Embalse Nuclear Power Station Explained

Embalse Nuclear Power Station
Name Official:Central Nuclear Embalse
Country:Argentina
Coordinates:-32.232°N -64.443°W
Operator:Nucleoeléctrica Argentina Sociedad Anónima
Status:Operational
Construction Began:1974
Commissioned:20 January 1984
Ps Units Operational:1 × 683 MW (gross)
Np Reactor Type:PHWR
Np Reactor Supplier:CANDU
Ps Thermal Capacity:2,015 MWt
Ps Electrical Capacity:635
Ps Annual Generation:5,192 GW·h (2009)
Website:central nuclear embalse

The Embalse Nuclear Power Station (Spanish; Castilian: Central Nuclear Embalse) is one of three operational nuclear power plants in Argentina. It is located on the southern shore of a reservoir on the Río Tercero, near the city of Embalse, Córdoba, 110 km south-southwest of Córdoba City.

The plant is a CANDU Pressurised Heavy Water Reactor (PHWR). It employs natural uranium (that is, with 0.72% of 235U) and uses heavy water for cooling and neutron moderation. It has a thermal power of 2,109 MWth, and generates 648 MWe of electricity, with a net output of about 600 MWe, supplying nearly 4.5% of the production of the Argentine Interconnection System (2005).

Additionally, Embalse produces the cobalt-60 radioisotope, which is employed in medicine (cancer therapy) and industrial applications. Argentina is one of the largest producers and exporters of this isotope in the world,[1] along with Canada and Russia.

Embalse was started in 1974 and began operation in 1983 (first criticality 13 March 1983, declared commercial 20 January 1984). It was built by an Italian-Canadian consortium formed by AECL, acting as the "turn-key" supplier of the nuclear portion, and Italimpianti, the "turn-key" supplier of the conventional portion.[2]

On 31 December 2015, the plant was taken offline, having completed its first operating cycle of about 30 years.

On 1 September 2016, the plant received the last two of four steam generators, fundamental elements for the life extension of the plant. The plant was reconditioned to deliver power for another 30 years: the replacement of the four steam generators was one of the key steps.[3] The plant was restarted on 4 January 2019,[4] [5] with power upgraded to a gross capacity of 683 MW and 635 MW net.[6]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Radioisotopes in Medicine | Nuclear Medicine - World Nuclear Association. www.world-nuclear.org.
  2. Web site: A Short History of the CANDU Nuclear Power System . Brooks . Gord L. . 2 December 2002. canteach.candu.org . 4 September 2016. p.18, In the case of the Cordoba (Argentina) project, AECL originally contracted to act as the "turn-key" supplier of the nuclear portion of the plant with its Italian partner, Italimpianti, acting as the "turn-key" supplier of the conventional portion..
  3. Web site: Llegaron los dos últimos generadores de vapor para la Central Nuclear Embalse . 1 September 2016 . canteach.candu.org . Nucleoeléctrica Argentina S.A. . ES . https://web.archive.org/web/20160903233336/http://www.na-sa.com.ar/es/novedades/llegaron-los-dos-ultimos-generadores-de-vapor-para-la-central-nuclear-embalse . 3 September 2016 . dead . 4 September 2016 .
  4. Web site: BNamericas - The Embalse Nuclear Power Plant returns to s.... BNamericas.com.
  5. Web site: Embalse Nuclear Generating Station Life Extension . 13 April 2016. www.snclavalin.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20170304114813/http://www.snclavalin.com/en/embalse-nuclear-generating-station-life-extension . 4 March 2017. live . 24 March 2017.
  6. Web site: Argentina's Embalse Shuts Down For Major Refurbishment Programme . 6 January 2016 . www.nucnet.org . 24 March 2017 . 25 March 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170325024529/http://www.nucnet.org/all-the-news/2016/01/06/argentina-s-embalse-shuts-down-for-major-refurbishment-programme/print . dead .