Beznau Nuclear Power Plant Explained

Beznau Nuclear Power Plant
Coordinates:47.5521°N 8.2285°W
Name Official:Kernkraftwerk Beznau
Country:Switzerland
Location:Döttingen AG, Zurzach
Status:Operational
Construction Began:1965
Owner:Axpo Holding
Ps Units Operational:2 × 365 MW
Np Reactor Type:PWR
Np Reactor Supplier:Westinghouse Electric
Ps Cogeneration:Yes (150 GW·ht/y)
Ps Cooling Source:Aare
Ps Electrical Capacity:730
Ps Electrical Cap Fac:91.8%
Ps Annual Generation:5,826

The Beznau nuclear power plant (German: '''Kernkraftwerk Beznau''' ['''KKB''']) is a nuclear power plant of the Swiss energy utility Axpo, located in the municipality Döttingen, Canton of Aargau, Switzerland, on an artificial island in the Aare river. The plant has been operating since September 1969.

History

Beznau 1 and 2

Beznau 1 is the first commercial nuclear power reactor in Switzerland.

Putting an end to the traditional predilection of the Swiss power utilities for hydroelectric power, in the beginning of the 1960s the then Nordostschweizerische Kraftwerke AG (NOK, now part of Axpo Holding) started to take into account the construction of a nuclear power plant. On 23 December 1964 the Swiss Federal Office of Energy recognized the artificial island in Beznau as potential location for a reactor. The corresponding construction permit was issued on 2 November 1965 and, after only four years, on 12 May 1969 commissioning was authorized. On 24 December 1969 Beznau 1 started commercial operation.[1]

In the meantime the procedure for the construction of the identical reactor Beznau 2 had begun. The location and a first construction permit were approved on 17 November 1967, followed on 21 September 1970 by the final one. The commissioning started on 16 July 1971 and the reactor finally entered the commercial operation phase on 15 March 1972.[1]

Beznau 1 obtained an unlimited operating license already on 30 October 1970. On the contrary Beznau 2 operated under temporary licenses until 3 December 2004, when the Swiss Federal Council removed the limitation.[2]

The power plant was built in the 1960s, when little opposition to nuclear projects was present. Over the years Beznau has been the scene of some anti-nuclear protests,[3] but such opposition never widespread among the majority of the local population. The cantonal citizens systematically rejected all votes on early shutdown of existing plants and on building suspension of new ones.[4] Finally, in 2007 the cantonal parliament entrusted the government to act in order to promote the building of a new reactor.[5]

No date for a definitive shutdown of the KKB had been set. From a technical point of view, similar types of reactors can probably operate safely to at least 60 years and probably until 80 years.[6] Beznau's Unit 1 is among the oldest commercial nuclear power plants still in operations as of 31 January 2016.[7]

Greenpeace protest

At dawn on 5 March 2014, Greenpeace activists broke into Beznau, urging European governments to close down the reactors on safety grounds. Some 100 protesters dressed in orange jumpsuits climbed over the boundary fence and hoisted large banners with images of cracking reactors and announcing "The End" of nuclear power at the 45-year-old Beznau nuclear plant.

40 activists were arrested by cantonal police before noon and the others in the evening. 58 activists were reported to the Public Prosecutor for trespassing. The nuclear operator Axpo submitted a criminal complaint for trespassing.

2015 Unit 1 shutdown

Newspaper Tages Anzeiger commented in October 2015 that two independent sources have confirmed that the reactor 1 pressure vessel contains around 1,000 cavities of half a centimetre in diameter.[8] Similar cavities, although smaller in number, size and extension,[9] were first discovered in the Belgian Doel 3 reactor, consequently the Swiss Federal Nuclear Safety Inspectorate (ENSI) asked Beznau and Gösgen NPPs to perform adequate testing on their reactor pressure vessel. It must be said that the flaw indications in the Belgian NPPs (Doel-3 and Tihange-2) did not cause the definitive shut down of the reactors. Indeed, both reactors resumed operations once all the needed tests were passed. Unit 1 has been shut down since the discovery of such material defects. A restart was expected in 2016 in case of positive test results, but since April 2017 no deadline for a restart was announced.[10]

2018 Unit 1 restart

Unit 1 was restarted in 2018. Axpo had proved that the inclusions found in the reactor pressure vessel steel did not have a negative effect on safety.[11] [12]

Assessing 80 years operation

In 2024 Axpo is assessing the technical feasibility of operating the Beznau nuclear power plant beyond the planned 60 years, beyond 2030.[13]

Beznau 3 plans

In view of the substitution of the plant, Resun AG submitted a framework permit application for a third reactor to the federal authorities on 4 December 2008, designated "EKKB" (Ersatzkernkraftwerk Beznau, Beznau replacement nuclear power plant) or Beznau 3.[14] Although the technical specifications are to be defined later, the reactor of choice is to be a light water type Generation III reactor with an electrical power of 1450 MW. The cooling is to be ensured by a hybrid tower.[15] [16]

The project is on indefinite hold following decisions by the Swiss federal authorities after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in 2011 to cease constructing new nuclear power plants.

Technical specifications

Reactors and generators

The KKB is composed of two identical pressurized water reactors units (Beznau 1 and 2) delivered by Westinghouse Electric.

Both reactors are certified for the use of MOX fuel. Since 2013, no more MOX fuel elements are used in both Beznau units.[17]

Characterized by a thermal power of 1130 MW, each unit produces 365 MW net electricity through two Brown Boveri turbine generators. Over the years the net electric power produced has been increased twice: it was 350 MW until 30 September 1996 and 357 MW until 2 January 2000.[18] The energy is delivered to the 220 kV grid.

The plant is cooled using the water of the Aar river and through the district heating system Refuna.

UnitTypeNet electrical powerGross electrical powerConstruction startCritical stateConnected to electricity gridCommercial operationShutdown
Beznau 1PWR365 MW380 MWSep. 1965Jun. 1969Jul. 1969Dec. 1969
Beznau 2PWR365 MW380 MWJan. 1968Oct. 1971Oct. 1971Mar. 1972

Refuna nuclear district heating

The Beznau NPP has been supplying the district heating system Refuna since 1984. This reduces the effect of the plant on the water temperature of the Aar river, and provides eleven surrounding municipalities with up to 150 GW·h of carbon-free heat per year. Beside Döttingen, the connected municipalities are Bad Zurzach, Klingnau, Unterendingen, Endingen, Böttstein, Tegerfelden, and in the bordering Baden District, Würenlingen and Untersiggenthal, and in the other bordering Brugg District, Rüfenach and Villigen. The heat extraction, at a supply temperature from 125 °C in winter down to 80 °C in summer, induces a loss of electric power, but less than 18 GW·he/year at 2 MWe average electric power loss. The energy content of the average 142 GW·h/y provided heat, is about the same as of 14,200,000 m3 of natural gas, averaging more than 5,800 m3 of natural gas consumption yearly saved for each of the 2,432 connected homes and customers.[19] [20]

Safety measures

Since the commissioning of the two reactors numerous upgrades have been carried out to improve safety.[21] [22] In the 1990s, the steam generators and the control technology of the reactor protection system were replaced. The control rooms were consequently adapted and new turbine controls installed.

Furthermore, each reactor unit has been equipped with an emergency building (NANO, NAchrüstung NOtstandsystem). These contain additional safety systems for the reactor emergency shutdown and for the feeding of the steam generators, a 50 kV emergency power line, and a diesel electricity generator. They are heavily protected (bunkerised) from external hazards and, if needed, are able to cool and shut down the power plant without human intervention for 72 hours.[23] [24] The at least 1.5 m thick concrete-steel housings protect the critical systems from external agents like earthquakes or plane crashes.[25] Each unit of the KKB has a large dry type containment in steel and concrete.

The emergency core cooling (ECCS) is performed by a redundant high-pressure safety injection system with a total of three strands (one in the NANO). The two steam generators are provided with water by two main feeding pumps. If they fail, feeding is taken over by one of the security systems: a double-stranded auxiliary feedwater system or one of the two emergency feedwater systems, one of which part of the bunkerised NANO. Finally, in case of problems with the cooling, two containment spray systems are entrusted with the removal of excessive heat and pressure by condensation of the resulting steam.

The power plant is connected through five strands to the external power grid. Two of them are mainly used to deliver the power plant output to the 220 kV grid. They are nevertheless equipped with an emergency diesel generator each. Two other strands provide emergency power and are connected to the nearby hydroelectric power plant and the 50 kV grid. Further, two diesel generators expressly equipped to be able to work in case of Accident management are also available. The NANO is connected through the fifth strand to the 50 kV grid and contains a fifth generator. The plant main UPS system can provide direct current for at least 2 h of normal operation.

Waste management

The KKB operates, since 1993, a separate interim radioactive waste storage facility (ZWIBEZ). It is composed of a hall for low level operational waste and a second one for the dry storage of spent fuel. The waste needing conditioning is stored in the central interim storage facility (ZZL) in Würenlingen. These two deposits are to ensure the storage of the plant's waste until at least 2020.

Safety events

See also: Swiss Federal Nuclear Safety Inspectorate.

The following is an overview of nuclear security incidents at Beznau graded on the International Nuclear Event Scale (INES), which ranges from 0 (least severe) to 7 (most severe). In the plant's history there has been one level 2 event and four level 1 events.

YearINES levelTotal
0 1234567
2020 2 2
2019 7 7
2018 4 4
2017 7 7
2016 6 6
2015 6 7
2014 10 10
2013 7 7
2012 13 1 14
2009 10 1 11
2008 4 4
2007 7 1 8
2006 2 2
2005 2 2
2004 2 2
2003 4 4
2002 2 2
2001 5 5
2000 4 4
1999 5 5
1998 2 2
1997 6 1 7
1996 3 1 4
1995 3 3
Total 123 4 1 128
Sources: 2020[26] 2019[27] 2018[28] 2017[29] 2016[30] 2015[31] 2014[32] 2013[33] 2012[34] others[35]

Level 2 events

2009

Level 1 events

2012

2007

1997

1996

Significant events before 1995

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. . In German.
  2. The Federal Council issues authorizations regarding the Nuclear Energy Act . . 2004-12-03 . 2010-10-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110520195605/http://www.bfe.admin.ch/energie/00588/00589/00644/index.html?lang=de&msg-id=13878 . 20 May 2011 . dead . In German.
  3. Web site: Chronic of nuclear energy in Switzerland . 2010-10-28 . Nuklearforum Schweiz . Nuklearforum Schweiz . https://web.archive.org/web/20081228003032/http://www.nuklearforum.ch/117327714764-de-index.html . 28 December 2008 . dead . In German.
  4. Web site: Results of the initiative Für eine Zukunft ohne weitere Atomkraftwerke . 2010-10-28 . 1984-09-23. Web site: Results of the initiative Für den Ausstieg aus der Atomenergie . 2010-10-28 . 1990-09-23. Web site: Results of the initiative Stopp dem Atomkraftwerkbau (Moratorium) . 2010-10-28 . 1990-09-23. Web site: Results of the initiative Strom ohne Atom – Für eine Energiewende und schrittweise Stilllegung der Atomkraftwerke (Strom ohne Atom) . 2010-10-28 . 2003-05-18. Web site: Results of the initiative Moratorium Plus – Für die Verlängerung des Atomkraftwerk-Baustopps und die Begrenzung des Atomrisikos (MoratoriumPlus) . 2010-10-28 . 2003-05-18. In German, French, or Italian.
  5. . In German.
  6. Web site: Aging U.S. Nuclear Plants Pushing Limits of Life Expectancy. 30 November 2015.
  7. Web site: IAEA. 2017. Nuclear Power Reactors in the World. English.
  8. Web site: World's oldest nuclear reactor 'like Emmental'. 8 October 2015.
  9. Web site: Letter from ENSI to WENRA "Reactor Pressure Vessel in Swiss NPP Beznau 1: Detection of flaw indications similar to those identified in Belgium".
  10. http://www.luzernerzeitung.ch/nachrichten/wirtschaft/Kein-Termin-fuer-Hochfahren-von-AKW-Beznau-1;art46442,1012237 Kein Termin für Hochfahren von AKW Beznau 1
  11. Web site: Beznau 1: Aluminium oxide inclusions do not have a negative impact on reactor pressure vessel safety . 8 March 2018 . . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20180330043110/https://www.ensi.ch/en/2018/03/08/beznau-1-aluminium-oxide-inclusions-not-negative-impact-reactor-pressure-vessel-safety/ . 30 March 2018 . 4 April 2024 .
  12. Web site: Complaint filed against restart of world’s oldest nuclear reactor . 9 March 2018 . . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20190514193822/https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/society/beznau-controversy_complaint-filed-against-restart-of-world-s-oldest-nuclear-reactor/43958210 . 14 May 2019 . 4 April 2024 .
  13. Web site: Axpo considers extended operation of Beznau NPP . 4 April 2018 . www.neimagazine.com . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20240404173032/https://www.neimagazine.com/news/newsaxpo-considers-extended-operation-of-beznau-npp-11658913 . 4 April 2024 . 4 April 2024 .
  14. Axpo und BKW reichen Rahmenbewilligungsgesuche für Ersatz-Kernkraftwerke in Beznau und Mühleberg ein . Axpo AG . 2008-12-04 . 2010-10-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110706221835/http://www.axpo.ch/axpo/de/kernenergie_multi/medien/medienmitteilungen/2008/dezember_2008/axpo_und_bkw_reichenrahmenbewilligungsgesuchefuerersatz-kernkraf.html . 6 July 2011 . dead .
  15. Web site: Operation Beznau replacement nuclear power plant . . 2010-10-28 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101031202516/http://axpo.ch/axpo/en/kernenergie/wissen/ersatzkernkraftwerkbeznau/betrieb.html . 31 October 2010 . dead .
  16. Web site: Adaptation of the structure plan; Decisions on the nuclear power plants . . 2010-11-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110726151826/http://www.ag.ch/grossrat/iga_grw_ges.php?GesNr=791078 . 26 July 2011 . dead .
  17. [Swiss Federal Nuclear Safety Inspectorate]
  18. . In German.
  19. Web site: 75 MW heat extraction from Beznau nuclear power plant . Handl . K.H. . 1998 . www.iaea.org . . 15 September 2016 .
  20. Web site: Experience of operating nuclear district heating in Switzerland . Schmidiger . Roland . 5 April 2013 . www.oecd-nea.org . . https://web.archive.org/web/20150927070902/http://www.oecd-nea.org/ndd/workshops/nucogen/presentations/5_Schmidiger_Experience-Operating-Nuclear-Swi.pdf . 27 September 2015 . live . 15 September 2016 . dmy .
  21. . In German.
  22. . In German.
  23. http://woody.com/2012/05/07/not-losing-to-the-rain/ The Notstand building, a bunkered facility which could support all of the plant systems for at least 72 hours. I asked Martin Richner, the head of risk assessment, why Beznau spent so much money on the Notstand building when there was no regulation or government directive to do so. Martin answered me, “Woody, we live here.”
  24. Web site: A PRA Looks at the Fukushima Daiichi Accident (learns lessons from Beznau) . https://web.archive.org/web/20131214225420/http://woody.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/The-Fukushima-Daiichi-Accident-v8b.pdf . 14 December 2013 . dead . dmy .
  25. . In German.
  26. Web site: Aufsichtsbericht 2020 . . June 2021. 2021-10-11.
  27. Web site: Aufsichtsbericht 2019 . . June 2020. 2020-12-09.
  28. Web site: Aufsichtsbericht 2018 . . June 2019. 2020-12-09.
  29. Web site: Aufsichtsbericht 2017 . . June 2018. 2020-12-09.
  30. Web site: Aufsichtsbericht 2016 . . June 2017. 2020-12-09.
  31. Web site: Aufsichtsbericht 2015 . . June 2016. 2020-12-09.
  32. Web site: 2014 ENSI Oversight Report – ENSI-AN-9252 . . 24 June 2015.
  33. Web site: 2013 ENSI Oversight Report – ENSI-AN-8800 . . 30 June 2014.
  34. Web site: Regulatory Oversight Report 2012 concerning nuclear safety in Swiss nuclear installations . 20 . ENSI rated one event as INES Level 1 – This related to an incident at Unit 2 of the Beznau nuclear power plant where a generator failed to start during a regular function test of the energy diesel generator . June 2013 . 9 February 2015 . 3 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303214648/http://static.ensi.ch/1371652379/ensi_aufsichtsbericht_2012.pdf . dead .
  35. Web site: . Annual reports. 2010-10-28 . In German.
  36. . In German.
  37. . In German.
  38. . In German.
  39. . In German.
  40. periodical Aargauer Tagblatt, 18 July 1992
  41. Web site: ZeitungsArchiv NZZ - E-Paper.