Jump to content

Niederaichbach Nuclear Power Plant

Coordinates: 48°36′17″N 12°18′14″E / 48.60472°N 12.30389°E / 48.60472; 12.30389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Lee Vilenski (talk | contribs) at 08:08, 12 August 2020 (clean up, typo(s) fixed: Nevertheless → Nevertheless,, transfered → transferred). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Niederaichbach Nuclear Power Station
Reactor building (far right) during decommissioning
Map
Official nameKernkraftwerk Niederaichbach
CountryGermany
LocationNiederaichbach
Coordinates48°36′17″N 12°18′14″E / 48.60472°N 12.30389°E / 48.60472; 12.30389
StatusDecommissioned
Construction beganJune 1, 1966
Commission dateJanuary 1, 1973
Decommission dateJuly 21, 1974
Construction cost230,000,000 DM
OwnerKarlsruhe Institute for Technology
OperatorKernkraftwerk Niederaichbach GMBH
Nuclear power station
Reactors1 x 106 MWe
Reactor typeHeavy Water Gas Cooled Reactor
Thermal capacity321 MWt
Power generation
Capacity factor1.1%

Niederaichbach Nuclear Power Plant (German: Kernkraftwerk Niederaichbach (KKN)) was a German nuclear plant in Niederaichbach, Bavaria. The plant consisted of one heavy water gas cooled (HWGC) reactor with a gross capacity of 106 MWe. Safety and maintenance issues caused the reactor to be decommissioned after only a year and a half in operation. It was the first nuclear plant in Europe to be completely decommissioned, with the final work being completed in autumn 1995.[1]

Although located at the same location as the Isar Nuclear Power Plant, the Niederaichbach plant used a different reactor type and was decommissioned five years before construction of the Isar plant was completed.

History

In the late 1950s the government of Bavaria became interested in developing nuclear power within the state. Construction began in 1966. Only a year later, Hans Matthöfer, German Minister of Education and Technology, remarked that the project had "No technological future", due to the limitations of its experimental HWGC reactor.[2] Nevertheless, construction continued, with others in the Bavarian government hopeful that its construction and operation would provide much needed technological and operational experience.

Construction was completed in 1972 at the cost of 230 million Deutsche Marks. It began operation in 1973, but struggled to produce anywhere close to its capacity. After problems with the steam turbines in mid-1974 the reactor was taken offline and decommissioned.[3] In its year and a half of operation it generated only 20,000 MWh of power, equivalent to just 18 days of full capacity operation or a capacity factor of just 1.1%.[2][4]

Decommissioning

In mid-1974 the reactor was first placed into SAFSTOR for decontamination,[5] and its fuel was transferred to CEA for disposal.[6] From 1975 to 1995 the reactor structure was demolished, returning the area to its greenfield condition. This was the first reactor in Europe to be completely decommissioned in this manner. It cost 280 million DM to demolish and remediate the area, more than its construction cost.[2]

After its decommissioning, German development of heavy water reactors was halted.[3]

Today a monument marks its former location near the current Isar Nuclear Power Plant.

References

  1. ^ Erfahrungen aus dem Abriß des KKW Niederaichbach (KKN) für die Entsorgung stillgelegter Kernkraftwerke (PDF). 1995. ISSN 0722-8333.
  2. ^ a b c "KERNKRAFTWERKE : Eventuell Radi - DER SPIEGEL 41/1979". www.spiegel.de. Retrieved 2020-08-04.
  3. ^ a b Joachim Radkau & Lothar Hahn: Aufstieg und Fall der deutschen Atomwirtschaft. oekom, München 2013. P. 331.
  4. ^ "PRIS - Reactor Details". pris.iaea.org. Retrieved 2020-08-05.
  5. ^ Strahlenschutzkommission: Demontage und Beseitigung des Kernkraftwerkes Niederaichbach, April 18, 1986, Accessed August 4, 2020
  6. ^ Deutscher Bundestag: Stand der Wiederaufarbeitung deutscher Brennelemente im Ausland und des deutschen Plutonium-Inventares. Drucksache 17/8527. German Bundestag, 31 January 2012, accessed 4 August 2020.