Monday, November 9, 2020

WNN Daily World Nuclear News 9 November 2020

  9 November 2020

NEW NUCLEAR: Belarusian President celebrates start-up of new reactor

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has inaugurated the country's first nuclear power reactor. Lukashenko visited the site in Ostrovets on 7 November, where he witnessed the increase in the generating capacity of unit 1 to 400 MW. The unit, which was connected to the grid five days ago, is the first of the VVER-1200 design to be built outside Russia.

"Is the area of the construction and maintenance site larger than the plant itself? I had the impression that it is almost twice as large," Lukashenko said, according to a statement on the president's website.

Energy Minister Viktor Karankevich told him that 130 different buildings and structures had been constructed and covered an area of more than 100 hectares. "With the launch of the first unit, 88 facilities will be commissioned, with the launch of the second one - 42," he added.

At the BelNPP training centre, where the President was briefed on work to commission the plant and its integration into the country's economy, he said the plant's start-up was "a historic moment" for the country.

Karankevich said the plant will produce about 18 TWh annually and enable Belarus to replace about 4.5 billion cubic meters of natural gas per year, save more than USD500 million and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than 7 million tonnes per year.

“The lifespan of the plant is 60 years with the possibility of extension to 100 years," the minister added. In total, more than 2500 specialists will work at the Belarusian nuclear power plant, about 60 of them from Russia and Ukraine with experience in working at nuclear power plants.

Lukashenko discussed the prospects of cooperation with Russia in nuclear energy with Aleksey Likhachov, the director general of Rosatom, who also attended the president's visit to the plant. Likhachov proposed the creation of a Rosatom subsidiary in Belarus. The possible construction of additional units at the plant and the launch of an energy-intensive manufacturing base in the region were also touched upon. In addition, Rosatom, together with the Kurchatov Institute, offered the Belarusian National Academy of Sciences to build a research reactor.

"The launch of the nuclear power plant will open up new opportunities for the national economy and will allow Belarus to develop other sectors such as electric transport. However, it is important to create our own battery," Lukashenko said. "As soon as we design our own battery for electric vehicles we will fully switch to electric [transport], ahead of other countries," he added. Another priority, he said, is converting residential heating to electricity.

Speaking to reporters during the visit, Lukashenko said opposition to the Belrusian plant by neighbouring countries was "just envy and competition". He added: "These neighbours are 10 years behind us in NPP construction. We're ahead of them, and they should admit it."

Construction of the Ostrovets plant has spurred the development of other sectors, especially the construction industry and the building materials sector, he said. It will also boost the development of environmentally friendly transport, and give the country an opportunity to reduce its consumption of natural gas.

"Many large sectors of the economy are moving forward. We have invested almost USD7 billion in our economy. If we decide to build the second plant, this will be a good stimulus for the development of the economy; a locomotive that will create momentum for many sectors of the economy," he said.

In a separate statement, Rosatom said the unit will enter the trial operation stage in late November-early December. Commercial operation is scheduled for the first quarter of 2021.

Rosatom subsidiary Atomenergomash is the supplier of key equipment for the nuclear island for the Belarusian NPP. Its fuel assemblies were manufactured by TVEL at the Novosibirsk Chemical Concentrates Plant, with enrichment level of between 1.3% and 4.4%.

NEW NUCLEAR: Contract for first two Columbia class submarines for US Navy

The US Navy has awarded General Dynamics Electric Boat a USD9.5 billion contract modification option for construction and testing of the first two Columbia class nuclear-powered submarines, as well as associated design and engineering support. Electric Boat - a wholly owned subsidiary of aerospace and defence firm General Dynamics - is the prime contractor on the Columbia programme, which will replace the aging Ohio class of ballistic missile submarines.

The US Department of Defense said the modification to the integrated product and process development contract supports the fiscal 2021 construction start of the lead ship (SSBN 826) and advance procurement, advance construction, coordinated material buys and full construction of the follow hull (SSBN 827) in fiscal 2024. Work is expected to be completed by April 2030.

Electric Boat will perform about 78% of the construction of the Columbia class and recently shifted the programme to full-scale construction at the company's manufacturing complex in Quonset Point, Rhode Island. Construction of four of the six 'supermodules' will take place at Electric Boat's Quonset Point facility. The supermodules will then be transported by barge to the company's Final Test and Assembly facility in Groton, Connecticut, where the components will be assembled into a complete submarine in a facility now under construction specifically for the Columbia class.

At 170 metres long, with a displacement of nearly 21,000 tonnes, the submarines of the Columbia class will be the largest ever built by the USA. It will be constructed with a life-of-ship reactor resulting in a shorter mid-life maintenance period. As a result, strategic nuclear deterrence requirements can be met with a smaller overall force structure of 12 Columbia class submarines, compared to fourteen Ohio class submarines, saving over USD40 billion in acquisition and operational costs, the US Navy said.

General Dynamics recently reported that the design maturity for Columbia was almost 90% complete, nearly twice the level of design completion of the lead Virginia class submarine when it started construction.

REGULATION & SAFETY: European project to bolster earthquake protection

A new EU-funded project aims to improve confidence in nuclear safety by advancing the approach to seismic safety assessments for nuclear power plants. The 'methods and tools innovations for seismic risk assessment' (METIS) Horizon 2020 project is being led by France's EDF Group.

The METIS project was officially launched after a virtual kick off meeting on 29-30 September. The project will run from September 2020 until 2024. It has a total budget of EUR5 million (USD6 million), of which EUR4 million is funded from the European Commission under its Safety margins determination for design basis-exceeding external hazards programme.

The METIS project will be delivered by an international consortium consisting of 13 European partners from France, Germany, Italy, Greece, Slovenia, the UK and Ukraine, together with three organisations from Japan and the USA. The consortium brings together universities, research organisations and industrial companies.

The research will develop methods to improve the ability to define safety limits for extremely rare events, which go beyond current design analyses. The refined seismic probabilistic safety assessment is expected to provide meaningful support in defining regulations for safe design of nuclear power plants, as well as for assessing plant safety in real-time in case of temporary unavailability of relevant safety equipment or structures.

EDF said the outcome of the project will allow for "risk-informed decision-making in the European context and METIS will help to optimise the use of existing and future reactors and will contribute to competitiveness of the European nuclear industry."

Horizon 2020 is the biggest EU Research and Innovation programme ever with nearly EUR80 billion of funding available over seven years (2014 to 2020). It is the financial instrument for Innovation Union, a Europe 2020 flagship initiative aimed at securing Europe's global competitiveness.

NEW NUCLEAR: Rolls-Royce and ČEZ to explore SMR deployment

British engineering company Rolls-Royce and Czech utility ČEZ have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to explore the potential for small modular reactors in the Czech Republic. Rolls-Royce is leading the UK SMR Consortium, which also includes Assystem, Atkins, BAM Nuttall, Jacobs, Laing O’Rourke, National Nuclear Laboratory, Nuclear Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre and TWI. ČEZ has already entered into similar agreements with NuScale and GE Hitachi.

The UK SMR concept is a standard small pressure water reactor, with a planned operating time of 60 years and installed power of 440 MWe. The construction period of the entire facility should not exceed five years, ČEZ noted.
Tom Samson, interim CEO of the UK SMR Consortium, said: “The affordability and speed with which we can assemble the entire power station will no doubt make it a very attractive option for ČEZ as it looks to its future reliable low-carbon energy supply."

Daniel Beneš, chairman of ČEZ added: "New energy solutions and technologies play an important role in our business and we have been focusing on small modular reactors for quite some time now, especially in our top research company UJV Řež. In the future, they can be an important alternative that we cannot ignore."

ČEZ operates six units at its Dukovany and Temelín nuclear power plants, which produce more than a third of all electricity in the Czech Republic. ČEZ subsidiary Elektrárna Dukovany II is currently working on the construction of a new unit at the Dukovany site. It intends to operate the existing units for 60 years.

Bohdan Zronek, a director of ČEZ's Nuclear Energy Division, said: "Although we are working intensively on a new reactor unit at Dukovany, we are involved in these projects with a view to further development of nuclear energy, whose position in the energy mix of our company will continue to grow."



IN OTHER NEWS:

US president-elect Joe Biden has published his priorities on climate change, including investment in the power sector and innovation. His future administration would "move ambitiously to generate clean, American-made electricity to achieve a carbon pollution-free power sector by 2035" and "drive dramatic cost reductions in critical clean energy technologies, including battery storage, negative emissions technologies, the next generation of building materials, renewable hydrogen, and advanced nuclear - and rapidly commercialise them, ensuring that those new technologies are made in America".

China National Nuclear Corporation on 5 November inaugurated a new business unit - Zhongyuan Operation and Maintenance Overseas Engineering Company Limited - to provide overseas operation and maintenance services. Based in Shanghai, Zhongyuan O&M was jointly funded and established by CNNC subsidiaries China Zhongyuan Engineering Company, China Nuclear Power Company, China Nuclear Environmental Protection Company and China Nuclear Maintenance Company. CNNC said this marks an important achievement its integration of its internal operation and maintenance advantages and building the group's international brand for overseas operation and maintenance.

An amendment has been signed to the Practical Arrangements between the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Asian Regional Office of the Regional Cooperative Agreement, formally extending their collaboration by an additional three years until September 2023. Organised under the auspices of the IAEA, RCARO provides an intergovernmental framework through which member countries in the region can promote and coordinate research, development and training projects in nuclear science and technology.

On behalf of the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission, Orano TN is organising the return of three isotopic generators containing strontium 90 to the USA. These were used to generate electricity to supply beacons at sea for research purposes. The three generators were transported from CEA Saclay to Cherbourg where they were loaded on a vessel chartered by International Nuclear Services Limited before setting out for Charleston, South Carolina, in order to reach their final destination in a storage site in Nevada.

9 November 2020

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