Warm Sea Water Limits Nuclear Reactor Capacity

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Swedish utility Vattenfall said its Ringhals 2 nuclear reactor was running at 49 percent capacity on Tuesday as the sea water used to cool it nears an upper temperature limit.

Water from the Baltic Sea is used to cool several nuclear reactors along Sweden's coastline, but temperatures are unusually warm following a prolonged period of hot weather.

Vattenfall on Monday posted plans to take Ringhals 2 out of operation after water reached that reactor's 25 degree Celsius limit.

However Vattenfall spokesman Peter Stedt said on Tuesday it had opted to keep capacity at 49 percent after the sea water cooled to 24 degrees, while closely monitoring water temperatures as the warm weather continued.

The 865-megawatt (MW) pressurized water Ringhals 2 reactor is one of four reactors, which produce around 20 percent of Sweden's electricity. While Ringhals 3 and 4 are still online, Ringhals 1 is shut for annual planned maintenance.


(Reporting by Anna Ringstrom Editing by Alexander Smith)

Categories: Technology Technology(Energy)

Related Stories

Chiyoda, NYK, KNCC Target Global CCS Value Chain Development

PV Drilling Names New ‘Super Rig’ ahead of April Operations

Oil Rises as Widening Conflict Endangers Red Sea, Hormuz Flows

Eni Exits Consortium for Oil and Gas Exploration Offshore Israel

Big Oil to Reap Billions from Energy Price Surge

Mubadala Energy Secures Southwest Andaman Exploration Block off Indonesia

Thai Tanker Transits Hormuz after Iran Talks

Oil Falls on Middle East Ceasefire Hopes, Easing Supply Fears

Oil Rises as Iran Denies US Talks, Supply Risks Persist

PTTEP Picks Everllence Compressors for Thailand’s Offshore CCS Project

Current News

Iran War Reshapes Global LNG Trade

Drone Strike on Kuwaiti Oil Tanker off Dubai Signals Further Escalation in Gulf

INPEX Extends Pertamina LNG Pact, Signs Upstream MoU in Southeast Asia

Chiyoda, NYK, KNCC Target Global CCS Value Chain Development

PV Drilling Names New ‘Super Rig’ ahead of April Operations

Big Oil to Look Beyond Middle East as War Raises Risks

Oil Rises as Widening Conflict Endangers Red Sea, Hormuz Flows

Eni Exits Consortium for Oil and Gas Exploration Offshore Israel

Big Oil to Reap Billions from Energy Price Surge

UAE Stands Ready to Join Force to Reopen Strait of Hormuz

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com