Shidao Bay Nuclear Power Plant
Nuclear plant in Shandong, China From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shidao Bay Nuclear Power Plant (simplified Chinese: 石岛湾核电站; traditional Chinese: 石島灣核電廠; pinyin: Shídǎo wān hédiàn chǎng), commonly known as Shidaowan, is a nuclear power plant in Shandong province, China. The site is located near the Xiqianjia village in Ningjin subdistrict, Rongcheng, Weihai, Shandong. The plant is located about 23 kilometres (14 mi) south of Rongcheng City, 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) northwest of Shidao, and 68 kilometres (42 mi) southeast of Weihai City.[2]
Shidao Bay Nuclear Power Plant[1] | |
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Official name | 石岛湾核电站 |
Country | People's Republic of China |
Location | Rongcheng, Weihai, Shandong |
Coordinates | 36°58′20″N 122°31′44″E |
Status | Operational |
Construction began | 9 December 2012 |
Commission date |
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Construction cost | US$16 billion (units 1–7) |
Owners | China Huaneng Group Shandong Shidao Bay Nuclear Power Co., Ltd (HSNPC) Tsinghua University |
Operator |
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Nuclear power station | |
Reactor type | HTGR |
Cooling source | Yellow Sea |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 1 x 200 MW twin reactor 1 × 1500 MW |
Make and model | HTR-PM HPR1000 CAP1400 |
Units planned | 8 × 200 MW twin reactor |
Units under const. | 1 × 1500 MW 1 × 1134 MW |
Nameplate capacity | 1700 MW |
External links | |
Commons | Related media on Commons |
The plant has the first fourth-generation nuclear reactors in the world:[3] the HTR-PM, a high-temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTGR) concept (36°58′45″N 122°31′50″E). The plant will ultimately have ten 210 MWe (megawatts electrical) units of this type. Each unit is made of two HTR-PM reactors driving a single 210 MWe steam turbine.
The plant also hosts the construction of two 1500 MWe CAP1400 pressurized water reactors (36°57′56″N 122°31′12″E), a design based on the AP1000[4] jointly developed by Westinghouse and China's State Nuclear Power Technology Corporation (SNPTC).[5]
Shidao Bay nuclear power plant is a joint venture by China Huaneng Group, China Nuclear Engineering & Construction Group, and Tsinghua University. The total investment of 100 billion yuan (US$15.7 billion) and the 20-year construction plan makes it one of China's large nuclear projects.[6]
HTR-PM
Summarize
Perspective
In 2005, China announced its intention to scale up the HTR-10 experimental reactor for commercial power generation. The first two 250-MWt High-Temperature Reactor-Pebble-bed Modules (HTR-PM) will be installed at Shidao Bay, and together drive a steam turbine generating 200 MWe.
Originally to be started in 2011, the project was postponed after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in Japan in March 2011. In 2009, it was planned to be finished in 2013.[7] Construction finally began at the end of 2012,[8] with the pouring of concrete basemat occurring in April 2014.[9] The vessel was installed in 2016. It was expected to begin operating around 2017,[10] later postponed to 2018. The pressure vessel head was installed in December 2017.[11] Cold testing was completed in November 2020.[12] Hot functional testing of the reactors began in January 2021, and operational start up is planned for late 2021.[13] The first reactor went critical, marking the first criticality of a generation IV commercial nuclear power plant, in September 2021.[14] Reactor two achieved first criticality in November 2021.[15] Reactor one was connected to the state power grid and began producing power in December 2021 [16] The HTR-PM project demonstrated it had reached "initial full power" in December 2022.[17] The HTR-PM project finally entered commercial operation in December 2023.[18] An updated larger power plant, HTR-PM600, is planned with a capacity of 600 MWe using six HTR-PM reactor units.[19]
Hualong One
In July 2024, first concrete was poured for Shidaowan 1, the first of four Hualong One reactors.[20]
CAP1400
Summarize
Perspective
In November 2006, State Power Investment Corporation (SPIC) introduced the AP1000, a third-generation pressurized water reactor design, from the U.S. company Westinghouse Electric Corporation.[citation needed] Since then China built four AP1000 units, two in the Sanmen Nuclear Power Station, and another two in the Haiyang Nuclear Power Plant.
China has been researching and developing its own version of the AP1000, the more powerful CAP1400, also referred to as Guohe One (Guo He One, Chinese: 国和; pinyin: guó hé, i.e. unity of the country).[21][22]
Preparation work started in 2013 and Unit 1 construction started in 2018. Completion estimated in 2021.[23]
In May 2016, the CAP1400 design has successfully passed the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) Generic Reactor Safety Review.
According to SPIC, the company is building two CAP1400 reactors in a demonstration project located in the Shidao Bay nuclear plant.[24][25]
In March 2017, the Unit 1 first CAP1400 reactor pressure vessel hydraulic test was completed at the factory test site. The pressure vessel is the core equipment of the reactor and has a total weight of about 487 tons and a design life of 60 years.[26]
On 30 June 2017, the Unit 1 first low-pressure module LP2 of the CAP1400 National Nuclear Demonstration Project Turbine, was completed by Dongfang Electric Group Dongfang Steam Turbine Co., Ltd. The CAP1400 steam turbine low-pressure rotor has a weight of 267 tons and the whole block weight is 749 tons. The last stage blades in the low pressure turbines are 1.828 metres (6.00 ft) tall. The LP2 steam turbine will help drive the CAP1400 1,520 MW generator.[27]
In March 2022 it was announced that commercial operation of the two CAP1400 units is expected to commence in 2025.[28]
Reactor data
The Shidao Bay Nuclear Power Plant consist of two operational reactors (that drive one unit), two reactors under construction, and four planned future reactors.
Unit | Type / Model | Net power | Gross power | Thermal power | Start construction | First criticality | Grid connection | Commercial operation | Notes |
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Shidao Bay I | HTGR / HTR-PM | 200 MW | 211 MW | 250+250 MW | 9 December 2012 | 12 September 2021 | 20 December 2021 | 6 December 2023 | [29] [30] |
Shidaowan 1 | HPR1000 | 1134 MW | 1225 MW | 3180 MW | 28 July 2024 | 2029 | [31] | ||
Shidao Bay II-1 | PWR / CAP1400 | 1500 MW | 1550 MW | 4040 MW | 19 June 2019[32] | 4 November 2024[33] | |||
Shidao Bay II-2 | PWR / CAP1400 | 1500 MW | 1550 MW | 4040 MW | 21 April 2020[32] | 2025[28] | |||
See also
References
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