westinghouse, the pre-eminent US reactor vendor, is wounded and perhaps badly. It is in bankruptcy although the plan is for them to exit bankruptcy in the coming months. There is a package prepared financially to do so. But clearly between that and the fact that the high profile projects in the United States that featured the latest generation of their reactor design have experienced cost overruns and extreme schedule delays, this has contributed to what you might imagine would be a difficult sales pitch when they are walking and trying to sell reactors to other countries. They don’t have projects they can point to as very successful. So that’s obviously going to be a challenge although they have indicated that they want to be in this business.”

He added that ?They don’t want to be involved in the construction portion of the business. They want to leave that to local companies and international companies that specialise in construction but they would like to provide the reactors themselves. And they are talking with India, they are continuing to talk there. It’s really the only country outside of China and the U.S. where there might be a future for their reactors at this time. So, only time will tell how badly they have been affected by their bankruptcy and US project problems.?

Source : Radio CZ
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Kakodkar moots solar-like subsidy for nuclear power

Mr Anil Kakodkar a former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission pitched for subsidising nuclear energy so that it competes with low-cost solar power. Mr Kakodkar on the sidelines of an event said that "Nuclear is also carbon-free, it is sustainable. I think nuclear should also be eligible for that kind of subsidy (enjoyed by solar and wind) as it is also clean.”

Mr Kakodkar was replying to a specific question on whether the subsidies given to solar power result in a competitive disadvantage for nuclear power. He said the nuclear energy industry should be given access to the clean energy fund which is collected from carbon-spewing activities.

Mr Kakodkar suggested soft loans can be given to the nuclear industry as well which will lead to a "drastic" reduction in tariff.

The scientist said at present there is some clarity on the funding side for nuclear projects as government has made an equity commitment of Rs 3,000 crore, that makes it possible for an investment of up to Rs 10,000 crore in the sector.

The country currently has 22 nuclear reactors across eight plants with an installed capacity of over 6,700 mw. Government has a stated target of increasing the same by nearly 10 times to 63,000 mw by 2032.

Capacity addition in the solar sector has been faster, which now has an installed capacity of 20,000 mw and is aiming for a five times increase to 1,00,000 mw by 2022.

But thanks to subsidy, solar power is much cheaper at INR 3 a unit while nuclear energy is almost double at over INR 5 a unit.

Mr Kakodkar said that "Today, the borrowing for nuclear power is at commercial rates. So compared to that, if you get finances from the clean energy fund, which is a soft loan that solar gets, the tariff will come down drastically.”

He said both nuclear and solar are clean sources of energy and has to go "hand-in-hand" to solve the large energy needs of the country.

Mr Kakodkar, who was a key member of the team which negotiated a deal with the US which ended the country's nuclear isolation in 2008, said he is "anguished" about a lack of progress despite the deal.

He said that "I have a bit of anguish. We have lost lot of time. Today, it looks to me that government has done everything that it needs to do or could do. It is for the professional community to deliver now.”

Source : Economic Times
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NNL signs major agreement with Sellafield

The National Nuclear Laboratory is delighted to announce the signing of a new Technical Services Agreement with Sellafield Limited. NNL and Sellafield Ltd have a long and proud history of working together, and the TSA will introduce a significant positive change in the way in which the two organisations work together. One of the most important commercial agreements ever signed by NNL, the TSA strengthens our shared history and sets the direction for years to come.

The 2 organisations signed a collaboration agreement in October 2016, and the TSA aligns with this and provides the legal procedures for placing work between the 2 companies.

Dr Paul Howarth CEO of NNL said that “We have a strong, multi-faceted and unique relationship with Sellafield Ltd. A large portion of our work has also been associated with Sellafield and the site hosts around half our workforce and our biggest nuclear facilities. This new partnering approach will enable us to work much closer with Sellafield Ltd on new innovative approaches to help tackle the challenges on the site and will enable us to bring in supply chain companies, academia and small to medium enterprises across different technology sectors that may be able to offer innovative solutions.”

Sellafield Ltd Technical Director, Rebecca Weston added that “This 17 year agreement is about applying a long term view to our work – which will help us work better and nurture the game changing ideas we need to achieve our mission, as well as giving the confidence to invest in the development of skills for the long term. We have many examples of fantastic collaborative work with NNL across our portfolio, although many areas where we don’t. This will help spread that collaborative approach and make it more consistent. It will enable us to make the best use of skills across our two organisations and very importantly proactively develop our supply chain and academic and national laboratory links, being smarter in the way we divide work up and getting the right people together to deliver what we need.”

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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New evidence of nuclear fuel releases found at Fukushima

Uranium and other radioactive materials, such as caesium and technetium, have been found in tiny particles released from the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactors. This could mean the environmental impact from the fallout may last much longer than previously expected according to a new study by a team of international researchers, including scientists from The University of Manchester.

The team said that for the first time, the fallout of Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor fuel debris into the surrounding environment has been “explicitly revealed” by the study.

The scientists have been looking at extremely small pieces of debris, known as micro-particles, which were released into the environment during the initial disaster in 2011. The researchers discovered uranium from nuclear fuel embedded in or associated with caesium-rich micro particles that were emitted from the plant’s reactors during the meltdowns. The particles found measure just five micrometres or less; approximately 20 times smaller than the width of a human hair. The size of the particles means humans could inhale them.

The reactor debris fragments were found inside the nuclear exclusion zone, in paddy soils and at an abandoned aquaculture centre, located several kilometres from the nuclear plant.

It was previously thought that only volatile, gaseous radionuclides such as caesium and iodine were released from the damaged reactors. Now it is becoming clear that small, solid particles were also emitted, and that some of these particles contain very long-lived radionuclides; for example, uranium has a half-life of billions of years.

Dr Gareth Law, Senior Lecturer in Analytical Radiochemistry at the University of Manchester and an author on the paper, said that “Our research strongly suggests there is a need for further detailed investigation on Fukushima fuel debris, inside, and potentially outside the nuclear exclusion zone. Whilst it is extremely difficult to get samples from such an inhospitable environment, further work will enhance our understanding of the long-term behaviour of the fuel debris nano-particles and their impact.”

The Tokyo Electric Power Company is currently responsible for the clean-up and decommissioning process at the Fukushima Daiichi site and in the surrounding exclusion zone. Dr Satoshi Utsunomiya, Associate Professor at Kyushu University (Japan) led the study.

He added that “Having better knowledge of the released microparticles is also vitally important as it provides much needed data on the status of the melted nuclear fuels in the damaged reactors. This will provide extremely useful information for TEPCO’s decommissioning strategy.”

At present, chemical data on the fuel debris located within the damaged nuclear reactors is impossible to get due to the high levels of radiation. The microparticles found by the international team of researchers will provide vital clues on the decommissioning challenges that lie ahead.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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A Visit to Chernobyl as it Transforms Into a Solar Farm

In April 1986 the nuclear accident at Chernobyl devastated a large swathe of land in the north of Ukraine. The workers’ city of Pripyat was evacuated, to become one of the world’s most notorious ghost towns while dozens of villages in the vicinity of the nuclear power plant were similarly deserted as radiation polluted earth, air, and water alike. At the very heart of the Exclusion Zone however, the plant itself would remain a hub of activity.

Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant was still producing energy for 14 years after the accident at Reactor 4. In the wake of the disaster, amid the rubble and radiation, it was safer to allow the remaining fuel rods to burn out in their own time, rather than trying to remove them. Reactor 2 wasn’t shut down until after a fire in 1991; Reactor 1 followed in 1996. Reactor 3 was in use until December 2000, and since then Chernobyl has produced no energy at all until now.

The Ukrainian-German project Solar Chernobyl is preparing to launch a solar farm right next to the Chernobyl reactors. Due to go online early in 2018, the one-megawatt installation features 3,800 photovoltaic panels and will be capable of powering as many as 2,000 homes. A further 99 megawatts are planned for a future development, and the project, which has so far cost a million euros (USD 1.25 million) to build, is expected to pay itself off within seven years.

Ukraine currently has 12 active nuclear power plants, but it is no stranger to solar energy. It has been reported that Solar Chernobyl is the country’s first solar farm, but this is in fact the fourth such installation built on Ukrainian territory.

The Okhotnykovo and Perovo Solar Parks, in Crimea, were both commissioned in 2011 generating 82 and 100 megawatts respectively. A third was brought online in 2012, the 42-megawatt Starokozache Solar Park near Odessa in south Ukraine. Following Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, however, Ukraine lost its two largest solar farms. With Russian natural gas supplies now similarly cut off, the new installation at Chernobyl, though far smaller than the nuclear site’s original output of four 1,000-megawatt reactors, is nevertheless a welcome step in the direction of energy independence.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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Fukushima radiation levels dangerously high – Report

Economic Times reported that Tokyo, Greenpeace said that its towns in Fukushima prefecture, close to the disaster hit nuclear power plant, were exposed to excessive levels of radiation almost 100 times greater than safe levels. The survey said that in the towns of Namie and Iitate, located between 10 and 40 km from the Fukushima Daiichi plant and where evacuation orders were partially lifted in March 2017, radiation levels continue to be "up to 100 times higher than the international limit for public exposure."

Jan Vande Putte with Greenpeace Belgium, and leader of a survey conducted in the area, said that "This is public land. Citizens, including children and pregnant women returning to their contaminated homes, are at risk of receiving radiation doses equivalent to one chest X-ray every week. This is unacceptable and a clear violation of their human rights.”

The report also warned that all areas surveyed, including those where people have been allowed to return, had levels of radiation similar to an active nuclear facility.

The non-governmental environmental organization said the situation is "requiring strict controls".

Efe news reported that this was despite the fact that residents had lifted restrictions on access after years of decontamination efforts.

Japanese authorities have said these areas are progressively returning to normalcy after the massive 9.1-magnitude earthquake and resulting tsunami which struck on March 11, 2011, triggering the nuclear disaster at Fukushima.

The government had said that radiation levels in the reopened zones pose no risk to human health.
Japan also noted that the government data was corroborated by the country's medical experts and organizations such as the UN Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation.

Source : Economic Times
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Sudan and Russia to sign accord to develop nuclear power - SUNA agency

State news agency SUNA said that Sudan will sign a "roadmap" with Russia to build nuclear power stations during a visit to Moscow by Khartoum's electricity minister.

SUNA said Water Resources, Irrigation, and Electricity Minister Moataz Mousa, who left Khartoum, would meet the head of Russia's state nuclear agency Rosatom. The trip comes four months after Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir told his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin he wanted to discuss nuclear power cooperation with Russia.

SUNA quoted a spokesman for the ministry as saying the two sides would sign several memorandums of understanding including the roadmap "to implement a plan to develop nuclear (power) stations". It did not elaborate.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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Romania second reactor back at full capacity

Reuters reported that Romanian state owned nuclear power producer Nuclearelectrica said its second unit reactor was back at full capacity after its power generation had been halved on Sunday to replace a pump engine part. The company has two 706 megawatt reactors at Cernavoda in southeastern Romania, accounting for roughly a fifth of the country's power production.

Its first unit, which was shut down on Sunday to assess a defect which occurred at one of the plant's process systems, remained offline. Nuclearelectrica has estimated the shutdown would last for about 48 hours.

Source : Reuters
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Japan Shikoku Electric to scrap one nuclear reactor

Reuters reported that Japan's Shikoku Electric Power Co Inc said that it will decommission an ageing reactor at its Ikata nuclear plant as the country's power industry struggles to meet new nuclear safety standards set after the 2011 Fukushima disaster. The announcement brings to 15 the number of reactors being scrapped since the meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi plant more than seven years ago. The move comes as Japan's return to nuclear power is slowly gathering pace, although the industry still faces public opposition, court challenges and unfavourable economics.

Shikoku Electric will scrap the No. 2 reactor at the Ikata plant, about 720 km (450 miles) west of Tokyo. The reactor began operations in 1982 with a capacity of 566 megawatts but has been shut since 2012.

The decision took into account factors including the cost of reinforcing work to meet new safety standards and the need to extend the reactor's operations after a standard operating life of 40 years, the company said in a statement.

Shikoku Electric earlier decided to scrap the No.1 reactor at Ikata, while a Japanese court in December ordered the utility not to restart the No.3 reactor, overturning a lower court decision. The No.3 reactor has been idled for maintenance since October 2017 after resuming operations in 2016.

Just five reactors are currently operating out of 40 commercially viable units. All reactors in Japan had to be relicensed following the 2011 Fukushima disaster which highlighted shortcomings in regulation.

Source : Reuters
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België bevestigt: kerncentrales dicht in 2025

De twee Belgische kerncentrales in Doel en Tihange gaan dicht in 2025. Alleen als de komende jaren mocht blijken dat een tekort aan elektriciteit dreigt, zou kunnen worden besloten de levensduur toch te verlengen.

Buitenlandredactie 30-03-18, 16:54 Laatste update: 17:00
De regeringspartijen bereikten vandaag een akkoord over een energiestrategie waarin deze afspraak is vastgelegd. Over de veiligheid van de reactoren bestaan veel zorgen in de buurlanden, waaronder Nederland.

Langer open
De sluiting in 2025 was al voorzien, maar de laatste tijd opperde de N-VA, de grootste regeringspartij, de centrales langer open te houden. De partij kreeg de garantie dat de energieprijzen niet de pan uit rijzen en vergelijkbaar blijven met omringende landen.

Om de sluiting van de centrales op te vangen en aan de klimaateisen van Parijs te kunnen voldoen, zet de regering volop in op hernieuwbare energie, onder meer door meer windparken in de Noordzee neer te zetten.

Nederlandse gaskraan dicht
Het versneld terugschroeven van de Nederlandse gasproductie baart de regering geen zorgen. De Belgische energieminister Marie-Christine Marghem heeft ,,regelmatig en nauw'' contact met minister Wiebes en ,,werkt dan ook goed samen met de Nederlandse overheid'', laat haar woordvoerder weten.

België is voor 30 procent afhankelijk van het laagcalorische gas uit Nederland. De buurlanden hebben vastgelegd dat de gaskraan vanaf 2024 geleidelijk wordt dichtgedraaid en de levering in 2030 stopt.

De industrie kan al voor een groot deel draaien op hoogcalorisch gas. De installaties bij Belgische huishoudens worden de komende tien jaar aangepast. ,,Een verdere versnelling van de omschakeling van buitenlandse verbruikers is op dit moment niet mogelijk'', aldus Wiebes.

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Workers of Hanford Nuclear halts nuke power plant demolition after radiation exposure

ABC News reported that Seven decades after making key portions of the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, workers at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation are being exposed to radiation as they tear down buildings that helped create the nation's nuclear arsenal. Dozens of workers demolishing a plutonium processing plant from the 1940s have inhaled or ingested radioactive particles in the past year, and even carried some of that radiation into their vehicles.

The incidents have prompted the federal government, along with state regulators, to halt the demolition of the Plutonium Finishing Plant until a safe plan can be developed. The contamination has also shaken confidence in the massive Hanford cleanup, which costs the federal treasury around USD 2 billion a year.

Mr Tom Carpenter, head of the Seattle-based watchdog group Hanford Challenge said that "This is a very disturbing set of incidents.”

The Energy Department, which owns Hanford, has launched an independent investigation into the spread of radiation at the plant. The investigation will be conducted by an agency office that is not connected to work at Hanford.

Radioactive particles are known to have contaminated 42 workers, which led to the shutdown of demolition, the agency has said.

Carpenter said widespread worker contamination has been rare at Hanford in recent decades. Plutonium production ended in the 1980s and the site in 1989 switched its focus to cleanup of nuclear wastes.

Carpenter said that "It's one of the more serious events to happen in the age of cleanup at Hanford. There have been other incidents, but none rose to the level of plutonium contamination of this many people and private vehicles and being found miles and miles away."

Source : ABC News
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France's EDF March nuclear power production up 4.1 percent

Reuters reported that French state controlled utility EDF electricity production from its nuclear reactors rose by 4.1% in March compared with the same month a year ago. Nuclear power generation was at 35.7 terrawatt-hour (TWh), EDF said, compared with the same period a last year when output was hit by a high volume of outages.

Total nuclear electricity generation to date for 2018 stood at 112.9 TWh at the end of March, up 4.1% compared with the same period in 2017.

Nuclear accounts for over 75% of French electricity needs. EDF operates all 58 French nuclear reactors.

Source : Economic Times
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Kudankulam nuclear plant has advanced safety features – NPCIL

India Today reported that Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd told the Supreme Court that the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant has advanced safety features and it was designed to withstand earthquakes and other such threats. The NPCIL made the submissions before a bench headed by Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra. The bench was hearing an NPCIL application seeking an extension of time to complete the away-from-reactor facility for spent fuel according to the apex courts directions passed in a judgment in May 2013.

Representing NPCIL, Additional Solicitor-General Tushar Mehta told the bench, comprising justices Mr AM Khanwilkar and D Y Chandrachud, the process to complete the AFR facility was going on.

Advocate Prashant Bhushan, appearing for the petitioner, opposed the NPCIL plea and said even after the fuel rods were out of service, they remain radioactive for a long time. He referred to the 2011 Fukushima nuclear accident in Japan after a massive earthquake and followed by a tsunami, and said the spent fuel stored there was leaked in the environment and sea which caused radiation in adjoining areas.

To this, Mr Mehta said, the plant is specifically designed and has been "provided with all the advanced safety features. The spent fuel is stored near the plant, which is designed to survive earthquakes as per the specific site."

When Mr Mehta told the bench the process for an AFR facility was on, Bhushan claimed that even site for this has not been selected yet.

The bench asked Mr Mehta to inform it about the progress made in this regard and listed the matter for hearing in July.

NPCIL is seeking extension until April 2022 for the construction of an AFR facility for the Kudankulam plant.

In 2013, the apex court gave its nod to commissioning of the plant in Tamil Nadu but asked the government and the NPCIL to find suitably safe areas to dispose the nuclear waste. It also issued guidelines on commissioning, safety and security and environmental issues concerning the nuclear plant.

The project is an Indo-Russian joint venture to establish a nuclear power plant with six units in Tamil Nadu.

Source : India Today
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Doel 1 stilgelegd na lek in nucleair gedeelte

De reactor van de kerncentrale Doel 1 in Beveren is stilgelegd als gevolg van een lek in het nucleaire gedeelte. Dat heeft uitbater Engie Electrabel aan het Belgische TV Oost bevestigd.

Buitenlandredactie 28-04-18, 13:49 Laatste update: 14:39

In een uur tijd krijgt een medewerker de maximale hoeveel­heid straling die wij hanteren

De lekkage werd begin deze week vastgesteld in het koelsysteem van de reactor. Het herstel verloopt erg moeizaam, omdat de radio-actieve straling in dat deel van de kerncentrale zeer groot is. Tegenover TV Oost heeft Nele Scheerlinck, woordvoerder van kerncentrale Doel, tekst en uitleg gegeven over de lekkage. De oorzaak zou een barst zijn in een waterleiding in het hart van de kerncentrale. Het zou voor het eerst zijn dat dit type leiding gesprongen is. Daarom wordt nu gezocht naar de exacte oorzaak en een passende oplossing.

Dat is echter niet eenvoudig. Scheerlinck geeft aan dat medewerkers die de herstelwerkzaamheden moeten uitvoeren aan de leiding maximaal een uur aan een stuk kunnen werken op die locatie, vanwege de hoge stralingswaarden. ,,In een uur tijd krijgt een medewerker de maximale hoeveelheid straling die wij hanteren. Onze norm ligt lager dan de wettelijke voorschriften."

Mensen in de omgeving van de kerncentrale lopen geen gevaar. Door de leiding is er wat water verloren gegaan. ,,Maar niet veel. Het is ver onder de limieten die een automatische stop zouden veroorzaken. Er is geen impact op de veiligheid."

Onderhoud
Het onderhoud aan de reactor stond eigenlijk gepland tussen 29 mei en 1 oktober. Engie Electabel heeft nu besloten om het onderhoud meteen uit te voeren. De einddatum van 1 oktober blijft daarbij wel hetzelfde.

Het gebeurt wel vaker dat reactoren in Doel of Tihange, de andere kerncentrale in België, zonder vooraankondiging worden stilgelegd. In buurlanden is veel bezorgdheid over de veiligheid. Vorige week zaterdag deden zo'n 250 mensen in België, onder wie ook Nederlanders, aangifte tegen de Belgische staat, de uitbater en de Belgische atoomwaakhond FANC.

Gammel
Actiegroepen uit Nederland, België en Duitsland willen met hun actie bereiken dat de volgens hen 'gammele' kernreactoren worden gesloten. Zij voerden daarvoor onder meer het grote aantal storingen en stilleggingen aan.

Doel 1 werd in 1975 in gebruik genomen en is de oudste kerncentrale van België. In februari 2015 werd hij na veertig jaar stilgelegd, maar aan het einde van dat jaar werd hij weer op het elektriciteitsnet aangesloten. De Belgische regering heeft afgesproken dat de centrales uiterlijk in 2025 dichtgaan.

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Chinese mainland has 38 nuclear power units in operation

Global Times reported that Chinese mainland now has 38 nuclear power units in operation, with a total installed capacity of 36.93 million kilowatts. According to China Nuclear Energy Association, most of the nuclear power units are located in southeast China's coastal provinces, whose nuclear power generation makes up about 15 to 25 percent of total power generation.

Thanks to improving manufacturing capabilities, China now can produce eight to 10 core parts for pressurized water reactors each year.

However, nuclear power's share in the country's total energy generated is still low compared with the international average, and there is much room for improvement, according to Zhang Huazhu, a senior expert with CNEA.

China aims to lift its installed capacity of nuclear power units in operation and under construction to about 88 million kilowatts by 2020.

Source : Global Times
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Future of US nuclear power fleet depends mostly on natural gas prices

Existing US nuclear power generating plants operate under increasingly competitive market conditions brought on by relatively low natural gas prices, increasing electricity generation from renewable energy sources, and limited growth in electric power demand. Several sensitivity cases prepared for EIA’s Annual Energy Outlook 2018 show the potential effects on the US nuclear power fleet of different assumptions for natural gas prices, potential carbon policies, and nuclear power plant operating costs.

Currently, 60 nuclear power plants operate in the United States with a combined electricity generating capacity of 99 gigawatts. Nine plants with a combined 11 GW of capacity have announced plans to retire by 2025. Based on assumptions in the AEO2018 Reference case, which reflects current laws and regulations, EIA expects additional unplanned retirements will reduce total US nuclear generating capacity from 99 GW in 2017 to 79 GW by 2050.

Higher or lower natural gas prices. About half of the existing nuclear fleet operates in deregulated wholesale electricity (i.e., merchant) markets, where natural gas-fired generators can and sometimes do set the marginal price for electricity. For this reason, changes in natural gas prices affect electric power markets. Two sensitivity cases with different assumptions for oil and natural gas resources and technology result in higher and lower natural gas prices.

In the High Oil and Gas Resource and Technology case, lower natural gas prices lead to more nuclear retirements, and total nuclear capacity falls to 55 GW by 2050 in this case. Conversely, in the Low Oil and Gas Resource and Technology case, higher natural gas prices lead to fewer nuclear retirements, but nuclear capacity still falls to 83 GW in 2050. In all three of these cases, no additional nuclear plants come online beyond the units currently under construction in Georgia (Vogtle Units 3 and 4), but in some locations nuclear power plant capacity increases because of uprates.

Higher or lower nuclear operating costs. Operating costs have played a major role in recent retirement decisions. At least five currently operating nuclear plants have requested state-level price support to continue operating. In two sensitivity cases, assumed operating costs were raised or lowered by 20%.

On their own, changes in operating costs have a relatively minor effect on changes in nuclear capacity. With higher operating costs, nuclear capacity falls to 66 GW by 2050; with lower operating costs, nuclear capacity falls to 84 GWlevels that are 13 GW lower than and 5 GW higher than Reference case capacity in 2050, respectively.

Combined effects of higher and lower natural gas prices and operating costs. Four cases combine the assumptions above so that higher and lower natural gas prices are combined with higher and lower nuclear operating costs. Nuclear capacity increases the most in the case that combines high natural gas prices and lower nuclear operating costs, resulting in 134 GW of nuclear capacity by 2050, or 35 GW higher than current levels. Conversely, the combination of low natural gas prices and higher nuclear operating costs reduces the nuclear fleet to 18 GW, or about 18% of the current nuclear power fleet.

Effects of various carbon fees. Potential policies that would subject fossil fuel-fired power plants, such as those fueled by coal, natural gas, and petroleum, to fees based on their carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions would result in higher wholesale electricity prices, and in turn, would allow nuclear power plants which do not generate CO2 emissions to become more economically competitive.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
Bijlage:
voda
0
Hitachi's UK nuclear project to get guarantees from government

Reuters reported that Hitachi Ltd's Horizon Nuclear Power unit has received an assurance from the British government that it will guarantee loans for the construction of two reactors in Wales.

British Prime Minister Theresa May met Hitachi Chairman Hiroaki Nakanishi last week in London and asked him to go ahead the project, conveying the government's intention to fully guarantee the loans.

As the project costs have increased to meet new safety provisions, Hitachi is still pushing for the British government to take a stake in the project and guarantee electricity prices to ensure it is profitable, the Mainichi said.

The cost of the Hitachi project in Wales has ballooned to 3 trillion yen (USD 27.4 billion) due to the tougher safety measures, the newspaper said.

The British government is seeking new ways to fund nuclear projects after criticism over a deal awarded to France's EDF to build the first nuclear plant in Britain in 20 years, which could cost consumers 30 billion pounds (USD 41 billion).

Britain needs to replace ageing nuclear reactors and coal plants coming offline in the 2020s but high up-front costs have delayed the construction of new plants.

Source : Reuters
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