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Rostov Nuclear Power Plant
Nuclear power plant in Volgodonsk, Russia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Rostov Nuclear Power Plant (Russian: ⓘ), also known as the Volgodonsk Nuclear Power Plant (Russian: ⓘ), is a Russian nuclear power plant located on the left bank of Tsimlyansk Reservoir in the lower stream of the Don river near Volgodonsk, Rostov Oblast.[1]
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Construction of Rostov reactor No. 1 began in 1977 and operations began in 2001. Construction of reactor No. 2 commenced in 1983 and finished in 2010. Unit 3 was connected to the electrical grid for the first time in December 2015.[1] Unit 4 underwent first criticality on 7 December 2017,[2] and put into commercial operation on 28 September 2018.[3] Units 3 and 4 are of an upgraded VVER-1000/320 subtype.[4]
The post–Soviet Union revival of the nuclear industry of Russia took place at Rostov in the early 2000s, with the completion of the building of unit 2 in 2010, unit 3 in 2015 and unit 4 in 2017. Unit 4 was the last VVER-1000/V-320 reactor built.[5]
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Reactors
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Accidents and incidents
November 4, 2014 — an emergency shutdown of two power units occurred at the Rostov NPP, the supply of electricity to consumers was stopped, it took five to six hours to restore operation. The shutdown of the power units occurred due to the tripping of the protection.[8]
On 21 October 2021, unit 2 at the Rostov Nuclear Power Plant activated emergency shutdown procedures and put on maintenance mode due to a crack in the welded joint on the pipeline and resulting steam leak.[9]
On 31 December 2022, a fire broke out in unit 3's block transformer under maintenance, killing one and severely injuring another.[10]
July 16, 2024 — the power unit of the Rostov NPP was shut down due to the activation of automation due to the malfunction of the turbogenerator. The amount of temporary restrictions in the southern power system immediately after the accident reached 1.5 GW. After restoration works, the deficit decreased to 500 MW. restrictions on electricity consumption were introduced in the southern regions, the lights went out in the temporarily occupied Crimea. [11]
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See also
References
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