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PRESS RELEASE
China Completing the Nuclear Fuel Cycle
Jan.
7, 2018 (EIRNS)—China has begun pouring concrete for one of the world’s
first Generation IV nuclear breeder reactors, the CFR-600, on the coast
of Fujian province, about 400km south of Shanghai. The 600MW
demonstration unit, which is due to be complete in 2023, follows a 20MW
experimental reactor completed in 2011. It is intended to be the
prototype of a 1GW commercial reactor scheduled for around 2030.
The
significance of the sodium-cooled reactor is that it points the way to
the fast breeder fourth generation designs that are expected to be
adopted by the global nuclear power industry over the next century. It
is not the only design that the Chinese industry is pursuing. Another
Generation IV fast breeder is being built in nearby Jiangxi province.
This uses pebble-bed fuel and a helium cooling system.
The
advantage of these reactors, which use fast neutrons to split uranium
atoms, is that they are about 60 times more fuel efficient than slow
reactors, they generate less radioactive waste, and they can be used in a
closed cycle system, in which waste is reprocessed into new fuel. This
last requirement is particularly important for China, which is planning a
massive expansion of its nuclear fleet, but is concerned about future
shortages of uranium. The China Institute of Atomic Energy, which
designed the CFR-600, is envisaging an increase in output from 40GW in
2015 to 400GW in 2050, at which time it is forecast that nuclear will
account for 16% of the country’s 2,500GW installed capacity.
Speaking
at the inauguration ceremony, Wang Shoujun the chairman of China
National Nuclear Corp. commented: "The fast neutron reactor project has
been recognized as China’s major scientific and technological nuclear
energy programme, which is of much significance for the closed cycle of
nuclear fuel, promoting the sustainable development of China’s nuclear
energy and boosting the local economy." |
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