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Balakovo Nuclear Power Plant

Coordinates: 52°5′28″N 47°57′19″E / 52.09111°N 47.95528°E / 52.09111; 47.95528
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Balakovo Nuclear Power Plant
Balakovo Nuclear Power Plant
Map
CountryRussia
Coordinates52°5′28″N 47°57′19″E / 52.09111°N 47.95528°E / 52.09111; 47.95528
StatusOperational
Construction beganDecember 1, 1980
Commission dateMay 23, 1986
OperatorRosenergoatom
Nuclear power station
Reactor typeVVER
Power generation
Units operational4 x 1,000 MW
Units under const.1 x 1,000 MW
Nameplate capacity4,000 MW
Capacity factor82.9%
Annual net output29,062 GW·h
External links
WebsiteOfficial website Edit this at Wikidata
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Balakovo nuclear power station (Russian: Балаковская АЭС, romanizedBalakovskaya AES [pronunciation]) is located in the city of Balakovo, Saratov Oblast, Russia, about 900 kilometres (560 mi) south-east of Moscow. It consists of four operational reactors; fifth and sixth unit construction cancelled. Owner and operator of the nuclear power station is Rosenergoatom.

Balakovo NPP participates in a twinning program between nuclear power stations in Europe and Russia; since 1990 it has been in partnership with Biblis Nuclear Power Plant.[1]

Remix fuel tests

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Balakovo Nuclear Power Plant is used for experiments with Remix Fuel. In December 2024 the third final 18-month phase of the pilot program has started with the goal to achieve closed nuclear cycle for VVER reactors. A mixture of enriched uranium with recycled uranium and plutonium received from the used nuclear fuel at other VVER reactors is used instead of a standard enriched uranium. After the first 2 stages of 3, fuel elements were inspected and were approved for the 3rd final stage. The 3rd stage should conclude in 2026 when the fuel will be unloaded and further studied. Remix fuel has a lower plutonium content of up to 5% compared with MOX fuel.[2]

Reactor data

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The Balakovo Nuclear Power Plant has four operating units:

Unit[3] Reactor type Net
capacity
Gross
capacity
Construction
started
Electricity
grid
Commercial
operation
Shutdown
Balakovo-1 VVER-1000/320 950 MW 1,000 MW 1980-12-01 1985-12-28 1986-05-23 2045 planned
Balakovo-2 VVER-1000/320 950 MW 1,000 MW 1981-08-01 1987-10-08 1988-01-12 2043 planned[4]
Balakovo-3 VVER-1000/320 950 MW 1,000 MW 1982-11-01 1988-12-25 1989-04-08 2048 planned[5]
Balakovo-4 VVER-1000/320 950 MW 1,000 MW 1984-04-01 1993-05-12 1993-12-22 2053 planned
Balakovo-5 VVER-1000/320 950 MW 1,000 MW 1987-04-01 - - Construction suspended 1992-12-28
Balakovo-6 VVER-1000/320 950 MW 1,000 MW 1988-05-01 - - Construction suspended 1992-12-28

In 2018 Rosatom announced it had developed a thermal annealing technique for reactor pressure vessels which ameliorates radiation damage and extends service life by between 15 and 30 years. This had been demonstrated on unit 1.[6]

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Incidents

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On 27 June 1985 during startup of the first reactor unit, a human error (later attributed to inexperience and haste) unexpectedly opened a pressurizer relief valve, and 300 °C (572 °F) steam caused an explosion of the turbine and entered the staff work area. Fourteen people were killed.[7] This event is cited as one of the predecessors of the Chernobyl disaster.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Kraftwerk Biblis: WANO-Partnerschaft mit Balakovo jährt sich zum 20. Mal" (in German). RWE. 2010-09-29. Archived from the original on 2011-09-11. Retrieved 2010-10-18.
  2. ^ "Final cycle of REMIX nuclear fuel trial under way". World Nuclear News. 3 December 2024. Retrieved 3 December 2024.
  3. ^ Power Reactor Information System of the IAEA: „Russian Federation: Nuclear Power Reactors“
  4. ^ "Годовой отчёт 2017 с. 73-75" (PDF). rosenergoatom.ru. 24 April 2018.
  5. ^ "Срок эксплуатации энергоблока №3 Балаковской АЭС продлен на 30 лет".
  6. ^ "Rosatom launches annealing technology for VVER-1000 units". World Nuclear News. 27 November 2018. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  7. ^ "Accidents 1980's". nuclearfiles.org. 2009-05-17. Archived from the original on 2009-05-17. Retrieved 2017-02-18.
  8. ^ Medvedev, Grigory. "The Truth About Chernobyl", I. B, Tauris, London, 1 January 1991, ISBN 1850433313.
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