|
China to increase nuclear power capacity by 23m kilowatts
BEIJING—The Chinese State Council has officially approved a plan to
expand the country’s installed capacity of nuclear generating units by
23 million kilowatts from 2005 to 2020, according to the National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC).
Building the newly installed generating units with a combined capacity
of 23 million kilowatts will cost total investment of 450 billion yuan
(about 60 billion U.S. dollars). According to the plan, submitted by
NDRC, China will have an installed nuclear power capacity of 40 million
kilowatts on the mainland by 2020. By then, its annual nuclear power
generation capacity will reach 260-280 billion kilowatt-hours. The ratio
of installed nuclear power capacity will be increased by half to account
for 4 percent of China’s total installed power generating capacity.
Currently, nuclear power capacity on the mainland stood at 16.97 million
kilowatts, with 11 nuclear generating units in operation involving a
combined capacity of 9.07 million kilowatts and another eight units
under construction.
The country has selected 13 sites for the new nuclear plants, which are
all located in coastal areas, including four in ZhejiangProvince, one in
Jiangsu Province, three in Guangdong Province, two in Shandong Province
and the other three in Liaoning and Fujian provinces and the Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region, according to the plan. The NDRC said the
government is considering to build a nuclear plant respectively in
Shandong, Fujian and Guangxi, where no nuclear power plants exist at
present.
The country is also doing research work for building nuclear plants in
inland regions, including Hubei, Jiangxi and Hunan provinces. The plan
said the country would design, build and operate the megawatt
pressurized water reactors on its own while introducing and absorbing
advanced foreign technologies. China has reached an agreement in July
with the U.S.-based Westinghouse Electric Co. to build four nuclear
power plants in China and transfer core technologies for
third-generation AP1000 reactors.
China’s first third-generation pressurized water reactors adopting
Westinghouse technology, built in Sanmen of east China’s Zhejiang
Province, will be put into commercial operation at the end of 2013.
China now has 11 nuclear power reactors in operation. Among them, three
use domestic technologies, two are equipped with Russian technology and
four with French technologies, and two are Canadian designed. All the 11
reactors employ second-generation nuclear power technologies.
China is the world’s second-largest power consumer after the United
States, with about 80 percent of the total generating capacity coming
from coal-fired generators. Experts said the development of the clean
nuclear power would relieve the nation’s reliance on coal. Chinese Vice
Premier Zeng Peiyan expressed his hope on Thursday that the American
Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) will strengthen cooperation with
its Chinese counterpart on drawing up and revising nuclear power
standards.
“I hope the ASME will be active in absorbing the Chinese side in the
drawing up and revising of the U.S. nuclear power standards,” said Zeng
in a meeting with ASME President Sam Zamrik.
Zeng congratulated ASME on the publication of the Chinese version of
ASME’s nuclear power standard in China, saying the drawing up of nuclear
power standard is an important and fundamental work, which is a summary
of the technologies and experiences of nuclear power development and
also an important way to standardize and guide nuclear power actions and
safeguard nuclear power safety. He said the Chinese government has made
a guideline to actively promote the development of nuclear power and
attaches great importance to nuclear power safety and the work of
establishing a standardized system for nuclear power.
“The introduction of U.S. nuclear power standard into China will play an
important role in China’s nuclear power construction,” said Zeng. He
added that he hoped the ASME will help China set up an authorized
authentication and inspection organization for nuclear power, and
jointly make contribution to the improvement of nuclear power standard
system and the development of world nuclear power industries.—Xinhua |