On 14.12.2001 during full power operation a small steam leakage inside the containment was observed by plant personnel. From the alarms plant personnel concluded on a steam leakage at a flange in the reactor vessel head spray system. Four minutes in the event the leakage could be terminated by closing an isolation valve in a drain line of the reactor vessel head spray system. The reactor vessel head spray system (which has no safety function) is isolated from the reactor pressure vessel by a check valve and two containment isolation valves which are closed during operation. The leak occurred between the check valve and the inner contain-ment isolation valve. This part of the reactor vessel head spray system is drained via a drain line which is also connected to drains of main steam lines inside containment. The leakage observed was due to the backflow of main steam via the drain line to the leak in the reactor vessel head spray system. There was no significant release of radioactivity into the containment. After thorough analysis the licensee concluded that a hydrogen explosion may have occurred in connection with the leakage. On 18.02.2002 during a load reduction of the reactor the leakage location has been inspected. A significant part of piping between the check valve and the inner containment isolation valve of the reactor vessel head spray system was completely destroyed. Based on the inspection it is assumed that a hydrogen (radiolysis gases) explosion inside the pipe caused the destruction of the piping (100 mm diameter). The plant was brought to cold shutdown for repair and further investigation.
Everywhere you look, the nuclear industry’s hype machine is in overdrive. Goldman Sachs, Microsoft, and the UK government all tout small modular reactors as the silver bullet for climate change and energy security. Tech billionaires are hiring nuclear veterans. Wall Street is whispering about “round-the-clock power” for artificial intelligence data centers. For those old enough […]
Kernenergie en veiligheid: A wargame sought to test if a major radiological release that would prompt the evacuation of millions of civilians in South Korea could distract key US allies from assisting and rebuffing an all-out military invasion of Taiwan. The short answer was yes. The game originally presumed that China, wanting to keep the […]
Big batteries and EVs to the rescue again as faults with new nuclear plant cause chaos on Nordic grids The Finnish nuclear power plant Olkiluoto was finally connected to the grid last year, at an estimated cost of €11 billion compared to the original budget of €3 billion. That cost blowout forced its developer, the […]
A vast subsea nuclear graveyard planned to hold Britain’s burgeoning piles of radioactive waste is set to become the biggest, longest-lasting and most expensive infrastructure project ever undertaken in the UK. The project [UK's nuclear waste dump] is now predicted to take more than 150yrs to complete with lifetime costs of £66bn in today’s money...The […]
Last year, the Dutch Province of Limburg started an alliance in which, besides the local government, research institutes, small nuclear reactor (SMR) developers, utilities, industrial customers and funders cooperated. With this "Limburg SMR alliance" Limburg tried to lead the way towards an SMR in Limburg. The preferred site for a first SMR would be Chemelot, […]