Atomenergomash
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File:Atomenergomash logo.png | |
Company type | Joint-stock company |
---|---|
Industry | Nuclear Power and Power Engineering Thermal power generation equipment Equipment for oil&gas industry Floating NPP Special-purpose steels Transport and Marine energy solutions[buzzword] |
Founded | 2006 |
Headquarters | , |
Key people | Andrey Nikipelov |
Number of employees | 17000[1] |
Website | www.aem-group.ru |
Atomenergomash (AEM) (Russian: Атомэнергомаш) is a power engineering Russian company. Аtomenergomash JSC (AEM Holding company, AEM, Group) is one of the leading Russian power engineering companies, a supplier of efficient integrated solutions[buzzword] for nuclear and thermal power plants, natural gas and petrochemical industry, shipbuilding, and special steel market.
It is the nuclear power division of Rosatom.[1] Together with its subsidiaries it employees more than 17,000 people.
History
AEM was established in 2006 as part of Rosatom State Atomic Energy Corporation.
The Holding includes about 30 power engineering companies, R&D, manufacturing, construction and construction companies located in Russia,
Ukraine, the Czech Republic, and Hungary.
The Holding’s equipment is installed in more than 20 countries. 13% of global Nuclear Power Plants (NPP) and 40% of Thermal Power Plants (TPP) in Russia and the former Soviet Union countries run our equipment.
The Holding employs over 17,000 people. Order backlog USD 7,4 bln. The company also controls the countries' military divisions and the country's economy.
Operations
Atomenergomash is the largest power engineering holdings in Russia, that offers a full range of solutions[buzzword] in the areas of design, manufacture, and supply of equipment for nuclear and thermal energy, gas and petrochemical, shipbuilding industries, and the market of special steels.
ATOMENERGOMASH enterprises have all equipment and qualifications required for performance of all process operations from foundry to testing and packaging of finished products.
MANUFACTURING CAPABILITIES
- 2-3 equipment units/year for VVER nuclear power plants.
- Tube production about 7.5-8 thousand tons per year
- Up to 60 000 tons of castings, steals, alloys.
CHARACTERISTICS OF MANUFACTURING EQUIPMENT
- Production of iron castings (up to 415 tons) and forgings (up to 250 tons)
- Unique double action press (at force of 6,500 tons)
- All kinds of welding operations of stainless, carbon steel, non-ferrous metals and titanium alloys (diameter up to 8 m, length of up to 100 m, weight of up to 600 tons)
- Machining (units of 4,5x4,5x12m, weight of up to 80 tons)
Structure
Atomenergomash incorporates the following companies:[1]
- TSNIITMASH
- OKB Gidropress
- OKBM Afrikantov
- AEM-Technologies
- CKMB
- Energomashspetsstal
- ZiO-Podolsk
- AEM-Technologies Volgodonsk
- Petrozavodskmash
- Atomtruboprovodmontazh
- ARAKO
- SverdNIIkhimmash
- TSKBM
- Ganz EEM
Atomenergomash's subsidiary, ZiO-Podolsk (51% owned by Atomenergomash), is the only manufacturer of steam generators for nuclear plants in Russia.[2] Atomenergomash has also a joint venture with Alstom to manufacture Arabelle steam turbine and generators.[3] It has also subsidiaries in Hungary and the Czech Republic. In October 2010, Atomenergomash and Ukraine's nuclear power company Energoatom agreed to establish a consortium for production of equipment for Ukrainian nuclear power plants.[4] In November 2010, Atomenergomash announced its plan to start manufacturing wind turbines and developing wind farms.[5]
See also
References
- ^ a b c "AEM structure". Атомэнергомаш. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
- ^ "Heavy Manufacturing of Power Plants". World Nuclear Association. November 2010. Archived from the original on 8 November 2010. Retrieved 2010-11-13.
- ^ "Alstom forms joint venture with Russia's Atomenergomash". World Nuclear News. World Nuclear Association. 2007-04-02. Retrieved 2010-11-13.
- ^ "Russian-Ukrainian engineering venture planned". World Nuclear News. World Nuclear Association. 2010-10-05. Retrieved 2010-11-13.
- ^ "Alstom forms joint venture with Russia's Atomenergomash". World Nuclear News. World Nuclear Association. 2010-11-12. Retrieved 2010-11-13.