Westinghouse AP1000 Nuclear Reactor Starts Generating Power (world-nuclear-news.org)
Longtime Slashdot reader TopSpin writes: The Sanmen 1 nuclear reactor in Zhejiang, China, has been synchronized to the power grid and is generating power. The reactor has been under construction for nine years and became the first AP1000 in the world to achieve criticality on June 21, 2018. The AP1000 design received final design certification from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 2005 and has a net output of 1.117 GWe. Three other AP1000 reactors are under construction in China at the Sanmen and Haiyang sites and two reactors are under construction in the U.S. at the Vogtle Electric Generating Plant in Georgia. On June 29, the Taishan 1 reactor became the first Areva Evolutionary Power Reactor (EPR) design to generate power. Four EPR reactors are under construction in Finland, France, and China.
PLEASE NO. The future is renewable solar, wind and geothermal.
Sure dummy. There's more "regulatory red tape"...in China.
Are Anonymous Cowards getting stupider or am I getting smarter? I can't tell any more.
You are welcome on my lawn.
China hit peak coal about four years ago and continues to decline.
All new nuclear that wasn't already under construction was put on indefinite hold after the March 2011 disaster in Japan. They are finishing off what they had already started but not beginning anything new. Also, it's not non-carbon electricity. Nuclear plants release around 100g of CO2/kWh, much better than coal but also much worse than wind and solar.
They are investing very heavily in renewable energy and storage. That's clearly the future for China.
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SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC