China Daily (Hong Kong)

Nuclear giant waits for green light

Westinghou­se Electric plans to advance delayed third-generation reactor projects

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

Westinghou­se Electric Co said it is looking forward to carrying the delayed third-generation reactor projects in China forward this year — the world’s first Westinghou­se AP1000 in Sanmen, Zhejiang province and Haiyang, Shandong province.

Bill Poirier, vice president of Westinghou­se’s China projects, said Sanmen unit one is well prepared for fuel loading and the company is waiting for the final approval from the Chinese government.

“Safety operation is our priority, and we have conducted 55 tests at Sanmen unit one and the same 55 tests again at Haiyang unit one to verify we have met or exceeded all the safety criteria and requiremen­ts at both units,” he said.

Poirier said the company is confident that AP1000, a key nuclear technology, will be more widely adopted in the country, and Westinghou­se will have its local team to promote the technology in China.

According to Gavin Liu, Asia president of Westinghou­se, AP1000 is the firm’s flagship product in the new plant market, accumulate­d from over 50 years of history, experience and knowledge.

The US-based nuclear energy company said it is looking forward to more cooperatio­n in the nuclear sector with Chinese partners as power demand in the country is spurred by economic growth and concerns over environmen­tal protection increase.

“Westinghou­se is willing to leverage our experience in design, constructi­on and operation with our Chinese partners while we are also willing to explore the internatio­nal market with Chinese partners,” said Raj Bhan, vice-president and China managing director at Westinghou­se.

“We look forward to enhancing our cooperatio­n with Chinese partners in the future, including in the design, constructi­on and operation of AP1000,” he said.

According to Poirier, the company has been working together with Chinese partners including key elements of the technology transfer.

Some 70 percent of the equipment in the first four units was completed by Chinese manufactur­ers, he said.

“It’s a good example of cooperatio­n between Westinghou­se and Chinese customers to localize and achieve alliance. We hope the cooperatio­n model can be applied to a third country to jointly explore the internatio­nal market.”

Liu said he hoped China-US trade disputes could be successful­ly resolved over discussion, as US and China are the top two economic superpower­s and both should take each other’s trade cooperatio­n very seriously.

Constructi­on of six to eight nuclear reactors will commence in 2018, raising China’s total nuclear generating capacity by six gigawatts, the National Energy Administra­tion said earlier this month.

China will also finish two delayed third-generation reactor projects in 2018, including the Sanmen nuclear power plant in Zhejiang and the first unit of the Taishan European Pressurize­d Reactor project designed by Areva in Guangdong province.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? An employee supervises the installati­on of a nuclear reactor at a power station in Haiyang, Shandong province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY An employee supervises the installati­on of a nuclear reactor at a power station in Haiyang, Shandong province.

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