Strides made in China's nuclear power tech research
Updated: 2013-07-18 11:23
(Xinhua)
|
||||||||
BEIJING -- China has made great strides in the technological research into the control rod drive mechanism, a key piece of equipment for nuclear power plants, according to a ministry statement issued Wednesday.
The Ministry of Science and Technology (MST) made the announcement in a brief statement, citing progress made in a government-funded research project carried out by state-owned China General Nuclear Power Corporation (CGN).
CGN launched the "Research of Control Rod Drive Mechanism for Mega-Kilowatt-Class Pressurized Water Reactor" project in 2011 as part of the country's efforts to break foreign monopolies on bottleneck technologies.
Scientists with the project have completed research into and production of China's indigenous control rod drive mechanism for generation II+ nuclear power plants, including all the performance tests and operation life tests, MST said.
The project team has also completed designs and production and are conducting related tests on the control rod drive mechanism for the generation III, 1,700-megawatt nuclear power plant, it added.
The ministry said some kinds of products, which are part of the research results, have been provided to more than 10 domestic reactors and will gradually replace imported alternatives.
China is expected to realize self-reliance in the nuclear power plant control rod drive mechanism through government-backed research projects in related areas, the ministry commented in the statement.
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Bar street heaven for expats, hell for locals |
Chinese Haute Couture |
Railway cities staying on track |
More concerns over camps |
Challenging times on 'high-speed Silk Road' |
Jiangnan Style |
Today's Top News
GSK finance head not allowed to leave
Putin puts US ties above Snowden
DPRK demands Panama free seized ship
7.75% growth possible for 2013: IMF
Bomber as rock star?
More use smartphones to access the Internet
Mandela making dramatic progress: daughter
Manila playing for 'sympathy'
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |