Unmatched Reliability


Unmatched Reliability


nuclear's unmatched reliability
Many of us take reliable electricity for granted. Flip a switch and the lights come on. Press a button and the elevator moves up or down. Plug in a tablet or cell phone and recharge it for another day of streaming video, texting and phone calls. Barring the occasional storm that interrupts power, the electricity we need is always there—and electric utilities and regulators work hard to keep it that way.
http://www.nei.org/Why-Nuclear-Energy/Reliable-Affordable-Energy/Unmatched-Reliability

What We're Told About Climate Change Versus What We're Told About Genetic Effects of Radiation


From Atomic Insights

What We're Told About Climate Change Versus What We're Told About Genetic Effects of Radiation


There are numerous similarities between the AAAS document titled What We Know: The Reality, Risk and Response to Climate Changeand the National Academy of Sciences 1956 document titled Genetics Committee Report Concerning Effects of Radioactivity on Heredity, one of six sections of the Biological Effects of Atomic Radiation.

Rod Adams

Rooftop Solar Shines Light On Bad Business Practices



Rooftop Solar Shines Light On Bad Business Practices
Consumers, State Attorney Generals and members of Congress have raised concerns that rooftop solar leasing companies are using deceptive marketing practices that overstate cost savings in order to get homeowners to buy their products, similar to what happened with the subprime mortgage crisis. Fortunately, serious companies exist that provide the true pros and cons of these systems in an overall long-term energy strategy that includes various technologies and strategies to fit the customers needs, often not pushing rooftop arrays at all.

What We Loved (and Hated) About Blackhat

What We Loved (and Hated) About Blackhat

Blackhat doesn't quite get information security right, but it has its moments.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2475359,00.asp

Friday, January 16, 2015

SNPTC:CAP1400 Demonstration Project was submitted to State Council

SNPTC:CAP1400 Demonstration Project was submitted to State Council

Chief Executive Officer at Dynatom International GmbH
The Chief Engineer of SNPTC, Wang Zongtang showed on January 15th that each preliminary work for CAP1400 demonstration project has been fundamentally completed. And it is waiting for the approval from the State Council at present.

He also said SNPTC is currently carried out the research on CAP1700 and is planning to start the fourth generation nuclear power technology at present.

Source: http://news.bjx.com.cn/html/20150116/582585.shtml

Koodankulam Nuclear Power Project is most accident prone, claims PMANE

 Koodankulam Nuclear Power Project is most accident prone, claims PMANE
Koodankulam Nuclear Power Project is most accident prone, claims PMANE - See more at: http://www.merinews.com/article/koodankulam-nuclear-power-project-is-most-accident-prone-claims-pmane/15903556.shtml#sthash.TucEfIwr.dpuf

http://www.merinews.com/article/koodankulam-nuclear-power-project-is-most-accident-prone-claims-pmane/15903556.shtml

Japan, Indonesia to codevelop ‘next generation’ gas nuclear reactor


Japan, Indonesia to codevelop ‘next generation’ gas nuclear reactor 

Japan and Indonesia will launch a joint project to develop a high-temperature gas-cooled nuclear reactor (HTGR) this spring, The Yomiuri Shimbun has learned.

http://the-japan-news.com/news/article/0001857955

Nuclear power safer than ever: China

 Nuclear power safer than ever: China
Nuclear power safer than ever: China
Nuclear power safer than ever: China
http://news.asiaone.com/news/asia/nuclear-power-safer-ever-china

NRC Celebrates A Milestone — 40 Years of Safety and Service

NRC Celebrates A Milestone — 40 Years of Safety and Service

Tom Wellock
NRC Historian
It’s been 40 years since the Nuclear Regulatory Commission began operations on January 19, 1975. To be sure, the agency inherited a mixed legacy from its predecessor, the Atomic Energy Commission. The AEC had established an approach to reactor safety still used today, but critics claimed it worked too closely with the nuclear industry to promote nuclear power. As a new agency, the NRC had to demonstrate that it would be an unbiased, independent regulator.
40yearsOver the years, domestic and international events have challenged the NRC to define what independence meant. A new video on the NRC’s YouTube channel shows us how, in the early years, the essential elements of the NRC’s character were developed and remains today. For example, as the video shows, between 1975 and 1979, the NRC dealt with a major fire at the Brown’s Ferry nuclear power plant in Alabama,  a controversial request to export uranium to India, staff dissent over reactor safety, and tough questioning of its research conclusions regarding the probabilities of nuclear accidents.
From these experiences, the NRC learned that being an independent safety regulator took more than legislation. It meant cultivating a diverse staff, seeking out dissent and heeding critics. Safety research needed to be conducted free of perceived bias, and it learned the limits within which a regulatory agency may act under the United States’ constitutional separation of powers.
All these lessons have proven to be an asset for the NRC when it dealt with its greatest crisis — the 1979 accident at Three Mile Island; and in learning lessons from watershed nuclear events at both Chernobyl and Fukushima. We hope you’ll take a few minutes to watch the video.

Japan Joins the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage

Japan Joins the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage

CSC signing by Japan
IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano (left) looks on as Ambassador Mitsuru Kitano, Resident Representative of Japan, signs the Convention of Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage at IAEA Headquarters in Vienna on 15 January 2015. (Photo Credit: D. Calma/IAEA)
Japan has submitted its instrument of acceptance to the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage (CSC), an important international instrument relating to liability and compensation for damage caused by a nuclear accident, triggering its entry into force.
The Permanent Representative of Japan to the IAEA, Ambassador Mitsuru Kitano signed and delivered the instrument of acceptance to IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano on 15 January 2015.
Congratulating the Government of Japan, Director General Amano said that this depositary action marks an important occasion, “as it paves the way for the Convention to enter into force three months from now, on 15 April.”
Director General Amano further mentioned that “the use of nuclear power looks set to continue to grow throughout the world in the coming decades and it is important to have adequate compensation schemes in place.” He noted that a number of instruments existed in this field, including the Vienna Convention, the Paris Convention and the Joint Protocol linking the two, and that the upcoming entry into force of the Convention on Supplementary Compensation for Nuclear Damage “is a valuable additional step towards establishing a global nuclear liability regime.”
Ambassador Kitano in his remarks stated that joining the CSC was an important step for Japan, an occasion that will lead to its entry into force, which is of great significance for the international community.
He further mentioned that Japan as a country that experienced the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station in 2011 has a responsibility to contribute to the establishment of a global nuclear liability regime. As there is an increased interest in nuclear power and energy, Japan would continue to encourage other countries, especially in Asia, to join the Convention.
A global nuclear liability regime that addresses the concerns of all States that might be affected by a nuclear accident with a view to providing appropriate compensation for nuclear damage is one of the elements of the Action Plan on Nuclear Safety adopted by IAEA Member States after the March 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident.
The CSC, which was adopted on 12 September 1997 to modernize and enhance the international legal regime in light of the 1986 Chernobyl accident, is an additional important step in this direction.
The Convention has two main objectives. The first is to establish a global nuclear liability regime in which all States may participate. Accordingly, the Convention is open not only to States that are party to an existing nuclear liability convention, but also to other States, provided that their national legislation is consistent with uniform rules on civil liability laid down in the Annex to the Convention.
The Convention also aims to increase the amount of compensation available in the event of a nuclear incident by establishing a minimum national compensation amount and an international fund, to which Contracting Parties will be expected to contribute in the event of a nuclear accident.
The Convention now has 19 Signatories and six Contracting States. With Japan joining the Convention, it will enter into force on 15 April 2015. The adherence of at least five States with a minimum of 400 000 units of installed nuclear capacity was required to bring the Convention into force, which has now been met.

PennEnergy's Top Oil & Gas News 1/16

Top Oil & Gas News

UAE energy minister: No change in OPEC policy amid sliding oil prices

$subtitles.get($x) The energy minister for the United Arab Emirates said Tuesday there are no plans for OPEC to curb production to shore up falling crude prices, and instead put the onus on shale oil drillers for oversupplying the market. … Continue Reading
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter

PennEnergy Video News Update

$subtitles.get($x) From the continuing drop in oil prices, to the Democrats' gamble on Keystone XL, to the downplayed impact of New York's fracking ban, all of the biggest oil and gas headlines are in the PennEnergy Video News Update. … Continue Reading
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter

This Week's Most Popular Oil & Gas News

Oil prices dip below $45 as OPEC signals no cuts

US House overwhelmingly approves bill for Keystone XL oil pipeline

Senate Democrats look to tweak bill on Keystone XL oil pipeline

Obama administration moves to create first methane limits for gas drilling

NY hydraulic fracturing ban seen as having little impact on supply

Petrobras fails to meet oil production output target

EPA: Proposal strengthens preparedness level and response to oil spills

Shell, Qatar shelve petrochemical project as oil prices fall

EIA: Market expectations of oil price uncertainty have increased in recent months

Is Keystone still necessary as oil and gas prices dip?

Ohio EPA: No contamination detected after oil refinery explosion

Venezuela, Saudi leaders meet and talk oil prices in Riyadh

British Columbia bans conversion of liquefied natural gas pipeline

Statoil intends to extend life of Norne field to 2030

Mexico's Pemex proposes to import US crude

Power Engineering's Top Stories 1/16

Twitter
Top Stories
Exelon, PHI reach agreement with New Jersey Board of Public Utilities on proposed merger
Exelon Corp. and Pepco Holdings Inc. have reached a settlement with the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (BPU) to review the two companies’ proposed merger, which was announced on April 30, 2014.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
US aims to cut methane emissions by nearly half
The Obama administration is putting the energy industry on notice that it intends to curb methane emissions by nearly half through regulations affecting oil and gas production.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
Abengoa to develop largest combined-cycle power plant in Mexico
Abengoa has been chosen by Mexico’s Federal Electricity Commission (CFE) to develop the Norte III project, a 924-MW combined-cycle power plant in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico as part of the National Investment Plan 2014-2018 recently announced by the Mexican government.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
Shaw Renewable acquires wind power project from Apex Clean Energy
D. E. Shaw Renewable Investments LLC (DESRI) and Apex Clean Energy (Apex) announced the sale of the 300-MW Balko Wind, a wind energy project in Beaver County, Oklahoma.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
The Week's Most Read Articles
Longview Power asks for more time to file bankruptcy reorganization plan
Longview Power and related coal-producing companies on Dec. 31 asked their bankruptcy court to further extend their exclusive right to file a chapter 11 plan through and including Feb. 28, 2015, and to solicit votes in support of that plan out through April 30, 2015.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
Kemper County IGCC power plant cost increases $25mn
A filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission shows the cost of the Kemper County power project has increased by another $25 million.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
EPC Firms: Are they Meeting the Needs of Power Generators?
In partnership with Power Engineering magazine, Flaspöhler Research Group of Kansas City performed an eye-opening survey of 64 key power generation executives to measure the utilization, performance and perceptions of engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) firms serving the power generation industry. Thirty two EPC firms were evaluated.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
Exelon Generation promotes nuclear execs
Exelon Nuclear has announced the promotion of Michael Pacilio to executive vice president and chief operating officer of Exelon Generation LLC; and Bryan Hanson to senior vice president, Exelon Generation, and president and chief nuclear officer of Exelon Nuclear.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
More Headlines
MidAmerican completes 3 more wind farms in energy project
Hawaiian Electric may implement rolling blackouts on Oahu
Enid Event Center now powered by 100 percent wind power
Squirrel's wrong turn leads to Ohio power outage
Tender open for two nuclear reactors in S. Korea
Concrete dome completed at UAE nuclear plant project
Burns named chairman of the NRC, will focus on safety
TVA names new EVP, General Counsel
Areva to perform nuclear power plant outage and maintenance services
UK’s Heysham 1 nuclear reactor returns to service
SheerWind to install wind power project for Tampa Electric
North Carolina solar power project ready for construction
Inslee pushes for cap-and-trade proposal
Entergy: Radiation rule violation should get lower rating
Report: Wind means more jobs, more energy for Carolinas
Armenian nuclear power project to break ground in 2018
Kurion robot to plug leaks at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor
Report: Fuel cell systems to reach $57.8Bn by 2023

Industry Trends
Henry Hub Average Natural Gas Spot Prices
The Henry Hub is the pricing point for natural gas futures contracts. Here's a look at how prices have changed up to Jan. 7, 2014.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas' Economic Indicators
The Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas offers a glimpse into how the markets are doing domestically and internationally.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter
EIA’s weekly coal production report
The U.S. Energy Information Administration has released its coal production report for the week ending Jan. 3.
Read More
Share: Facebook Linkedin Twitter