E.On keeps options open on Italy nuclear tech-report

July 18 (Reuters) – Germany’s E.On (EONGn.DE) has still not decided what technology it would use for possible nuclear power plants in Italy, the head of its Italian unit, Klaus Schaefer, said in an interview with an Italian newspaper.

“We still haven’t taken a decision” on technology, Schaefer, who is chief executive of E.On Italia, told Il Sole 24 Ore in the interview, published on Sunday.

“We can count on lots of specific experience, with a variety of solutions in all the countries where we are operating,” he said.

Rival group Enel (ENEI.MI) of Italy and France’s EDF (EDF.PA) have already picked French EPR reactors and Schaefer did not exclude his company also using that.

“Nothing excluded, no limits,” he said.

Italy plans to revive nuclear energy, which was rejected by a public vote in 1987 after the Chernobyl disaster in Ukraine. But clashing political interests have delayed setting up a safety agency — an important step in the plans.

Schaefer said there were still key elements missing from the plans, including rules for competition for sites and guarantees on stability for regulation.

The nuclear safety agency, yet to be set up, is expected to define precise criteria for selecting sites and oversee construction and operation. [ID:nLDE66D0QP]

He added that E.On could start work on nuclear projects in Italy before Enel and EdF but added it was not important.

“We are in a marathon, not a 100 metre sprint,” he said.

He said the government’s target of laying the first stone within the current legislature which could run to 2013 was “a tougher objective than it was a year ago,” adding that lost time could be regained.

Schaefer said if all went well, the first nuclear power plant could be working five to seven years after the start of construction.

(Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

U.N. watchdog backs Egypt nuclear power plant plans

CAIRO, June 22 (Reuters) – The U.N. nuclear watchdog is ready to cooperate with plans to build nuclear power plants in Egypt, which is now working on locations for construction, the head of the U.N. body said on Tuesday.

Egypt said in March it planned to build four plants by 2025 and inaugurate the first in 2019 in an effort to reduce the most populous Arab country’s reliance on oil and gas. Officials hope the programme would add capacity of up to 4,000 megawatts.

“The IAEA is very happy to cooperate with Egypt in its project of introducing nuclear power. Now Egypt is finalizing its plan of choosing the site for its nuclear plant,” said Yukiya Amano, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Speaking after talks with Egyptian officials, he told reporters he had proposed sending a mission to Egypt. He did not give details.

The official state news agency MENA also quoted Electricity and Energy Minister Hassan Ahmed Younes saying the IAEA had voiced its full support of Egypt’s nuclear programme.

Egypt, with 78 million peopled, has signed a nuclear power consultancy deal with Australia’s WorleyParsons (WOR.AX).

The deal, reached last year, includes looking for potential locations and updating studies on the Dabaa site on the Mediterranean coast, where Egypt planned to build a power station in the 1980s.

Egypt has long pressed for making the Middle East a nuclear-weapons-free zone and backed plans for a U.N.-sponsored conference for Middle East states in 2012 on the issue.

Israel is widely believed to have the region’s only nuclear arsenal. Western powers suspect Iran of developing nuclear weapons under the cover of a civilian programme. Tehran denies such ambitions.

“In the upcoming conference in 2012 of the creation of a nuclear free zone, we have further discussed the aid that the agency could extend to Egypt,” Amano said. (Reporting by Marwa Awad, writing by Edmund Blair)

No impact from radiation leak at China nuclear plant, says CLP

June 15 (Reuters) – CLP Holdings Ltd (0002.HK), Hong Kong’s largest power supplier, said it had recorded a small rise in radioactivity in reactor cooling water at a nuclear plant in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen last month.

“The reactor cooling water is sealed in completely and isolated from the external environment, thus causing no impact to the public,” CLP said on Tuesday.

CLP’s statement followed a report by Washington-based Radio Free Asia that the Daya Bay nuclear plant had suffered a large radiation leak that was threatening public safety.

Preliminary assessments indicated there was a very small leakage at a fuel rod in Unit 2 of the power station, the company said in a statement obtained by Reuters on Tuesday.

The level of radioactivity had since remained stable over the last two weeks, it said.

Operations at the Daya Bay nuclear power plant had not been affected, said the company, adding that the situation did not fall within the International Nuclear Event Scale, which measures the significance of nuclear accidents.

Daya Bay nuclear power plant, 25 percent owned by CLP, is located about 50 km (30 miles) from densely-populated Hong Kong and supplies a quarter of the city’s power.

The power station, which comprises two nuclear reactors with a generating capacity of 984 megawatts each, has been controversial in Hong Kong, where activists have questioned the safety of the facility.

Activists have raised questions about the time it took for CLP to issue a statement about the leak.

“We are concerned about the plant’s slow reaction (to the incident) and the long duration it took them to act on the situation,” said Prentice Koo, a Greenpeace campaigner in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong’s Security Bureau said the Hong Kong Observatory’s radiation monitoring stations had not registered any unusual levels since May 23. The bureau said it would study the incident further and follow up with CLP. (Reporting by Alison Leung and Darren Chen; Editing by Don Durfee and Chris Lewis)

UPDATE 1-Southern Ga. Hatch 1 reactor cut to 28 pct

HOUSTON, June 9 (Reuters) – Southern Co’s (SO.N)
876-megawatt Unit 1 at the Hatch nuclear power plant in Georgia
was operating at 28 percent output on Wednesday resulting from
a condenser vacuum problem, a spokeswoman said.

The reactor’s unit was reduced late Tuesday from full power
earlier in the day, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said
in a report.

The problem has been isolated and repair plans are being
implemented, the spokeswoman said.

She declined to give details on how long the unit might be
operating at a reduced output.
———————————————————–
PLANT BACKGROUND/TIMELINE
STATE: Georgia
COUNTY: Appling
TOWN: Baxley
OPERATOR: Southern Co’s Southern Nuclear
OWNER(S): Southern Co’s Georgia Power (50.1 pct)

Oglethorpe Power Corp (30 pct)

Municipal Elec. Authority of Georgia (17.7 pct)

City of Dalton (2.2 percent)
CAPACITY: 1,759 MW
UNIT(S): 1 – 876 MW General Electric boiling water reactor

2 – 883 MW General Electric boiling water reactor
FUEL: Nuclear
DISPATCH: Baseload
COST: $934 million
TIMELINE:
1975 – Unit 1 enters commercial service
1979 – Unit 2 enters commercial service
2002 – NRC renews original 40 year operating licenses for
an additional 20 years
2034 – Unit 1 extended operating license expires
2038 – Unit 2 extended operating license expires
(Reporting by Ratul Ray Chaudhuri in Bangalore and Eileen
O’Grady; Editing by Sofina Mirza-Reid)

Tax woes turned friendly cabbie Derrick Bird into mass murderer

London, June 4 (ANI): Cumbria gunman Derrick Bird”s spiralling debts turned him into a mass murderer from a friendly cabbie, it has emerged.

Bird, 52, had outstanding income tax dues of more than 100,000pounds.

He wanted to settle it with a large share of his mum Mary”s will when she died.

But he soon found his twin David was to be the main beneficiary.

Bird now felt he had been “stitched up” by David and his lawyer handling the will, Kevin Commons, his brother”s pal.

When a taxman discovered Bird had 60,000pounds in a bank account, he was convinced David has given up on him.

Bird anger was further fuelled by grudges against his previous bosses at the Sellafield nuclear power plant and fellow Lake District taxi drivers.

David and Commons were Bird”s first victims before he murdered 10 and wounded 11 others in the recent gun rampage across Cumbria.

“Derrick believed David had been sucking up to their mum to engineer a huge share of the cash. He became obsessed and finally unhinged, fearing he had been cheated by his family,” the Sun quoted an insider, as saying.

Another source said: “It”s all to do with income tax. David had been trying to help Derrick with his financial problems. But we think Derrick got it into his head that his brother was ripping him off.”

A friend said: “It has been said there was some family problem over the will and how it would affect Derrick”s tax affairs.

“The feeling was that if his mother”s will was divided equally then a lot of it would be swallowed up by the taxman. I think the family thought it better Derrick”s share should be as low as possible so the money didn”t simply go to the Government.” (ANI)

Russia pursuing independent policy vis-a-vis Iran: Kremlin

Russia is pursuing an independent policy vis-a-vis Iran and its stance on Tehran’s nuclear programme was neither pro-US nor pro-Iranian, according to a top Kremlin official.

Responding to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahemadinejad’s claim that Russia is siding with Tehran’s enemies in the crisis over the Iranian nuclear drive, Kremlin foreign policy aide Sergei Prikhodko said, “Russia is unfailingly guided by its long-term government interests.”

Rejecting Ahmadinejad’s claims Prikhodko said Russia’s position is “specifically Russian, it reflects the interests of all Russia’s people, and therefore can be neither pro-American nor pro-Iranian.”

“Any unpredictability, political extremism, lack of transparency or inconsistency in decision-making…is unacceptable for Russia,” Prikhodko was quoted as saying by RIA Novosti.

“No one has ever managed to retain their authority through political demagoguery,” Prikhodko added.

Russia is building Iran’s first nuclear power plant in Bushehr city, a facility expected to finally come online in August after a series of delays.

CEZ to restart Dukovany unit 3 after re-fuelling

PRAGUE, April 2 (Reuters) – Czech power group CEZ (CEZPsp.PR) said on Friday it would restart the third unit at its Dukovany nuclear power plant over the weekend after a regular re-fuelling.

Utilities

CEZ added it would again shut units 3 and 4 at the plant in late October for 25 days.

(Reporting by Jason Hovet)

CEZ to restart Dukovany unit 3 after re-fuelling

PRAGUE, April 2 (Reuters) – Czech power group CEZ (CEZPsp.PR) said on Friday it would restart the third unit at its Dukovany nuclear power plant over the weekend after a regular re-fuelling.

Utilities

CEZ added it would again shut units 3 and 4 at the plant in late October for 25 days.

(Reporting by Jason Hovet)

New Delhi, Mar. 15 (ANI): The expected face-off between the UPA Government and the Opposition over the former”s proposed Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Bill has fizzled out with the UPA saying it will not table the Bill that provides for compensation in case of a nuclear accident for discussion today.

The BJP and the Left have already indicated opposition to the Bill that is key to operationalise the landmark Indo-US nuclear deal. Senior BJP leader L.K. Advani said the Government must give reasons for not tabling the Bill for a discussion, when it already figures in the day”s listed business.

The Bill pegs the maximum amount of liability in case of each nuclear accident at Rs 300 crore to be paid by the operator of the nuclear plant.

However, the draft bill also has provisions that would enable the government to either increase or decrease the amount of liability of any operator.

“At the introduction itself we will oppose unless the government assures us that it would be sent to a Parliamentary Standing Committee,” a private television channel quoted CPI(M) politburo member Sitaram Yechury, as saying.

The BJP is also understood to have expressed concern over the Rs 300 crore limits in the liability of the nuclear power plant operator.

“All these issues are there and we will discuss all that in the standing committee,” said Yechury when asked about the Rs 300 crore limits.

Reports had it that the government was keen on getting the Bill passed in the ongoing budget session itself.

National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon had met BJP leader Arun Jaitley to brief him about the Bill, but the main opposition is yet to have all its concerns addressed.

Jaitley is understood to have given a list of queries regarding the Bill to Menon but was yet to get any reply.

The Bill was approved by the Union Cabinet on November 20 last year.

According to the provisions in the draft legislation, the operator would not be liable for any nuclear damage if the incident was caused by “grave national disaster of exceptional character”, armed conflict or act of terrorism and suffered by person on account of his own negligence.

Former Atomic Energy Commission Chairman and key architect of the Indo-US nuclear deal Anil Kakodkar feels that the liability limit is optimum.

The Bill also provides for establishment of Nuclear Damage Claims Commission which will have one or more claims commissioners for a specified area.

The claims commissioner shall have all powers of a civil court for the purpose of taking evidence on oath, enforcing attendance of witnesses, compelling the discovery and production of documents and other material objects.

Environment activists have described as a violation of fundamental rights the proposed attempt to cap the level of compensation to victims of a nuclear accident. “Under Article 21 of the Constitution, there is no warrant or justification for capping nuclear liability,” noted jurist Soli Sorabjee said in his opinion to Greenpeace.

Issues relating to the remaining steps of the nuclear deal — reprocessing pact and civil liability legislation — are expected to be key points in Prime Minister Manmohan Singh”s agenda when he meets US President Barack Obama on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit next month.

After award of compensation, the operator has the right to appeal in three cases, one of which is when he argues that the incident resulted from “willful act or gross negligence” of a supplier of material, equipment or services.

The right to claim compensation has a limit of 10 years from the date of incident. The exception is of stolen, lost, jettisoned or abandoned nuclear material, where the period is increased to 20 years.

The government is expected to argue that the legislation is necessary as the Atomic Energy Act that governs the nuclear power sector is silent on compensation.

Several insurance companies also do not cover injuries caused due to radiation.

The state-run Nuclear Power Corporation of India that operates all atomic power plants in the country has set aside Rs 500 crore to meet compensation requirements in case of a nuclear incident. (ANI)

UPA Government, Opposition set to square off in Parliament on Nuke Liability Bill

New Delhi, Mar. 15 (ANI): The UPA Government and the Opposition are likely to engage in a heated debate over the former”s proposed Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Bill that provides for compensation in case of a nuclear accident.

The Bill is slated to be introduced in the Lok Sabha today, and, the BJP and the Left have already indicated opposition to the Bill that is key to operationalise the landmark Indo-US nuclear deal.

The Bill pegs the maximum amount of liability in case of each nuclear accident at Rs 300 crore to be paid by the operator of the nuclear plant.

However, the draft bill also has provisions that would enable the government to either increase or decrease the amount of liability of any operator.

“At the introduction itself we will oppose unless the government assures us that it would be sent to a Parliamentary Standing Committee,” a private television channel quoted CPI(M) politburo member Sitaram Yechury, as saying.

The BJP is also understood to have expressed concern over the Rs 300 crore limits in the liability of the nuclear power plant operator.

“All these issues are there and we will discuss all that in the standing committee,” said Yechury when asked about the Rs 300 crore limits.

Reports had it that the government was keen on getting the Bill passed in the ongoing budget session itself.

National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon had met BJP leader Arun Jaitley to brief him about the Bill, but the main opposition is yet to have all its concerns addressed.

Jaitley is understood to have given a list of queries regarding the Bill to Menon but was yet to get any reply.

The Bill was approved by the Union Cabinet on November 20 last year.

According to the provisions in the draft legislation, the operator would not be liable for any nuclear damage if the incident was caused by “grave national disaster of exceptional character”, armed conflict or act of terrorism and suffered by person on account of his own negligence.

Former Atomic Energy Commission Chairman and key architect of the Indo-US nuclear deal Anil Kakodkar feels that the liability limit is optimum.

The Bill also provides for establishment of Nuclear Damage Claims Commission which will have one or more claims commissioners for a specified area.

The claims commissioner shall have all powers of a civil court for the purpose of taking evidence on oath, enforcing attendance of witnesses, compelling the discovery and production of documents and other material objects.

Environment activists have described as a violation of fundamental rights the proposed attempt to cap the level of compensation to victims of a nuclear accident. “Under Article 21 of the Constitution, there is no warrant or justification for capping nuclear liability,” noted jurist Soli Sorabjee said in his opinion to Greenpeace.

Issues relating to the remaining steps of the nuclear deal — reprocessing pact and civil liability legislation — are expected to be key points in Prime Minister Manmohan Singh”s agenda when he meets US President Barack Obama on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit next month.

After award of compensation, the operator has the right to appeal in three cases, one of which is when he argues that the incident resulted from “willful act or gross negligence” of a supplier of material, equipment or services.

The right to claim compensation has a limit of 10 years from the date of incident. The exception is of stolen, lost, jettisoned or abandoned nuclear material, where the period is increased to 20 years.

The government is expected to argue that the legislation is necessary as the Atomic Energy Act that governs the nuclear power sector is silent on compensation.

Several insurance companies also do not cover injuries caused due to radiation.

The state-run Nuclear Power Corporation of India that operates all atomic power plants in the country has set aside Rs 500 crore to meet compensation requirements in case of a nuclear incident. (ANI)

Nuclear Damage Bill to be introduced in Lok Sabha

New Delhi, Mar 15 (ANI): The Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Bill, which provides for compensation in case of a nuclear accident and is key to operationalise the Indo-US nuclear deal, is all set to be introduced in the Lok Sabha on Monday.l

The BJP and the Left parties have already indicated their opposition to the crucial bill providing compesation to the victims.

The bill puts the maximum amount of liability in case of each nuclear accident at Rs 300 crore to be paid by the operator of the nuclear plant and also has provisions that would enable the government to either increase or decrease the amount of liability of any operator.

CPI (M) politburo member Sitaram Yechury said: “At the introduction itself we will oppose unless the government assures us that it would be sent to a Parliamentary Standing Committee. All these issues are there and we will discuss all that in the standing committee.”

The BJP is also understood to have expressed concern over the Rs 300 crore limit in the liability of the nuclear power plant operator.

The government is keen on getting the Bill passed in the ongoing budget session itself and National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon had met BJP leader Arun Jaitley to brief him about the Bill.

The operator would not be liable for any nuclear damage if the incident was caused by “grave national disaster of exceptional character”, armed conflict or act of terrorism and suffered by person on account of his own negligence, according to the draft legislation. (ANI)

US says no to nuclear power plant to Pak

WASHINGTON: The US has categorically told Pakistan that it would not get any atomic power plant or civilian nuclear deal on the lines of the one signed with India.

“The United States is working closely with Pakistan to help meet its growing needs. Nuclear power is not currently part of our discussions,” a senior Administration official told PTI.

Leaders of Pakistan, who have been pitching hard for a nuclear power plant, have been told about in recently.

The senior Administration official, preferring anonymity, said the US has also told Pakistan that there is no way that they can get a civilian nuclear deal similar to the one the Obama Administration has signed with India.

The Indo-US civilian nuclear deal is specific to India only and there is no thinking going on in the administration to create a template for it, the official said.

Moreover, given the past experiences that the US had with Pakistan on nuclear proliferation issue and the episode of disgraced Pakistani scientist A Q Khan accused of transferring sensitive technologies abroad, the official said both the top American lawmakers and those in the US Government have serious concerns about the safety of Pakistani nuclear weapons.

Under these circumstances, it is quite difficult to consider “that (nuclear power)” option for Pakistan, the officials pointed out.

Israel aware of S. Arabia’s plans to build nuke power plant

Riyadh (Saudi Arabia), Aug.21 (ANI): Israel has said that it is aware about Saudi Arabia’s plans to build nuclear power plants.

The Saudi newspaper Al-Watan quoted the country’s Minister of Water and Electricity, Abdullah al-Hosain, as saying the kingdom was working on plans for its first nuclear power plant.

The US inked civil nuclear power deals with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates last year.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Israel had no official response to the Saudi minister’s announcement.

Over the last two years, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, Kuwait, the UAE, Yemen, Morocco, Libya, Jordan and Egypt have all indicated an interest in developing nuclear programs.

According to the Jerusalem Post, Israel has been careful not to take a public stand on civilian nuclear programs in neighboring states, partly because as one of the few countries in the world that has not signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty, it is not keen on lobbying against nuclear know-how for peaceful needs going to countries that are willing to sign the treaty, since that would focus the limelight on Israel’s own unique situation.

Nevertheless, defense officials said that Saudi interest in nuclear power was connected to Teheran’s continued race toward nuclear power.

“The Saudis are genuinely scared of what will happen if Iran turns nuclear,” one official said. “This is part of their response.” (ANI)

Biofuels may be used to clean up Chernobyl ‘badlands’

London, June 29 (ANI): Belarus, a country affected much by the fallout of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster of 1986, is planning to grow biofuels to make its soil fit to grow food again within decades rather than hundreds of years.

The Chernobyl disaster was a nuclear reactor accident at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union.

It is considered to be the worst nuclear power plant disaster in history, resulting in a severe release of radioactivity following a massive power excursion that destroyed the reactor.

A 40,000 square kilometre area of south-east Belarus is so stuffed with radioactive isotopes that rained down from the nearby Chernobyl nuclear power station in 1986 that it won’t be fit for growing food for hundreds of years, as the isotopes won’t have decayed sufficiently.

But now, according to a report in New Scientist, Belarus is planning to use the crops to suck up the radioactive strontium and caesium and make the soil fit to grow food again within decades.

This week, a team of Irish biofuels technologists is in the capital, Minsk, hoping to do a deal with state agencies to buy radioactive sugar beet and other crops grown on the contaminated land to make biofuels for sale across Europe.

The company, Greenfield Project Management, insists no radioactive material will get into the biofuel as only ethanol is distilled out.

“In distillation, only the most volatile compounds rise up the tube. Everything else is left behind,” said Basil Miller of Greenfield.

The heavy radioactive residues will be burned in a power station, producing a concentrated “radioactive ash”.

“This can be disposed of at existing treatment works for nuclear waste,” said Miller.

The Belarus government hopes that by growing biofuels and using the whole plant, it can cleanse the soil.

“Instead of centuries of natural decay (of the radionuclides), this process will cut the time to 20 to 40 years,” said Andrei Savinkh, Belarus representative at the UN in Geneva.

Greenfield plans to build the first biofuels distillery next year at Mozyr, close to one of the most contaminated areas.

The 500 million Euros plant will turn half a million cubic metres of crops a year into 700 million litres of biofuels, starting in 2011.

As many as 10 more plants will follow provided funding can be raised, according to Miller. (ANI)

The ‘jilted’Karachi woman who saved Pak nuke programme from sabotage

Islamabad, May 28 (ANI): In a startling revelation, about 30 years after it actually happened, it has been disclosed how a young woman, who was betrayed by a nuclear scientist, helped the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) to nab 12 scientists and engineers, who were planning to sabotage the country’s nuclear sites.

The story dates back to 1978 when Pakistan was trying hard to join the list of nuclear countries.

A female college lecturer of a Karachi Memon family had exposed the plans of sabotaging Pakistan’s nuclear programme by certain scientists at the behest of a ‘superpower’ to the then ISI Sindh head Brigadier Imtiaz Ahmed, The News reports.

Unveiling the secret he had maintained for over 30 years, Brigadier Ahmed said that a young woman college lecturer, feeling betrayed after a romance with a nuclear scientist of the Karachi Nuclear Power Plant (KANUPP), had given a lead to the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) which led to the arrest of 12 scientists and engineers.

“Listen, almost 30 years have passed since this incident, but till date I can’t forget how a heartbroken woman’s commitment to herself to take revenge from her lover had led to the unfolding of this secret, which, if not shared, might have deprived Pakistan of its nuclear assets and we might not be celebrating this day,” he said.

Brigadier Ahmed recalled the meeting with the young female lecturer who admitted that she was dating Munshi, a nuclear scientist working with KANUPP, but felt betrayed and cheated as she believed he had spoiled her life.

She told Brigadier Ahmed that she was thinking of taking revenge from him.

She revealed that Munshi was working for a secret agency of a superpower which used to provide him questions related to the nuclear programme and he used to give them replies to those.

Brigadier Ahmed was later awarded the Tamgha-e-Basalat by the Pakistan President for unearthing the conspiracy. (ANI)

Russia signs nuclear deal with Jordan

MOSCOW: Russia on Friday signed an agreement with Jordan to build nuclear power plants, desalination and research and training facilities in the West Asian kingdom.

The 10-year deal signed here by Russia’s RosAtom nuclear corporation CEO Sergei Kiriyenko and Jordanian Atomic Energy Commission chairman Khaled Toukan also stipulates cooperation in the production and use of nuclear materials.

“This agreement is the beginning of major strategic cooperation between the two countries. We intend to cooperate in the construction of nuclear power plants… and plan to build four plants in Jordan in the coming decades,” Kiriyenko was quoted as saying by RIA Novosti news agency.

Construction of a nuclear power plant for production of electricity and a sea water desalination station are among the important projects to be executed under the deal, Jordan’s nuclear official said.

Russia will also partner Jordan in Uranium processing under the agreement, the official added.

China starts constructing third-generation nuclear reactors

New Delhi, Apr 20 (ANI): China has started the construction of its first third-generation pressurized water reactors using AP 1000 technologies developed by US-based Westinghouse.

The reactors, located in Sanmen of east China’s Zhejiang Province, will also be the first in the world using such technologies.

The Sanmen Nuclear Power Plant will be built in three phases, with an investment of more than 5.88 billion dollars injected in the first phase, Xinhua reported.

The first phase project will include two units each with a generating capacity of 1.25 million kw. The first generating unit will be put into operation in 2013, and the second, in 2014. The plant will eventually have six such units.

“It is the biggest energy cooperation project between China and the United States,” said Zhang Guobao, Vice Minister in charge of the National Development and Reform Commission and also head of the National Energy Administration.

“It will contribute to the human kind’s peaceful use of nuclear power,” he said.

China launched bidding in 2003 for its nuclear power stations of the third generation. Foreign companies including Westinghouse, France’s Areva and Russia’s AtomStroyExport are major bidders.

Westinghouse became the winner after China signed a memo with the United States on the introduction and transfer of third-generation nuclear power technologies in December 2006. (ANI)

UPDATE 1-Entergy NY Indian Pt 3 reactor reonnects to grid

(Releads with reconnection to grid)

NEW YORK, April 15 (Reuters) – Entergy Corp’s (ETR.N) 1,025-megawatt Unit 3 at the Indian Point nuclear power plant near New York City reconnected to the power grid Wednesday afternoon after a 35-day refueling outage, the company said.

The unit had been shut since March 11 for scheduled maintenance and refueling. By late Wednesday afternoon, it was operating at 28 percent of production capacity, said Jerry Nappi, Indian Point spokesman for Entergy.

The 2,045 MW Indian Point station is located in Buchanan in Westchester County about 45 miles north of New York City. The station has two units: the 1,020 MW Unit 2 and the 1,025 MW Unit 3, which entered service in 1973 and 1976.

Unit 2 continued to operate at full power early Wednesday.

Before it shut on March 11 to refuel, Unit 3 had operated for 678 consecutive days, a U.S. record for continuous operation for Westinghouse pressurized water reactors, Entergy said.

One MW powers about 800 homes in New York.

Entergy, of New Orleans, owns and operates about 30,000 MW of generating capacity, markets energy commodities and transmits and distributes power to 2.7 million customers in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas. (Reporting by Joe Silha and Bernie Woodall, editing by John Picinich)

Russia delivers first batch of nuclear fuel to India

Vinay Shukla Moscow, Apr 10 (PTI) Under a multi-million dollar long-term nuclear fuel supply deal between Moscow and New Delhi, Russia has delivered the first batch of 30 metric tonnes of uranium pellets to India. “Thirty metric tonnes of pellets have been delivered to Hyderabad-based Nuclear Fuel Complex for the production of fuel for ‘Rajasthan’ NPP,” Russia’s ‘Atomenergoprom’ said in a statement.

Under the USD 700 million contract inked between Russia’s TVEL Corporation and India’s Department of Atomic Energy in February, this is the first batch of Uranium Dioxide pellets delivered to Nuclear Fuel Complex. One of the largest nuclear fuel producers in the world, TVEL is a wholly owned subsidiary of ‘Atomenergoprom’.

Under the deal, it would supply the uranium pellets to fuel pressurised heavy water reactors (PHWR) in India. TVEL would also ensure life-cycle supply of fuel for the light-water VVER reactors of the Kudankulam nuclear power plant in Tamil Nadu.

Russia is currently completing the assembly of first two VVER-1000 reactors with total two Megawatt capacity at Kudankulam. Under the deal inked in December 2008 during President Dmitry Medvedev’s maiden India visit, Russia will build four more reactors to meet India’s growing energy requirements.

Japan power firms make scant progress with CO2 cuts

TOKYO, April 10 (Reuters) – Japan’s electric power companies made little progress in producing low-carbon electricity and lowering emissions in the past year, industry data showed on Friday, mostly due to an outage at a nuclear power plant.

The data increases the likelihood that Japanese power firms, factories and companies will have to buy more carbon offsets from abroad to help Japan to meet its commitments under the Kyoto Protocol.

Japan’s commitments depend largely on the electric power sector’s efforts to make electricity low carbon by using more non-fossil fuels and producing 20 percent less carbon dioxide emissions per kilowatt hour than 1990/1991 levels.

Japan’s 12 electric power companies produced 0.45 kg CO2 per kilowatt hour in the year to March 2008, preliminary data by the Federation of Electric Power Companies showed.

That compares with 0.453 kg a year ago, against the sector’s target of 0.34 kg over the five years to March 2013 from 0.417 kg in 1990/1991.

Tokyo Electric Power Co’s (9501.T) 1,356-megawatt No.7 reactor at its Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear plant, the world’s largest, has been closed since July 2007 after a powerful earthquake. [ID:nT327041]

The industry data is being closely watched. 2008/2009 was the start of Japan’s five-year plan under the Kyoto Protocol, the U.N.-led global climate pact under which many nations aim to reduce emissions.

The electric power sector’s CO2 emissions per kilowatt hour is used as a basis to calculate emissions at offices and factories from their power consumption. [ID:nT299251]

The sector’s voluntary target is not legally binding, but it considers it a commitment and has said it would make up any shortfall with U.N. approved emission credits from abroad or other offsets. (Editing by Sue Thomas)