Kostroma Nuclear Power Plant

Proposed Russian nuclear power plant
Kostroma NPP
GenerationGeneration III+ reactor
Reactor conceptWater-moderated and water-cooled reactor
Reactor lineVVER (Voda Voda Energo Reactor)
Reactor types4 VVER-1200 reactors
Main parameters of the reactor core
Fuel (fissile material)235U (NU/SEU/LEU)
Fuel stateSolid
Neutron energy spectrumThermal
Primary control methodControl rods
Primary moderatorWater
Primary coolantLiquid (light water)
Reactor usage
Primary useGeneration of electricity
Power (electric)4800MW

Kostroma Nuclear Power Plant is an as-yet proposed, but currently non-existent nuclear power plant that was to be erected in the Buysky District, of Kostroma Oblast in Russia.

History

In the mid-1970s within the erstwhile Soviet Union, it was decided by the Soviet Council of Ministers under chairman Alexei Kosygin that a nuclear power plant would be constructed in Kostroma, using two RBMKP-2400 generation II reactor cores.[1]

Construction began in 1979, with several design changes made throughout; in the 1980s, Soviet planners decided to build two RBMK-1500 reactors instead. In the aftermath of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, the plant's design was again re-drawn to use VVER-1000 reactors.[2] All construction came to a complete stop in 1990, not long before the collapse of the Soviet Union. In the '90s, a proposal was made to build two VPBER-600 reactors (variants of the VVER-640 design)[citation needed], but the proposal never reached production stage.

On 8 December 1996, further construction was rejected by referendum with 87% voting against. By 1999, the Kostroma Regional Court and later Supreme Court of the Russian Federation ruled the Kostroma Oblast Duma decision to hold a referendum (date 25 April 1996, No. 278) illegal.[citation needed]

Per resolution No. 1574 of the Kostroma Oblast Duma, date 1 March 2007, all resolutions preventing construction were cancelled and, therefore, construction was to resume in earnest; on-site switchgear had already been installed that could handle up to 500kV.[citation needed]

Resumed construction efforts (2008)

On 14 October 2008, Kostroma's regional governor was presented with a Declaration of Intent to invest in the construction of two power units, signed by Rosatom State Corporation's then General Director, Sergey Kiriyenko.[3] Public hearings held in 2009 discussed the potential environmental impact for power units No. 1 and 2 of the plant. Construction of the plant was also referenced by a government scheme to improve energy infrastructure within Russia, approved for construction until the year 2030 by order of the Russian government.[citation needed]

It was decided that the plant would be built in stages: between 2016 and 2020, two power units would be built using the VVER-1200 design with a capacity of 2300MW. Later, two additional units would have been installed for a total capacity of 4600MW.[4]

Construction canceled again (2011)

By April 2011, Rosatom had received a license from Russian energy regulator Rostekhnadzor, authorising construction. In the end, Rosatom canceled all construction plans.[5]

To this day, the Kostroma Nuclear Power Plant has never been built.

References

  1. ^ Доллежаль Н. А. У истоков рукотворного мира: Записки конструктора — М.: Знание, 1989 — Трибуна академика — 256с.
  2. ^ Луконин Н. Ф. Атомная энергетика СССР. Текущие проблемы и перспективы показателей АЭС. Журнал «Атомная энергия». Том 63, вып. 5. 1987 год. Электронная библиотека «История Росатома» — [1]
  3. ^ Анастасия Денисова. Буйскую АЭС возродят[dead link] // Ведомости.ru, 15.10.2008
  4. ^ www.dp.ru со ссылкой на RIA Novosti и долгосрочную генеральную схему размещения объектов электроэнергетики (13 March 2008). "В России построят четыре АЭС". Санкт-Петербург: Delovoy Peterburg. ISSN 1606-1829.[dead link]
  5. ^ ""Росатом" в ближайшие годы не планирует строительство Центральной АЭС". РИА Новости. 2011-04-19. Archived from the original on 2012-03-11. Retrieved 2011-05-11.

External links

  • Kostroma nuclear plant discussed on Rosenergoatom website (Russian language page)
  • Publication by Kirill Rubankov, titled Атомная радость ("Atomic Bliss") (Russian language page) // «Expert Online» /15 окт 2008

See also

  • v
  • t
  • e
Reactors
Active
Under construction
  • Kursk II
  • Seversk
Closed
Canceled
  • Bashkir
  • Crimean
  • Gorky
  • Kaliningrad
  • Krasnodar
  • Primorsk
  • South Ural
  • Tatar (Kama)
  • Tver
  • Volgograd
  • Voronezh
Planned
  • Central
  • Kola II
  • Nizhny Novgorod
  • Smolensk II
Reactor types
Power plant reactors
Research, experimental
and prototype reactors
Research locationsCompanies
Category