Estonia inks MOU with Moltex for work on a Molten Salt Reactor

Romania inks MOU with NuScale for work on LWR type SMR

Ukraine plans consortium for work on Holtec SMR

Czech PM details plans to push for revised tender on new reactors

South Africa take steps to reopen effort to secure nuclear reactors

Five small nations are moving ahead with plans to develop their own nuclear power stations. Two of the efforts involve U.S. developers of small modular reactors (SMRs) Here is a round up of recent news items.

Estonia to Study Siting of Moltex Advanced Reactor

(WNN) Fermi Energia of Estonia has selected Moltex Energy as its preferred technology for its plans to establish carbon-free energy production in the Baltic region. Moltex Energy said this week that the two companies had signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) which states their intention to work together, including a feasibility study for the siting of a Moltex advanced reactor and the development of a suitable licensing regime.

In its statement, Moltex Energy noted that Estonia generates the majority of its power from oil shale, but that this fossil fuel capacity will have been mostly retired by 2030.

Wind power in the Baltic provides some potential, but the country needs an alternative, reliable power source if it is to remain self-sufficient in energy, it said.

Estonia’s neighbors Latvia, Lithuania and Finland are all net importers of electricity. The intent of the MOU is to create a source of clean and safe power generation in Estonia which would represent an improvement in energy security for the whole region.

Simon Newton, business development director at Moltex, said: “Estonia is a vibrant, entrepreneurial and forward-looking economy and is the perfect place to benefit from the Moltex Stable Salt Reactor technology.” (video)

Kalev Kallemets, CEO of Fermi Energia, said:

“Our ambition is to deploy the first fourth generation small modular reactor in the EU, here in Estonia, by the early 2030s. We are delighted to be working closely with Moltex Energy on this vital project. It is important for Estonia to have its own source of clean, cheap energy and Moltex’s innovative technology has huge potential for us.”

UK-based Moltex Energy announced in July last year that it will build a demonstration SSR-W (Stable Salt Reactor – Wasteburner) at the Point Lepreau nuclear power plant site in Canada under an agreement signed with the New Brunswick Energy Solutions Corporation and NB Power. The firm is also pursuing market opportunities in the UK.

Moltex Energy’s SSR is a conceptual UK reactor design with no pumps (only small impellers in the secondary salt bath) and relies on convection from static vertical fuel tubes in the core to convey heat to the steam generators.

The fuel assemblies are arranged at the center of a tank half filled with the coolant salt which transfers heat away from the fuel assemblies to the peripheral steam generators, essentially by convection. Core temperature is 500-600°C, at atmospheric pressure.

How the Moltex Reactor Works

The fuel is in the salt and is held in vented tubes. The tubes are bundled into fuel assemblies similar to those in a conventional PWR. These are held in the support structure which forms the reactor modules. (Technical papers)(PDF files)

The tank is filled with a safe molten salt coolant, which is not pressurized like gas or water coolants in today’s power reactors and not violently reactive with air and water like sodium in today’s Fast Breeder reactors.

A second similar coolant salt system takes heat from the primary coolant salt to a patented GridReserve energy storage system.

GridReserve is a collection of molten salt storage tanks that stores gigawatt scale thermal energy when it’s not needed for electricity production. When demand goes up, say when renewables are off, the plant can take heat from the reactor and storage tanks to produce electricity. This is just like in a Concentrated Solar Power plant and uses the same solar salt, turning a 1GW reactor into a 3GW peaking plant.

The GridReserve system appears to be a form of “load following,” but not from the reactor itself, but from the stored heat in the secondary salt loop. This approach removes the burden of managing the reactor for this purpose.

Refuelling is simple: Fuel assemblies are simply moved sideways out of the core and replaced with fresh fuel assemblies. This results in a near on-line refuelling process.

The entire construction is simple, with no high pressure systems, few moving parts, and no Pressure Vessel needing specialist foundries. The reactor is continuously cooled by natural air flow, giving complete security against overheating in an accident situation. See this video for a “fly through” of the design.

The firm claims on its website that multiple versions of Stable Salt Reactors are possible. The first being developed now is a “waste burner.” This uses fuel produced by a new, low cost and very simple process from spent conventional reactor fuel.

Reduction in the radioactive life of the majority of that spent fuel from hundreds of thousands of years to just a few hundred years will effectively clean up a large part of the hazardous residue of the first nuclear era.

A second generation Stable Salt Reactors design will be able to breed new nuclear fuel from depleted uranium and thorium. The firm also proposes to develop a graphite moderated option to use conventional enriched uranium as fuel.

Romania to Explore Use of a NuScale SMR

(WNN) An agreement was inked this week between US small modular reactor (SMR) developer NuScale Power and Romanian energy company Societata Nationala Nuclearelectrica SA (SNN SA) to explore the use of SMRs in Romania.

The two companies have signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) covering the exchange of business and technical information on NuScale’s nuclear technology, with the goal of evaluating the development, licensing and construction of a NuScale SMR for a “potential similar long-term solution” in Romania.

John Hopkins, NuScale Power chairman and CEO, said the company was looking forward to collaborating with SNN SA “to determine what role NuScale’s technology can play in Romania’s energy future.”

SNN SA, also referred to as Nuclearelectrica, operates two Canadian-supplied CANDU units at Cernavoda that currently generate up to 20% of Romania’s electricity. The reactors use natural uranium and heavy water to achieve criticality. No enriched fuel is needed to run the reactors.

SSN SA’s CE0 said, “As the only nuclear power provider in Romania, we see great potential in SMRs because of the clean, safe, and affordable power they provide.”

Romania has been in negotiations with China since 2016 for development of two new CANDU type nuclear reactors. Some work that has already taken place on the CANDU Units 3 & 4 would be a springboard for completion by CGN.

What NuScale Would Bring to Romania

NuScale’s SMR technology features the self-contained NuScale Power Module, with an output of 200 MWt or 60 MWe each for a total in a 12-unit installation of 720 MWe. Based on pressurized water reactor technology (PWR) , the scalable design can be used in power plants of up to 12 individual modules.

The technology is currently undergoing design certification review by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems is planning the development of a 12-module plant at a site at the Idaho National Laboratory, with deployment expected in the mid-2020s.

NuScale has released information on the cost-competitive nature of its SMR. The firm said on its web site that the estimated construction cost for the first NuScale 684 MWe (net) plant is about $3 billion which works out, in round numbers, to $4400/Kw. The firm also said that total construction time, to mechanical completion, but not commissioning, would be 54 months. In July 2018 the firm released information saying that it was working on further cost savings with a target cost of $4200/Kw.

By comparison, CGN’s cost estimate for completion of the partially built twin CANDUs, at 720 MWe each, would come in at $5070/Kw.

NuScale has also signed MOUs to explore the deployment of its SMR technology in Canada and Jordan. All of these agreements are highly conceptual and don’t involve, at this stage, any significant financial commitments.

History of New CANDUs for Cernavoda

According to the World Nuclear Association in September 2014 China General Nuclear (CGN) submitted an offer to build the two units, and was accepted as a qualified investor. In October SNN designated CGN as the ‘selected investor’ for the project and a letter of intent to proceed was signed by all parties. In November 2015 the two companies signed a further agreement for the development, construction, operation, and decommissioning of Cernavoda 3&4.

CGN is reported to hold a 51% equity position in the project. The state nuclear power corporation Societatea Nationala Nuclearelectrica (SNN) said the cost is €7.2 billion/$7.7 billion for two 720 MW units.

In January 2016 the government concluded talks with CGN on the major areas of support and commitment associated with the project, including electricity market reform, tariff mechanisms, electricity sales, state guarantees, financial incentive policies, and continuity of those policies.

Construction is expected to resume at both sites. Work had begun on Unit 3 as part of larger five reactor expansion project, but only Unit 2 was completed in 2001. Preliminary work on units 3 & 4 was started thereafter and then stopped. World Nucleasr News did not update its 2018 report to indicate that restart of work on Units 3 & 4 has taken place. Completion dates are said to be in the early 2020s.

The new reactors, Units 3 & 4, will be updated versions of the Candu 6, but not the full EC6 version, since the concrete structures are already built. Unit 3 is reported to be 53% complete and Unit 4 30%. These updated numbers indicate some continuing level of construction activity since in 2017 WNN reported completion figures of 15% and 14%. The units will have an operating lifetime of 30 years with the possibility of a 25-year extension. Some 1000 tonnes of heavy water has been produced and is in storage.

Holtec’s SMR-160 Attracts Attention in Ukraine

(WNN & wires) Holtec International has made progress with its work on an SMR-160 system through agreements with Energoatom and Exelon Generation announced during the winter meeting of the Holtec Advisory Council for SMR-160, held in February 2019 in Jupiter, Florida.

Holtec is a private firm and keeps details of its development efforts closely held. So, the news about the meeting of its advisory committee represents a rare look at progress on the 160 MW SMR.

The SMR-160 reactor is under review by the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission and is in Phase 1 – Pre-Licensing Reviews -of the three-phase evaluation cycle. The SMR field in Canada has become highly competitive with nine other reactor vendors also in process for similar reviews. Two SMR developers have completed the Phase 1 process.

State Nuclear Regulatory Inspectorate of Ukraine, the nuclear regulatory authority in Ukraine, is expected to coordinate its regulatory assessment of SMR-160 under a collaborative arrangement with its Canadian counterpart.

Energoatom President Yury Nedashkovsky announced plans to establish a consortium with Holtec and Ukraine’s national nuclear consultant, State Scientific and Technical Centre for Nuclear and Radiation Safety (SSTC-NRS). It will explore the environmental and technical feasibility of qualifying a ‘generic’ SMR-160 system that can be built and operated at any candidate site in the country.

A formal announcement of the adoption of the terms of engagement for the consortium is expected later this year.

At the same meeting, Holtec signed a memorandum of understanding with Exelon Generation, adding Exelon to the SMR-160 team, which currently includes SNC-Lavalin and Mitsubishi Electric.

Chris Mudrick, Exelon Generation senior vice president, Northeast Operations, said in the Holtec statement:

“As the largest nuclear operator in the United States, Exelon Generation is pleased to partner with Holtec to develop an operating model for the SMR-160. This project is a great example of how innovation and new technologies are bringing our industry together and driving the future of nuclear power.”

Under the terms of the MoU, Exelon Generation plans to support SMR-160’s market acceptance, develop a generic deployment schedule and staffing plan, and assist to improve its operability and maintainability features.

As SMR-160s are built around the globe, Exelon Generation could provide reactor operating services to customers that lack an established nuclear industrial infrastructure. This approach may facilitate entry in to markets in small countries that otherwise might not be ready to adopt SMRs as part of their energy mix.

Holtec describes the SMR-160 as a “passive, intrinsically safe, secure and economical” small modular reactor that has the flexibility to be used in remote locations, in areas with limited water supplies or land, and in unique industrial applications where traditional larger reactors are not practical.

Advisory Committee Member Profiles

The meeting was led by the incoming advisory committee chairman, Michael Rencheck, CEO of Bruce Power, Canada, and attended by invited industry experts from several leading organizations, including Bruce Power, Energoatom, Entergy, Exelon Generation, Southern, Talen Energy, NEI, SNC-Lavalin, Mitsubishi Electric, and several major suppliers. (Membership list and bios)

Czech PM Calls for Nuclear Expansion with State Controls

Reuters reports that Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis has outlined the government’s plan to build a number of nuclear reactors, saying the state should control construction so it can halt the expansion should power prices fail to support the project. His statement clearly indicates the government still isn’t ready to do things –

Establish a guarantee and basis for a rate floor for pricing the electricity from the reactors in order to attract investors

Buy out the minority institutional investors in CEZ, the state owned electric utility, to cut off the prospect of lawsuits that might interfere with the project.

Even so the government expects to sign a contract with majority state-owned CEZ to build one or more new reactors at Dukovany, with a tender towards the end of 2020 and with a supplier chosen by 2024.

Babis said the government would not provide CEZ an unlimited state guarantee and that the utility would cover any extra costs not generated by the state regulators.

“The basic aim of the state should be to take control of construction of new nuclear capacity,” Babis told Reuters. “The state would get such control by signing a contract with CEZ on construction.”

The government has been considering how to fund a multi-billion-dollar expansion of CEZ’s nuclear power plants, before some units reach the end of their lifetime. Efforts to complete a previous tender for up to five new reactors, including several at Temelin, worth up to $25 billion, collapsed in 2014 when the government informed bidders it would not offer rate guarantees for electricity sold by the nuclear power stations.

South Africa Its Puts Toe Back in Nuclear Waters

(WNN) South Africa must consider nuclear as a clean energy source that can be part of its electricity generation mix, Energy Minister Jeff Radebe said in a speech at a business awards ceremony.

His statement comes as the South African government struggles to find a way to eliminate brown outs and insure reliable electrical power for its heavy industry and affordable rates for a struggling economy. Poverty is widespread in South Africa which also has entrenched high unemployment.

The country also needs to find a way to make procurement of nuclear energy credible. The previous administration, led by President Jacob Zuma, inked a secret deal with Russia for eight 1200 MW VVER PWR type reactors with a price tag of just over $43 billion.

Not only could South Africa not afford the project, even with 50% financing from Rosatom, but the deal, when reported in the news media, generated a political firestorm. Charges of nepotism and corruption were also made as Zuma hired relatives to run key parts of the project.

The Energy and Finance ministries were caught by surprise by the news of the Russian deal. Eskom, the state owned electric utility, said it didn’t have the funds to cover South Africa’s 50% cost share.

A public outcry over the lack of transparency in Zuma’s dealings with Rosatom led to a cancellation of the project coincident with end of his term in office.

The new administration hasn’t yet updated its Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) to expand that role of nuclear energy to meet the nation’s need for electricity, but recent comments by Radebe seem to indicate he’s heading in that direction.

“As a developing economy, plagued by high poverty and unemployment levels, the issue of reliable and affordable energy is critical,” Radebe said.

“We have to consider nuclear, and despite its high capital costs, we have not lost sight of the fact that this is a clean energy source that can contribute optimally for electricity generation,” the minister said.

Sustainable energy planning requires a “holistic approach” to planning for future energy needs, ensuring environmental and climate change issues, together with social development and economic growth, are all considered in a balanced manner, he said.

“We have come to realize that achieving these objectives simultaneously is no easy task as it entails juggling competing and often conflicting objectives. During the energy planning process, we therefore cannot discriminate against or favor any particular energy carriers,” he said.

The country cannot not ignore its abundant coal reserves, and the “relatively low” price of coal, but this is “counter-balanced” by coal’s high carbon content and internalized through policy options including emissions reduction targets and the introduction of carbon taxes.

The Portfolio Committee on Energy, which provides parliamentary oversight for the work of South Africa’s energy department, in November said the IRP should make it explicit that both coal and nuclear will remain important elements of the country’s energy mix.

~ Other Nuclear News ~

Testing Complete for China’s Hualong One Fuel

(WNN) Long-term irradiation testing of China National Nuclear Corporation’s (CNNC) CF3 pressurized water reactor (PWR) fuel has been completed.

Four sets of CF3 fuel assemblies, which are designed for use in the Hualong One reactor, were loaded into Qinshan II unit 2 – a Chinese-designed CNP-600 PWR – in July 2014.

The assemblies have undergone poolside inspections during each fuelling cycle, CNNC said. Inspection results show that the performance of the design has met internationally accepted standards.

According to World Nuclear Association information, CF3 fuel assemblies are being manufactured at CNNC’s main PWR fuel fabrication plant at Yibin in Sichuan province, using fuel pellets from Kazakhstan’s Ulba Metallurgical Plant.

Hualong One reactors are currently under construction at Fuqing and Fangchenggang. Fuqing 5 and 6 are expected to start up in 2019 and 2020, as are Fangchenggang 3 and 4. The Hualong One promoted on the international market is called the HPR1000, two of which are under construction at Karachi in Pakistan.

The significance of the successful tests is that China is now on the road to being self-sufficient for fuel for its new Hualong One reactors which are intended for export. Deals have been set in motion in the UK, Argentina and two units are nearing completion in Pakistan.

Finland’s Fennovoima, Its Next Nuclear Reactor,

a Russian Project, Likely to be Delayed Beyond 2024

Reuters reports that a Finnish-Russian consortium’s plan to build a nuclear reactor in western Finland by 2024 is likely to be delayed, perhaps as long as four years, as more time is needed to secure licenses, its chairman said.

“Normally when a plane departs late it arrives late. 2024 would be extremely ambitious if not unrealistic,” the consortium’s chairman, Esa Harmala, told Reuters.

Finland’s nuclear regulator STUK told Reuters it would make a decision on a license to start construction of the reactor, named Hanhikivi 1, in 2020, depending on getting required documents from its owners, including Rosatom.

The Fennovoima consortium said in 2017 it would submit the documents in 2018. Since then it said it would get a permit in 2019, a year later than originally planned. STUK said last that the documents would be submitted by July 2019.

That means the consortium may not get STUK approval until 2020 and would struggle to meet its target to start the plant in 2024.

The Fennovoima consortium includes Russia’s state nuclear company Rosatom, whose involvement has raised concerns in Finland about Russia’s influence in the country. A spokesman for Rosatom declined to comment on the delay in response to an inquiry from Reuters saying only it is still working on a 2024 startup date.

The Finnish parliament approved the project to build the 1.2 gigawatt (GW) reactor, which is expected to cost 6.5 billion-7 billion euros ($7.5 billion-$8 billion), to boost domestic energy production.

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