Fujian to get 6 nuclear reactors By Wang Ying (China Daily) Updated: 2006-05-19 09:00
The nation's biggest nuclear reactor builder, China National Nuclear Corp
(CNNC), has signed an agreement with one of China's top five power producers to
build six reactors in East China's Fujian Province. Beijing-based CNNC
and China Huadian Group yesterday announced the setting-up of Fujian Fuqing
Nuclear Co Ltd.
The venture will develop as many as six 1,000-MW
(megawatt) nuclear reactors in Fuqing.
It is the first nuclear
co-operation project between CNNC and a State-owned power firm whose core
business is not nuclear power development.
According to the agreement,
CNNC owns 51 per cent of the new venture, with the remaining 49 per cent owned
by Huadian.
CNNC will be responsible for development, construction and
the operation of the Fujian nuclear plant.
China Huadian will participate
in decision-making and project management.
Officials from both companies
declined to comment on the total investment involved in the new project and when
construction would begin.
But feasibility studies have already been
completed and the project has been included in China's 11th Five-Year Plan
(2006-10), the CNNC said.
China is working hard to diversify its energy
mix by pushing the use of nuclear and renewable energy sources, such as wind and
solar power.
The country plans to use nuclear power to supply 4 per cent
of its electricity demand by 2020. That figure currently stands at less than 2
per cent.
Currently, nine nuclear reactors are in operation in China. In
the coming 15 years, the country will need to build at least two reactors
annually, each with a capacity of 1,000 MW, to reach its ambitious target.
By the end of last year, China Huadian had a total installed
power-generating capacity of 38.8 GW (gigawatts), Huadian's President He Gong
said.
As much as 80.9 per cent of Huadian's power facilities are
coal-fired, the remaining capacity comes from hydro-electric plants.
The
company plans to increase its capacity to 60 GW within the next five years and
to 100 GW by 2020, Huadian said on its website. (For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)
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