Dukovany Nuclear Power Station
Dukovany Nuclear Power Station | |
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Dukovany Nuclear Power Station | |
Location of Dukovany Nuclear Power Station in Czech Republic | |
Country | Czech Republic |
Coordinates | 49°05′06″N 16°08′56″E / 49.08500°N 16.14889°ECoordinates: 49°05′06″N 16°08′56″E / 49.08500°N 16.14889°E |
Construction began | 1974 |
Construction cost | Kčs 25 billion |
Operator(s) | CEZ Group |
Nuclear power station | |
Reactor type | VVER 440 |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 4 x 505 MW (677,000 hp) |
Average generation | 14.99 TWh |
Website The Dukovany Nuclear Power Station |
The Dukovany Nuclear Power Station is a nuclear power plant (NPP) near Dukovany, a village in the Czech Republic.
It was the first NPP in what is now the Czech Republic (the Bohunice Nuclear Power Plant in what is now Slovakia was constructed in 1958) and is situated 30 kilometres (19 mi) from the city of Třebíč, near the Dalešice Reservoir, where the NPP sources its water supply. In 1970 Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union ratified a contract for construction of two NPPs. Actual construction work began four years later. From 1985 to 1987, four power units with pressurized water reactors were commissioned. All four are still in operation.
In 1994, a tourist centre was opened at the site.
Dukovany NPP annually supplies approximately 14 TWhr of electric energy to the national power network.[1] NPP is owned and operated by CEZ Group. The power plant modernisation will successively be carried out to the end of its planned service life.[2]
Technical data
The Dukovany NPP has four reactors. As of December 31, 2011 CEZ reported turbine generator output (gross capacity) as listed below. Net capacity is a baseline estimate only.
Unit | Type | Net capacity | Gross capacity | Initial criticality | Grid date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | VVER 440/V213 | 471 MWe | 505 MWe | Feb 1985 | Aug 1985 |
2 | VVER 440/V213 | 471 MWe | 505 MWe | Jan 1986 | Sep 1986 |
3 | VVER 440/V213 | 471 MWe | 505 MWe | Oct 1986 | May 1987 |
4 | VVER 440/V213 | 471 MWe | 505 MWe | Jun 1987 | Dec 1987 |
In 2005, Unit 3 was upgraded to 456 MWe gross capacity, and the same upgrade was made to Unit 1 and Unit 4 in 2007. Unit 3 was further upgraded in 2009 to 500MWe. In total an extra 240 MWe of capacity has been or will be added before 2013 in a comprehensive program of improvements including steam plant replacement, addition of instrumentation and fuel changes.
The reactors are fuelled by uranium dioxide UO2. Fuel is placed in the reactor in 312 fuel assemblies. Each assembly consists of 126 fuel rods with a hermetically sealed fuel.
Cooling Towers
Dukovany Nuclear Power Station has 8 cooling towers, each 125 metres tall.
Meteorological Tower
West of the facility at 49°5'42.89"N, 16°8'5.44"E, there is a 136 metre tall guyed tower for monitoring air radioactivity.
Power distribution
The powerlines leaving Dukovany Nuclear Power Station are mainly installed on delta type pylons. They run to Slavetice substation situated at 49°6'15" N and 16°7'10" E. At this substation the powerline to Dürnrohr in Austria starts.
Plant owner CEZ plans to install a district heating circuit to supply heat to homes and businesses in Brno. A pipeline over 40 kilometres in length could be installed after regional officials have considered CEZ's environmental impact statement for the project, submitted in July 2010.
Popular culture
The Dukovany reactor complex appears in the video game Tom Clancy's EndWar as a potential battlefield.[3]
See also
- Temelín Nuclear Power Station - another nuclear power plant in the Czech Republic
- Dalešice Reservoir - nearby reservoir that supplies cooling water and the Dalešice Hydro Power Plant
References
- ↑ Company website
- ↑
- ↑ Ubisoft (2008). "Locations". Ubisoft. Retrieved 1 April 2011.