Romania gets a New Style of Nuclear Plant with Generation of Rs. 25 crs per MW
The proposed deal, for a smaller and cheaper kind of
nuclear plant, built by an American firm, could start a race to export small
reactors.
The United States said on Monday that it would supply
Romania with a training simulator in preparation for building a new type of
nuclear power generating plant in the country.
If an agreement on moving ahead with a power station is
reached, Romania could become the first country in Europe, and perhaps in the
world, to have such a plant, known as a small modular reactor. Designed to be
less expensive and easier to build than traditional nuclear reactors, modular
reactors have been proposed by several
manufacturers.
The one in Romania would be built by NuScale
Power, a start-up company based in Portland, Ore. The government announced that
the plant would be built in Doicesti, at the site of
a shuttered coal-fired power plant about 55 miles northwest of Bucharest.
The arrangement was announced at a news conference held
by a group of American officials and businesspeople visiting Bucharest,
including David Turk, the deputy secretary of energy, with Romanian
counterparts including Virgil-Daniel Popescu, the
country’s energy minister.
The United States, which in recent years has not played a
major role in the construction of new nuclear plants overseas, would have an
opportunity to take an early lead in what could be a
new nuclear race with Europe and
China.
France and Britain are
also exploring building small nuclear reactors,
but their programs appear less advanced.
NuScale’s approach to nuclear energy involves constructing
relatively small reactors in factories and then assembling groups of them at
the actual site for generating power. The aim is to reduce costs as well as the
time required for construction. Conventional modern nuclear plants can cost $10
billion or more.
The plan involves building a power station composed of
six of the modular units. The plant would generate 462 megawatts of electricity,
making it the size of a medium-size conventional power station. Such a plant
might cost around $1.6 billion, according to figures published by the U.S.
Embassy in Bucharest. The hope is to have it operating by the end of the
decade.
Romania is phasing out coal, a politically dicey exercise
that puts many jobs at risk. Romanian officials and NuScale
executives say choosing a former coal site would save money by using some of
the existing facilities, like electrical grid connections, and provide work for
the coal plant’s labor force.
For the coal communities, the nuclear plants could offer
“rejuvenation, so to speak,” said Cosmin Ghita, chief
executive of Nuclearelectrica, a Romanian utility
that operates the country’s two existing nuclear power reactors at Cernavoda, about two hours east of Bucharest.
The simulator would be located at a university in
Bucharest and used to train Romanians and others from the region to operate one
of the reactors. The U.S. government would pay for it, in a sign of commitment
to the deal.
In 2019, Romania broke off talks with China about
supplying additional conventional reactors at Cernavoda
and turned to the United States as the country’s main nuclear partner. Although
the reactors at Cernavoda are of Canadian design,
Romanian officials say they are talking to American contractors about a role in
building new ones.