The Borneo Post

China looks to nuclear option to ease winter heating woes

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SHANGHAI: With its smogprone north desperate to slash coal consumptio­n, China is looking to deploy nuclear power to provide reliable winter heating, raising public safety concerns — though developers say the risks are minimal.

State- owned China National Nuclear Corp (CNNC) recently conducted a successful 168-hour trial run in Beijing for a small, dedicated ‘district heating reactor’ (DHR) it has named the ‘Yanlong’.

With the north facing natural gas shortages as cities switch away from coal, CNNC presented the ‘ DHR- 400’ as an alternativ­e heat supplier for the region, with each 400-megawatt unit capable of warming 200,000 urban households.

The model — which consists of a reactor core immersed in a water-filled tank around the same volume as an Olympic swimming pool — will require 1.5 billion yuan ( US$ 226.7 million) in investment and take just three years to build, a crucial advantage in a sector plagued by constructi­on delays.

As a small and relatively simple ‘swimming pool’ design, the lowpressur­e reactor is expected to be safer than convention­al models, with temperatur­es not exceeding 100 degrees Celsius, and it could be plugged directly into existing heating networks.

The technology is ready, said Gu Shenjie, deputy chief engineer with the Shanghai Nuclear Engineerin­g Research and Design Institute ( SNERDI), part of the State Power Investment Corp (SPIC).

“They ( CNNC) have supplied heat to their institute and office buildings and have successful­ly done that for three years,” Gu told Reuters on the sidelines of the INNCH New Nuclear Build Conference in Shanghai, adding that commercial­isation was the next stage. “I think it’s workable. The parameters are very low and it’s easy to maintain operations,” he added. — Reuters

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