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Worldwide Commercial Energy Production
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Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Worldwide Commercial Energy Production

Page 2: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Nuclear Power Countries

Page 3: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Nuclear Energy Use (textbook)Nuclear Energy Use (textbook)439 reactors worldwide = 16% electricity

France = 77% electricity; Japan+ Korea = 39%) investing increasingly;

U.S. = no new U.S. power plants ordered since 1978; 40% of 105 commercial nuclear power expected to be retired by 2015 & all by 2030;

© Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

Page 4: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Locations of Facilities

Source: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/three/maps/index.html

Page 5: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

PART 3: NUCLEAR POWER

• Nuclear power now produces only 7% of the U.S. energy supply.

• Construction costs and safety concerns have made nuclear power much less attractive than expected.

• Between 1970-1974, American utilities ordered 140 new reactors, but 100 were subsequently canceled.

• WWPSS – Washington Water Power + Supply System canceled 9 reactors in Washington State after cost overruns and bankruptcy in 1980’s

• Major Accidents –• 1979 - Three Mile Island• 1986 - Chernobyl

Page 6: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Nuclear Fuel Cycle

Source: http://www.sonic.net/~kerry/uranium.html

Page 7: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Pressurized Water Reactors

are 70% of reactors

• Water circulating through the core absorbs heat from fuel rods. The hot water is pumped to a steam generator where it heats a secondary loop which drives a high-speed turbine making electricity.

• Both reactor vessel and steam generator are housed in a special containment building of reinforced concrete.

Page 8: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Nuclear fission occurs in the core of a nuclear reactor

Page 9: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Reactor Design

Page 10: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

How Do Nuclear Reactors Work

• The common fuel for nuclear reactors is U235

that occurs naturally (0.7%) as a radioactive isotope of uranium.

• U235 is enriched to 3% concentration as it is processed into cylindrical pellets (1.5 cm long). The pellets are stacked in hollow metal rods (4 m long).

• 100 rods are bundled together into a fuel assembly. Thousands of these fuel

assemblies are bundled in the reactor core.

Page 11: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

How Do Nuclear Reactors Work

• When struck by neutrons, radioactive uranium atoms undergo nuclear fission, releasing energy and more neutrons. This result triggers a nuclear chain reaction.

• This reaction is moderated in a power plant by neutron-absorbing solution .

• Control Rods composed of neutron-absorbing material are inserted into spaces between fuel assemblies to control reaction rate.

• Water or other coolant is circulated between the fuel rods to remove excess heat.

Page 12: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Three Mile Isle

Page 13: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Three Mile IslandThree Mile IslandMarch 29, 1979, number 2 reactor near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania lost coolant & core suffered partial meltdown;

50,000 people evacuated & another 50,000 fled area;

unknown amounts of radioactive materials released;

partial cleanup & damages cost $1.2 billion so far;

released radiation increased cancer rates.

© Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

Page 14: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

March 28, 1979, 4:00 am

• Secondary cooling loop stops pumping. • Rising temperatures caused emergency valve

to open to release pressure, but indicator light malfunctioned

• Due to loss of steam, water level drops, water overheats and burns out pump

• Reactor core overheats and begins to melt (a “meltdown”)

Page 15: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Chernobyl

Chernobyl. In an experiment, technicians let the power of reactor 4 fall, and on April 26, 1986 the result was rapid power levels rising inside the core— melting fuel and causing a reactor containment breach—in addition to an internal hydrogen explosion. The top of the reactor blew off and spewed radioactive material into the atmosphere for 10 days.

Page 16: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

ChernobylChernobylApril 26, 1986, reactor explosion (Ukraine) flung radioactive debris into atmosphere.

health ministry reported 3,576 deaths; Greenpeace ~32,000 deaths;

about 400,000 people were forced to leave their homes;

~160,000 sq km (62,00 sq mi) contaminated;

> half million people exposed to dangerous levels of radioactivity;

cost of incident > $358 billion.© Brooks/Cole Publishing Company / ITP

Page 17: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Decline of Nuclear Power

• The public began growing fearful of possible meltdowns, especially after the disaster at Three Mile Island

• Nearly 2/3 of all orders for new plants were cancelled in the late 1970’s

• No new plants having been built in the past twenty-five years

Page 18: Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.

Energy Policy Act of 2005

• Signed by president BUSH in August 2005

• Government would cover cost overruns due to delays, up to $500 million each for the first two new nuclear reactors, and up to $250 million for the next four reactors