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Chinese nuclear power firms merge to fuel global clout - Report

Reuters reported that China Power Investment Corporation and State Nuclear Power Technology Corp have officially announced their merger, as Beijing moves to consolidate its nuclear power sector, aiming eventually to export reactors.

China Power producer currently controls about a tenth of China's nuclear power market, while the State Nuclear was formed in 2007 to handle nuclear technology transferred from US-based Westinghouse Electric Company.

Mr Wang Binghua, chairman and party secretary of State Power Investment Corporation, said that the new company, State Power Investment Corporation, is expected to own assets over CNY 700 billion and to post revenue of over CNY 200 billion annually.

China National Nuclear Power Corporation said in a prospectus published on Monday on the Shanghai Stock Exchange that the merger to form State Power Investment Corporation will increase competition between China's three major nuclear corporations in both domestic and international construction of nuclear infrastructure. The other major player in this sector is China General Nuclear Power Group.

China is contemplating a merger between CNNC and CGN which were set up as rivals to compete for projects at home and overseas but, under government prompting, have cooperated on a single reactor brand, Hualong 1, with the intention of eventually marketing it abroad.

Beijing said that in January it would aid the overseas expansion of Chinese firms, in particular in the rail and nuclear power sectors, raising hackles with some trading partners who fear it signals another wave of subsidized Chinese exports.

Source : Reuters
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Dozens of US firms bet on nuclear power revolution - Report


Reuters reported that the Pentagon's top arms provider and firms partly funded by Silicon Valley billionaires Bill Gates and Paul Allen are among dozens of companies collectively betting more than USD 1.3 billion that a new wave of nuclear power can be a force to fight climate change.

Advanced nuclear power plants, which will employ techniques such as using fuels other than uranium and coolants other than water, have attracted private investments from more than 40 companies from Florida to Washington state, the Third Way think tank says in the first report specifying the number of firms and total money invested in the technologies.

Researchers at Washington, D.C-based Third Way said that the reactors, which could come into development in 10 to 15 years, can help curb US carbon emissions and make investments in electricity generation less costly.

Companies expressing faith in advanced nuclear power range from Lockheed Martin, the Pentagon's largest supplier, to Holtec International, which is building a $260 million technology campus in economically depressed Camden, New Jersey.

Gates has partially funded TerraPower, a company which aims to build reactors fueled by liquid metal, and Allen has partially funded TriAlpha, a company that plans to make nuclear fusion plants.

Mr Josh Freed, who directs the clean energy program at Third Way, said that “Investors realize cost competitiveness is the name of the game. The reactors are designed to be scalable so that they can produce energy at a per megawatt hour cost that's competitive not just with existing nuclear but importantly with fossil fuels and renewable energy."

Advanced nuclear reactors should be smaller than today's reactors and construction should take one to five years, rather than 5 to 6.

Critics of advanced nuclear say companies have yet to make small reactors economically viable despite decades of development by energy companies and the US military. Advanced reactors using new fuels, such as thorium, and new cooling systems, such as molten salt, are also difficult to make economically viable.

The nuclear industry has also been weakened by a political backlash following radioactive leaks at Japan's Fukushima power plant in 2011. And the US natural gas boom has slashed the cost of that fuel, making it harder for nuclear power to compete.

The Third Way report was not funded by the nuclear industry. But the think tank has received financial support from The Nuclear Energy Institute, the industry's lobby group, and Babcock & Wilcox, a company hoping to build small nuclear reactors.

Source : Reuters
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AP steps up nuclear power push with 2nd site offer

The Indian Express reported that Andhra Pradesh, a state that had curiously turned down its initial electricity allocation of 530 MW from the Kudankulam atomic power project a decade ago, is now in the race for a second nuclear site that could see it emerge as a major nuclear hub in the southern region. A team of officers from the Department of Atomic Energy and the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited are learnt to have met with the senior officers of the Andhra Pradesh government to discuss the feasibility of identifying a second coastal site to set up a nuclear plant in the state.

Andhra Pradesh’s concerted nuclear push marks a sharp departure from the state’s strategy of focussing on gas-based capacity in the early part of the last decade, most of which is now struggling for want of fuel.

At present, there are just 3 states in the country, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu, that have two or more nuclear sites. In case of Andhra Pradesh, the Centre has already shortlisted the Kovvada site to build a nuclear project with the assistance of GE-Hitachi Nuclear Energy and discussions are currently on with an US-based nuclear vendor to arrive at a project proposal. Talks for a second site in Andhra Pradesh are aimed at housing two Russian-designed VVER 1000 reactors that were originally supposed to come up at Haripur in West Bengal. The states of Kerala, Karnataka and Odisha were also learnt to be in the reckoning for housing the units to be built with Russian assistance.

The project would be the second Russian-assisted nuclear station, after the 2,000 MWe Kudankulam project in Tamil Nadu. The DAE’s site selection committee had earlier earmarked the Haripur site as a second site for the Russians to build a 2,000 MWe nuclear project, identical to the Kudankulam project. In 2011, Rosatom, the Russian counterpart of India’s DAE, asked India for an alternate site after a series of local protests.

Source : The Indian Express
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Three big changes that will boost India's nuclear programme

Economic Times reported that India's nuclear programme is set to get a huge boost thanks to three big changes. First, Japan has asked India for a dedicated nuclear reactor site, signaling that not only is it willing to shed all inhibitions of doing nuclear commerce with India but is also keen to be counted with the US, France and Russia as a power building nuclear parks here.

Second, India is giving big contracts for six reactors each to US blue-chip companies GE and Westinghouse. This is a big shift from India's long-standing policy of signing deals for two reactors at one go. The six-reactor deal with the two American companies will mean cheaper pricing for India.

Third, a critical component of the nuclear industry, the insurance structure, will be activated next month when Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited buys a nuclear insurance policy at Rs 100-crore premium from a consortium that includes General Insurance Corporation and a group called Nuclear Risk Insurers from Britain.

The Japanese willingness to set up a nuclear park in India is a major foreign policy advance. This is because Japan is the only country that has faced a nuclear attack and is still willing to invest in India, which despite the Indo-US nuclear deal is still a nuclear weapon state outside the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Meetings are slotted over the next few months to close Indo-Japan nuclear negotiations.

Tokyo's decision shows an even wider global acceptance of India's nuclear programme. Plus, Japan's government-driven investment plans have typically suited India most. Critical infrastructure projects, the Metro for example, took off on the back of the Japanese government's financial commitment. Capital-intensive nuclear programmes will benefit from Japanese involvement.

The 6-reactor-each order for Westinghouse and GE, which got finalised following US President Barack Obama's visit earlier this year, will lower costs, and costs have always been an issue while negotiating nuclear commercial deals with the US. The sites for these reactors are in Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh.

One reason why high per unit cost of power have typically been cited by US companies were the provisions of the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act that asked for what many stakeholders thought were very high order of compensation.

An insurance pool was a critical part of the liability setup, and GIC plus the British group's INR 1,500-crore insurance pool will cover India's civil nuclear programme, with NPCIL buying the insurance next month. According to the CNLD Act, this sum would be made available as compensation right away after any nuclear disaster or accident that impacts areas 10 km beyond the site. Payment will not depend on fixing responsibility and will be quick.

Since the CNLD Act made suppliers say, GE or Westinghouse liable for a nuclear accident, as opposed to global norm of holding the operator, in India's case NPCIL, responsible, nuclear liability rules became anti-investment. This issue was resolved through an insurance pool that covers risks for suppliers.

The resolution happened after PM Mr Narendra Modi came back from the US late last year and instructed officials that the issue must be solved without changing the law and without putting a big financial burden on the government.

Source : Economic Times

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Japan's Kyushu Electric Power to restart nuclear power reactors

Proactive Investors reported that Japanese utility Kyushu Electric Power will restart its two nuclear power reactors at Sandei in the next couple of weeks.

They may have been closed since 2011, but Japanese utility Kyushu Electric Power will restart its two nuclear power reactors at Sandei in the next couple of weeks.

Reports are that fuel loading will commence next month, placing a timeline of the plants once again being onstream in August.

Nuclear power at its peak accounted for close to a third of Japan's power, before reducing to zero after the Fukushima tragedy.

Currently 43 reactors are operable and potentially able to restart, and 24 of these are in the process of restart approvals

Nuclear power around the globe is gaining momentum, with the British and French governments having announced a nuclear power cooperation agreement.

France continues to derive some 75% of its electricity from nuclear power.

Saudi Arabia is proposing to build 16 reactors by 2030 and the Czech Republic is expected to increase the share of nuclear power in its electricity generation mix to between 46% and 58% by 2040.

China is on track to increase its nuclear capacity to 58 GW equivalent by 2020 from the current 23GWe while India has reiterated plans to increase its capacity 14 fold to 63GWe in 2032.

Cameco Corporation announced in April that it will provide the Department of Atomic Energy of India with 7.1 million pounds of uranium concentrate through to 2020 under a CUSD 350 million deal.

Source : Proactive Investors
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Green Austria on warpath against nuclear power in Europe

Austria's announcement Monday that it would challenge state aid for a new nuclear plant in Britain marks the latest step in the country's solo campaign to roll back atomic energy in Europe.

Since the late 1970s, Austria has been fiercely anti-nuclear, starting with an unprecedented vote by its population that prevented the country's only plant from providing a watt of power.

With the exception of Italy, Austria is surrounded by countries with nuclear power, although Germany, to the north, has vowed to phase out its plants by 2022.

Mr Andrae Rupprechter, Environment Minister, said that "It's an energy source from the last century."

He said, referring to the Hinkley Point C contract in western England, that "It is outdated because it's a non-sustainable, high-risk source that is only competitive with an unjustified subsidy."

Austria filed its complaint at the European Court of Justice after Britain proposed GBP 17 billion in state funds to help build two reactors, projected to cost GBP 24.5 billion.

Rupprechter is contesting a determination by the European Union's executive Commission last October, which found that the deal was compatible with EU state aid rules.

For the minister, the aid is 'illegitimate.' He said that "If we establish high subsidies for nuclear energy, we will never have an even competition situatio. The future lies in renewable resources and we have to create a level playing field to give these resources the fairness to compete in the market."

More than three-quarters of Austrian electricity comes from renewable sources, which also make up 34% of its total energy production.

It is already far beyond the EU target, which calls on renewables to meet 20% of energy needs by 2020.

Home to plenty of sun, wind and water, the nation hopes to increase that amount to 50% by 2030.

Source : Economic Times
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Monticello nuclear power plant starts sustained operation at higher power level

Star Tribune reported that 2 years after completing a costly upgrade to the Monticello nuclear power plant, Xcel Energy said that the reactor on Wednesday began sustained operations at the new, higher power output.

Xcel said that the power increase results in enough electricity to serve an additional 53,000 homes.

Mr Chris Clark, president of Xcel’s Minnesota regional division, said in a statement that “Our Monticello plant can now deliver carbon-free energy to more than a half-million customers.”

The upgrade, which also replaced equipment to extend the plant’s life, was plagued by construction challenges from 2009 to 2013. Cost overruns drove up the price from USD 320 million to a final cost of USD 748 million, including inflation and financing-related allowances. Even after the work finished, the power boost faced testing and regulatory delays.

The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission, after an investigation of the problems, largely blamed Xcel’s imprudent management for the cost overruns, and didn’t allow the company to profit from the investment. As a result, Xcel wrote off USD 125 million, nearly half its profits in the Q1.

The reactor has operated at 600 MW since 1998. Xcel has been testing the reactor at higher levels, generally operating from 640 MW to 656 MW since December, according to regulatory documents.

On Tuesday, Xcel said that the US Nuclear Energy Commission granted permission for sustained operation at its new capacity, 671 MW, a nearly 12% gain over its former output.

That opens the door for Xcel to include the cost of the power upgrade but no return on the investment in rates.

Mr Clark added that “This investment represents real value for customers and is a key part of Xcel Energy’s goal of delivering 63% carbon-free electricity to our Upper Midwest customers by 2030.”

The plant, located 45 miles northwest of the Twin Cities, began commercial operation in 1971.

Source : Star Tribune
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Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant-II to be commissioned in 6-8 months

PTI reported that the 2nd unit of the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant in Tamil Nadu will be commissioned in the next 6-8 months amid efforts to expedite the setting up of 12 atomic plants proposed to be built by Russia in India in two decades.

Giving this information in Moscow, Indian Ambassador to Russia Mr PS Raghavan said discussions are underway on the units III, IV, V and VI to be built at Kudankulam.

Process is also underway to identify a site in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh for a plant which was proposed to be set up in Haripur in West Bengal but could not materialise due to various factors, including protests by locals.

Mr Raghavan said that "We are committed to the Russians. In last December (during the visit of President Vladimir Putin to India), we had decided that we will speed up the nuclear plant manufacture and that in two decades, we will have 12 power plants."

Asked about the progress on unit-II of Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant which is behind schedule, he said that work is underway on the unit which will have the capacity to generate 1,000 MW of electricity.

The Ambassador said that "Hot run is already going on. I would say that in the next 6-8 months, it should be fully commissioned. It should be onstream."

He said that "There has been a little bit of delay but that is not significant delay."

Commissioning of the unit-II has been put off four times so far. The last time the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited had postponed putting the unit into commercial operation was this month.

On the causes for the delay, the Indian Ambassador said that part of it was that after Fukushima radiation exposure of 2011, there has been a progressive tightening of safety regulations by the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board.

He said that "As you go along, they specify more tests, more shutdown periods and longer test-running. Besides, part of the delay was on account of "their equipment matching with our equipment."

With regard to units III and IV, he said 'long cycle' contracts have been done. Mr Raghavan said that "So, it is going well, we are already talking about how to do unit V and VI."

He said that work is also underway to identify another site for Russian nuclear plants, in place of Haripur in West Bengal where problems had erupted.

He added that "Some places have been identified. Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh have shown interest in nuclear power plants."

Source : PTI
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India ranked 12th in terms of power generation from nuclear source


With the total power generation from nuclear reactors at 5308 MWe, India is ranked 12th in the world in terms of power generation from nuclear sources.

This was revealed by Dr. Jitendra Singh, Union Minister of State for Atomic Energy and Space in a reply to an unstarred question in Lok Sabha on July 22 2015 though the data with respect to this was published by Power Reactor Information System (PRIS) of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in May 2015.

Further, in terms of number of nuclear reactors in operation, India was ranked at 7th position with 21 reactors.

The released data further said that there are 31 countries including India in the world that generate electricity from nuclear source.

Moreover, with 437 nuclear reactors in operation in world, the total power generation from nuclear stood at 377986 MWe.

Top 5 countries in terms of nuclear reactors and their capacity of production are

Countries Number of Reactors Total Generation


United States of America 99 98639 MWe

France 58 63130 MWe

Japan 43 40290 MWe

Russia 34 24654 MWe

China 21 23025 MWe

On the other hand, Pakistan has 3 nuclear reactors with total production of 690 MWe.

The installed nuclear power capacity of India is expected to increase from 5780 MWe to 10080 MWe on progressive completion of projects under commissioning or construction by 2019.

Financial sanction and administrative approval for Gorakhpur Haryana Anu Vidyut Pariyojana and Kudankulam Units- 3&4 (2X1000 MW) with a total capacity of 3400 MW has been accorded by the Government.

In addition, one Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor of 500 MW capacity at Kalpakkam, Tamil Nadu is at advanced stage of commissioning. Construction of two more Fast Breeder Reactors of 600 MWe capacity each at Kalpakkam, Tamil Nadu is also planned.

Besides, India has signed nuclear agreements with USA, France, Russia, Namibia, Mongolia, Republic of Korea, Argentine Republic, United Kingdom, Republic of Kazakhstan, Canada, Sri Lanka and Australia.

Source : Jagran Josh
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Nuclear energy to account 60pct of Ukraine's power generation

Published on Wed, 05 Aug 2015 48 times viewed

Mr Volodymyr Demchyshyn, Minister of Energy and Coal Industry of Ukraine, expects that the share of nuclear power in total electricity generation across Ukraine will be increased to 60% from the current 55% by the end of 2015.

Mr Demchyshyn said when speaking at anti-crisis energy staff meeting in the Cabinet of Ministers, that "Currently, Energoatom is the main pillar of the electricity market accounting for 55% of the total power generation. I expect that this share will increase further next year. We estimate that the share of Energoatom in energy output can reach 60% by the end of the year."

According to the minister, increasing power generation by means of nuclear power plants, Ukraine will be able to reduce its dependence on imports of deficit coal grades.

Mr Demchyshyn said that "With an effective use of Energoatom we can reduce dependence on coal by at least 5 million tonne per year. That is the volume of coal we need to supply from external sources."

China shows interest in Ukraine’s nuclear energyUkraine is ranked seventh in the world in terms of nuclear power generation capacity. All power generating units are of VVER type. There are four nuclear power plants operating in Ukraine with 15 power generating units. Zaporizhia nuclear power plant has six power generating units with total capacity of 6,000 MW, being the largest in Europe.

Source : UNIAN
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Japan restarts first nuclear power plant since Fukushima disaster

Japan has restarted its first nuclear reactor under new safety rules following the 2011 Fukushima disaster.

All Japan's nuclear plants were gradually shut down after a series of meltdowns at the Fukushima plant sparked by the tsunami and earthquake.

But after passing stringent new safety tests, Kyushu Electric Power restarted the number one reactor at its Sendai plant on Tuesday morning.

There is still strong public unease about a return to nuclear power.

Protests have been taking place outside the Sendai plant and at Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's residence in Tokyo, about 1,000 km (600 miles) away.

The BBC's Rupert Wingfield-Hayes in Tokyo says that after being told a disaster like Fukushima could never happen, public confidence has been shaken.

A total of 25 plants have applied to be restarted, he says, but all are facing legal challenges from concerned locals.

Kyushu said reactor No.1 at Sendai began operating again at 10:30 local time (01:30 GMT).

Kyushu Electric spokesman Tomomitsu Sakata said the reactor had gone back online without any problems.

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It will be about 24 hours before a full reaction takes place, and the plant is expected to start generating power by Friday. It will reach full capacity some time next month.

Prime Minister Abe said on Monday that the reactors had passed "the world's toughest safety screening".

"I would like Kyushu Electric to put safety first and take utmost precautions for the restart," he said.

Source : BBC News
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E.ON laat plan vallen om Duitse kerncentrales af te stoten

AMSTERDAM (Dow Jones)--E. ON SE (EOAN.XE) heeft zijn plan losgelaten om zijn Duitse kerncentrales af te stoten en meldt dit jaar een zwaar nettoverlies te boeken na voor miljoenen af te boeken.

De groep zal de voorgenomen desinvestering van Uniper, een nieuw bedrijf dat de energie-opwekking business binnen en buiten Europa zal bezitten, volgend jaar wel voortzetten. Maar de raad van commissarissen stemde in met het voorstel van het management om de nucleaire business en gerelateerde activiteiten te behouden.

De gewijzigde koers is een reactie op plannen van de Duitse regering om de wetgeving te veranderen die nutsbedrijven permanent aansprakelijk stelt voor kosten gerelateerd aan de productie van kernenergie.

E.ON's eerdere voornemen om de nucleaire activiteiten af te stoten wakkerde beschuldigingen aan dat het concern zich wilde ontdoen van toekomstige kosten voor de ontmanteling van kerncentrales en de opslag van kernafval, en belastingbetalers de last zouden moeten dragen in het geval Uniper insolvent zou worden.

E.ON meldt dit jaar een aanzienlijk nettoverlies te boeken vanwege impairments die oplopen in de miljarden euro's en in dit kwartaal genomen worden. Dit weerspiegelt voornamelijk nieuwe assumpties met betrekking tot aanhoudende lage groothandelsprijzen voor elektriciteit en andere grondstoffen, evenals het toezichthoudend klimaat.


Door Friedrich Geiger in Berlijn. Vertaald en bewerkt door Ellen Proper in Amsterdam; Dow Jones Nieuwsdienst: +31-20-5715200; ellen.proper@wsj.com

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China General Nuclear to develop Kenya's first nuclear power plant

Break Bulk reported that China General Nuclear has signed a memorandum of understanding with the government of Kenya on the development of nuclear power in Kenya. The agreement was signed during a visit by Kenya Nuclear Electricity Board representatives to CGN's Daya Bay nuclear power plant in China's Guangdong province.

World Nuclear News said in a report that the new plant will be based CGN's Hualong 1 technology. In addition to analyzing the technology, the agreement calls for comprehensive cooperation in nuclear power development and capacity building in Kenya. This will include research and development, construction, operation, fuel supply, nuclear safety, nuclear security, radioactive waste management and decommissioning.

Kenya has a massive need for new power capacity. Only 30% of Kenya's population of 44 million have electricity. The government plans to increase generating capacity from 2 GWe to 5 GWe by 2016 and grow to 17 GWe by 2030 under its Vision 2030 program.

Earlier this month, a team from the International Atomic Energy Agency team conducted an Integrated Nuclear Infrastructure Review mission to Kenya and concluded the country had made significant progress in its preparations to develop a nuclear power infrastructure.

Source : Break Bulk
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Mr George Osborne expected to back Chinese nuclear power station in Essex

The Guardian reported that China is expected to be allowed to build a nuclear power station in Essex as Mr George Osborne embraced the world’s most populous country as an ideal partner for British business.

The chancellor, on a trade mission to the country, argued that Britain should “run towards China” to help boost the UK economy and signalled that China could build a nuclear site in Bradwell, Essex, as part of a wider nuclear co-operation worth tens of billions of pounds.

Speaking at a press conference, Mr Osborne sidestepped concerns over Downing Street’s growing proximity to Beijing. When asked about what US officials have called Britain’s constant accommodation of Beijing, Mr Osborne added that “I think it is important that, as China grows, it rightly takes its place at the top table.”

The chancellor also used his visit to announce GBP 6 million for cultural exchanges to boost tourism, including sending the British Museum’s blockbuster exhibition A History of the World in 100 Objects to China, plus tours of Mandarin versions of Shakespeare and the first world war drama War Horse.

Mr Osborne is due to visit the Shanghai stock exchange on Tuesday to pledge that Britain will “stick together” with the east Asian power, after a period when the Chinese stock market has been hit by sharp falls.

Aiming to establish the City of London as China’s bridge to western financial markets, Mr Osborne is expected to say “Whatever the headlines, regardless of the challenges, we shouldn’t be running away from China. Through the ups and downs, let’s stick together to grow our economies.”

However, despite Mr Osborne’s optimism, Mr Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of England, said that China could be heading for a rough economic patch. In a speech, Mr Carney described China’s economic ‘miracle’ in the last three decades as extraordinary, but noted that performance since the recession of 2008 to 2009 had been bolstered by a large build-up of debt, which has more than doubled to reach almost 200% of GDP.

The governor said that “Some were now questioning China’s glide path to global economic hegemony.”

The Bradwell site is owned by EDF, the French energy company. EDF is also the lead partner with two Chinese companies in the building of Hinkley Point C in Somerset, the first nuclear power station to be built in Britain for a generation and Mr Osborne unveiled a GBP 2 billion loan guarantee for the plant.

Source : The Guardian
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Nuclear power plants in culture of denial over hacking risk

Financial Times reported that nuclear power plants around the world are harbouring a “culture of denial” about the risks of cyber hacking, with many failing to protect themselves against digital attacks, a review of the industry has warned.

A focus on safety and high physical security means that many nuclear facilities are blind to the risks of cyber attacks, according to the report by think-tank Chatham House, citing 50 incidents globally of which only a handful have been made public.

The findings are drawn from 18 months of research and 30 interviews with senior nuclear officials at plants and in government in Canada, France, Germany, Japan, the UK, Ukraine and the US.

Mr Caroline Baylon, the report’s author, said that “Cyber security is still new to many in the nuclear industry. They are really good at safety and, after 9/11, they’ve got really good at physical security. But they have barely grappled with cyber.”

The report cites officials who describe the industry as being far behind other industrial sectors when it comes to insulating themselves against digital attacks.

Ms Baylon said that there was a ‘culture of denial’ at many nuclear plants, with a standard response from engineers and officials being that because their systems were not connected to the internet, it would be very hard to compromise them.

She said that “Many people said it was simply not possible to cause a major incident like a release of ionising radiation with a cyber attack but that’s not necessarily true.”

Ms Baylon described how systems and back-ups powering reactor cooling systems could be compromised, for example, to trigger an incident similar to that seen at Fukushima Daichi in Japan in 2011, the worst nuclear failure since Chernobyl.

The report said that dozens of nuclear power stations have control systems accessible through the internet even though many plant operators believe a persistent ‘myth’ that their facilities are ‘air gapped’ with physically separated computer networks.

It points to a 2003 incident at the Davis-Besse plant in Ohio, when an engineer accessed the plant from his home laptop through an encrypted VPN connection. His home computer had become infected with the nuisance self-replicating ‘slammer’ worm. The trojan infected the nuclear plant’s computer system, causing a key safety control system to be overwhelmed with traffic from the worm and trip out.

A more serious 2006 incident occurred at Browns Ferry in Alabama when a key safety system was similarly overwhelmed with network traffic and nearly led to a meltdown.

The report points to a 2008 incident at the Hatch plant in Georgia to illustrate how vulnerable plants could be to deliberate digital disruption: though not an attack, when a contractor issued a routine patch to a business network system, it triggered a shutdown.

Source : Financial Times
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India plans to construct six more fast breeder reactors - Official

A senior official said that BHAVINI, the implementing arm of the Department of Atomic Energy, has plans to construct six new Fast Breeder Reactors over the next 15 years.

Mr P Chellapandi CMD of Bharatiya Nabhikiya Vidyut Nigam Limited said that country's first 500-MWe Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) at Kalpakkam, around 70 km from Chennai, being set up by BHAVINI, is expected to become critical in March or April 2016.

Mr Chellapandi said that "We are planning two more reactors. Once after one year of successful operation of this PFBR, we have to watch, then we will seek government sanction for construction of two 600 MW reactors at Kalpakkam. With the two proposed 600 MWs, we are optimising and constructing higher power with same costs."

He said that "Afterwards we have to think of new places for putting four more units. The site selection committee is choosing some places and are studying suitable size. Immediate vision is to construct two FBRs at Kalpakkam and four more beyond 2030."

On the first 500-MWe PFBR being set up, he said the PFBR (designed by Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research) construction is over and they are seeking clearance from the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) in phases for sodium charging, fuel loading, reactor criticality and power rising (generation).

He added that "AERB had already sent many specialists to the PFBR and we are also going for review process. Some experts are going to meet this month and we are likely to get clearance for sodium charging. After this we have to get clearance for fuel loading and that may happen in January-February and the reactor may become critical in March or April 2016."

Source : PTI
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GCC nuclear plants boon for Bahrain

It is reported that nuclear power plants in neighbouring GCC states could indirectly benefit Bahrain as the region moves towards greater interconnectivity.

Both the UAE and Saudi Arabia have announced their plans to embark on ambitious nuclear power programmes – a move which Arab Union of Electricity Gulf region assistant secretary-general Mr Mohamed Al Sadeqi said could benefit all member states.

Source : Trade Arabia
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Russia, Iran interested in construction new NPP in Iranian territory

Officials of the general executive for the construction Russian corporation Atomstroyexport said that Russia and Iran have confirmed mutual interest in the construction of new power units for Nuclear Power Plants (NPP) in the Iranian territory.

An official said that "Russia and Iran continue discussing cooperation in providing technical services for the Bushehr NPP," adding that Russia will continue providing technical support for the first power unit safe use.

The organisation said that "Russia and Iran confirm mutual readiness for cooperation in accordance with the agreements signed in autumn 2014."

In November 2014, Russia and Iran signed a set of agreements to build eight nuclear power units in Iran. Russia will also produce nuclear fuel for Iranian NPPs during the whole service life of the eight new power units.

In particular, a contract signed to build the second line of the NPP Bushehr, envisages the construction of two nuclear power units with possible expansion to four power units.

Situated on the Persian Gulf coast, Bushehr NPP with 1,000 MW power capacity became first NPP not only in Iran, but also in the whole Middle East region.

Source : TASS
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Nuclear power an article of faith for India by 2024

Economic Times reported that if the Mr Modi government has its way, India could produce 14,500 mw of nuclear power by 2024, almost a three-fold jump from the current level of 5,700 mw. That is a far cry from the government's stated intent to reach 63,000 mw by 2032 but, nevertheless, underlines India's commitment to nuclear energy as a way of reducing its reliance on fossil fuel.

Simultaneously, the government has sought to focus on renewables with the Union Cabinet earlier this year clearing a proposal for a five-fold jump in solar power by increasing its capacity to 100,000 mw by 2022.

PM Mr Narendra Modi, much like his predecessor Manmohan Singh, sees an essential role for nuclear power in India's energy mix. After decades of discrimination and international technology denial regimes, India finally managed to turn the tables in 2008 when it managed to get a waiver from the Nuclear Suppliers Group to trade in nuclear equipment.

Countries like the US, Russia and France -- all with major stakes in India's nuclear energy market worth billions of dollars -- helped India, a non-NPT signatory, get that waiver despite opposition from China. India continues to be the only country in the world to be able to carry out nuclear commerce despite not having signed the NPT. India believes it is an acknowledgement of its impeccable non-proliferation track record.

One reason why India got the waiver was a statement at the NSG by then foreign minister Mr Pranab Mukherjee that the country would abide by its commitment to unilateral and voluntary moratorium on nuclear testing. Mukherjee had said the waiver to India to conduct nuclear commerce would also have positive impact on global energy security.

Apart from the US, Russia and France, India now has entered into cooperation for peaceful uses of nuclear energy with at least seven other countries. These include South Korea, Namibia, Canada, Australia and Kazakhstan. India also signed an MoU for the same with Japan last week. This is significant also because it will allow major US vendors to source equipment from their Japanese partners.

Japanese PM Shinzo Abe finally clinched the agreement with India after he expressed satisfaction with India's unilateral and voluntary moratorium on nuclear testing, as expressed before the NSG in 2008.

The agreement with Canada and Australia are also particularly significant for India as these countries are the main exporters of uranium to the world. To facilitate the deal with India, former Canadian PM Stephen Harper made an exception when his government agreed to go by IAEA assurances alone over any possible misuse of uranium supplies to India.

Source : Economic Times
voda
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India, Russia likely to sign pact on Kudankulam during PM Mr Modi visit

In a move to scale up cooperation in the nuclear energy sector, India and Russia are likely to sign an agreement on Kudankulam units 5 and 6 during Prime Minister Mr Narendra Modi's visit to the Eurasian country from Wednesday.

Sources said the government is also planning to make optimum use of the available nuclear sites in various states to accommodate more atomic reactors to meet energy-starved country's growing needs.

Mr Modi is scheduled to visit Russia from December 23-24 to hold an annual summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow.

Ahead of the Prime Ministerial visit, Deputy Chief Executive Officer of Rosatom - the Russian counterpart of the India's Department of Atomic Energy - Nikolai Spasskiy paid a visit to India on December 7-8, during which he is believed to have held negotiations with Sekhar Basu, Secretary DAE regarding the possible inking of a pact of unit 5 and 6 of the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP) during Modi's stay.

Rosatom said that "During negotiations, the parties discussed issues of final acceptance of Unit 1 of Kudankulam NPP, achievement of the minimum controlled power at Unit 2, beginning of construction of Units 3 and 4, and signing of the general framework agreement for Units 5 and 6, as well as further cooperation development steps."

Sources said that the agreement details were also deliberated upon.

Meanwhile, unit 5 and 6 of VVER technology are expected to be of the same MW like units 1-4, but the cost details of the project is yet to be finalised.

Source : PTI
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