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Russia touts seafaring nuclear power plant

Reactor facility to be towed to meet need, officials say

- By Andrew E. Kramer NEW YORK TIMES

MURMANSK, Russia — Along the shore of Kola Bay in the far northwest of Russia lie bases for the country’s nuclear submarines and icebreaker­s. Low, rocky hills descend to an industrial waterfront of docks, cranes and railway tracks. Out on the bay, submarines have for decades stalked the azure waters, traveling between their port and the ocean depths.

Here, Russia is conducting an experiment with nuclear power, one that backers say is a leading-edge feat of engineerin­g but that critics call reckless.

The country is unveiling a floating nuclear power plant.

Tied to a wharf in the city of Murmansk, the Akademik Lomonosov rocks gently in the waves. The buoyant facility, made of two miniature reactors of a type used previously on submarines, is for now the only one of its kind.

Moscow, while leading the trend, is far from alone in seeing potential in floating nuclear plants. Two state-backed companies in China are building such facilities, and U.S. scientists have drawn up plans of their own. Proponents say they are cheaper, greener and, perhaps counterint­uitively, safer. They envision a future when nuclear power stations bob off the coasts of major cities around the world.

“They are light-years ahead of us,” Jacopo Buongiorno, a professor of nuclear engineerin­g at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, said of the Russian floating power program.

Rosatom, the Russian state nuclear company, has exported nuclear technology for years, selling plants in China, India and a host of developing nations. But smaller reactors effectivel­y placed on floats can be assembled more quickly, be put in a wider range of locations and respond more nimbly to fluctuatin­g supply on power grids that increasing­ly rely on wind and solar.

Easily transporte­d

The Russian design involves using submarines­tyle reactors loaded onto vessels, with a hatch near the bow to plug them into local electrical grids. The reactors will generate a combined 70 megawatts of electricit­y, or enough to power about 70,000 typical American homes. Rosatom plans to serially produce such floating nuclear plants, and is exploring various business plans, including retaining ownership of the reactors while selling the electricit­y they generate.

The bulky, rectangula­r structure resembles a bigbox store, only with a nuclear emblem of an atom emblazoned on its side. Inside, the floating reactor is a warren of tight corridors, steep staircases, pipes, wires and warning signs in Cyrillic letters.

Officials plan to tow the vessel to coastal cities in need of power, either for short-term boosts or longer-term additions to electricit­y supply. It can carry sufficient enriched uranium to power the two reactors for 12 years, before having to be towed, with its spent fuel, back to Russia, where the radioactiv­e waste will be processed.

A rotating crew of about 300 Russians, including private security guards, will operate the plant. Rosatom is considerin­g a work schedule where they will remain on board for four months at a time before taking a four-month break. The Akademik Lomonosov will start out serving Pevek, a remote port in Siberia about 500 miles from Alaska, next year.

While on the vessel, the civilian crew will have access to a host of amenities, making the structure a sort of cross between the set for “The Hunt for Red October” and a cruise ship. Those aboard can swim in a pool decorated with pictures of a tropical beach, play squash or strangely, given the seeming importance of sobriety on such a vessel, have a drink at a bar.

“Such a local source of electrical energy, which can easily be transporte­d to difficult-to-access locations, is economical­ly effective,” Vitaly A. Trutnev, director of Rosatom’s floating reactor program, said in an interview in the captain’s cabin, a suite decorated with orange upholstere­d chairs and wood laminate tables.

Tsunami-proof ?

Using nuclear reactors for marine propulsion, or on floating power plants, is not new. The United States used a barge-based reactor to generate electricit­y for the Panama Canal Zone from 1968 until 1976, and Westinghou­se, the U.S. reactor builder, planned — but never built — two floating plants off the New Jersey coast at around that time.

The idea of floating nuclear power won unexpected support after the 2011 Japanese tsunami. That disaster wrecked havoc on the Fukushima coastal power plant by flooding backup diesel generators intended to cool the plant in an emergency shutdown.

A floating reactor, supporters say, would survive tsunami waves at sea. And if an emergency shutdown were needed, it would retain access to cooling, something that is easier to do if it is already in the water, rather than relying on pumps. Rosatom, in a statement, insisted its plant was “invulnerab­le to tsunamis.”

Rosatom has so far not disclosed the cost of building the barge, or which countries are interested in buying electricit­y. The company estimates each floating plant will take four years to build, compared with a decade or so for many nuclear plants. The Sudan Tribune has cited that country’s minister of water resources and electricit­y as saying the government in Khartoum has a deal to become the first foreign customer. A Sudanese government spokesman, Mujahid Mohammed Satti, declined to comment on the report.

Others are also exploring the technology. China wants to build 20 floating nuclear plants, the first of which will start within two years. A French company has designed a reactor called Flexblue that would not float but rather be submerged on the ocean floor.

“The question is, would clients of Russia be comfortabl­e with something like this being parked right at a pier in a major city?” Matthew McKinzie, director of the nuclear program at the Natural Resources Defense Council in Washington, said in a telephone interview.

 ?? Maxim Babenko / New York Times photos ?? Backers say Russia’s Akademik Lomonosov, a floating nuclear power plant, is a leading-edge feat of engineerin­g, but critics call the experiment reckless.
Maxim Babenko / New York Times photos Backers say Russia’s Akademik Lomonosov, a floating nuclear power plant, is a leading-edge feat of engineerin­g, but critics call the experiment reckless.
 ??  ?? A rotating crew of about 300 Russians will operate the plant. Rosatom is considerin­g four-month shifts.
A rotating crew of about 300 Russians will operate the plant. Rosatom is considerin­g four-month shifts.
 ??  ?? Amenities for the crew even include a bar, in addition to more typical perks like a pool and a gym.
Amenities for the crew even include a bar, in addition to more typical perks like a pool and a gym.
 ??  ?? Cabins in the residentia­l block will house the crew of the Akademik Lomonosov.
Cabins in the residentia­l block will house the crew of the Akademik Lomonosov.

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