Overview
State Enterprise "National Nuclear Energy Generating Company "Energoatom" was founded in October 1996. The company operates four nuclear power plants in Ukraine consisting of 15 units (13 VVER-1000 units and 2 VVER-440 units) with a total installed capacity of 13,835 MW. The company also operates two hydroelectric units at the Oleksandrivska Hydroelectric Plant with the installed capacity of 25 MW and three hydroelectric units at the Tashlyk Pumped-Storage Power Plant with the installed capacity of 453 MW (the hydroelectric unit No. 3 was connected to the power system in 2022). Ukraine ranks seventh in the world and second in Europe in terms of the number of nuclear reactors operated and total capacity. Energoatom provides about 55% of Ukraine's electricity needs. The total number of employees as of the beginning of 2022 is 33,969 employees. The organizational and legal form of Energoatom is a state enterprise. The founder is theThe separated subdivisions of Energoatom
* Zaporizhzhia NPP. * Rivne NPP. * Pivdennoukrainsk NPP. * Khmelnytskyi NPP. * SS "Atomremontservice". * SS "Atomenergomash'. * SS "Centralized purchasing". * SS "Atomprojectengineering". * SS "Emergency Technical Center". * SS "Scientific&Technical Center". * SS "Warehouse". * SS "DO "Atomprylad". * SS "Automation&Mechanical Engineering". * SS "Energoatom-Trading". * SS "Administrative Department". * SS "Donuzlavska WPP" (located in the temporarily occupied territory).Nuclear power stations
Zaporizhzhya NPP
* Start of construction – 1979. * The commissioning of the first power unit – 1984. * 6 VVER-1000 units with a total installed capacity of 6000 MW. * Satellite city – Energodar, Zaporizhzhia region. The largest nuclear power plant in Ukraine and Europe. It is located near the steppe zone on the shore of the Kakhovka Reservoir. Over the years of its existence, it has produced more than 1.1 trillion kWh of electricity. It has its own dry storage facility for spent nuclear fuel (Dry SFSF).Rivne NPP
* Start of construction – 1973. * The commissioning of the first power unit – 1980. * 2 VVER-440 units та 2 VVER-1000 units with a total installed capacity of 2835 MW. * Satellite city – Varash, Rivne region. The first nuclear power plant in Ukraine with power water-cooled reactors of the VVER type. The annual production of electricity is about 20 billion kWh. The RNPP operates an automated radiation monitoring system (ARMS) equipped with seismic monitoring systems and RODOS (Real Time Online Decision Support) decision support system. This energy complex is unique for Ukraine and one of the best in the world in terms of the accuracy of parameters and characteristics.Khmelnytskyi NPP
* Start of construction – 1981. * The commissioning of the first power unit – 1987. * 2 VVER-1000 units with a total installed capacity of 2000 MW. * Satellite city – Netishyn, Khmelnytskyi region. The most promising Ukrainian nuclear power plant in terms of realizing Ukraine's export potential on the European energy market. It is located near the central part of Western Ukraine, on the border of three regions - Khmelnytskyi, Rivne and Ternopil. The power plant generates almost 15 billion kWh of electricity per year.South Ukrainian Energy Complex
South Ukraine NPP
* Start of construction – 1975. * The commissioning of the first power unit – 1982. * 3 VVER-1000 units with a total installed capacity of 3000 MW. * Satellite city – Pivdennoukrainsk, Mykolaiv region.Oleksandrivka Hydroelectric Plant
* 2 hydroelectric units with the installed capacity of 25 MWTashlyk Pumped-Storage Power Plant
* 3 hydroelectric units with the installed capacity of 453 MW The South Ukrainian Energy Complex uses basic nuclear as well as flexible hydro and hydro-storage capacities. It is located in the north of the Mykolaiv region, on the banks of the South Bug River. The complex produces 17-20 billion kWh of electricity per year. For the first time in Ukraine, the SUNPP was loaded with fresh nuclear fuel produced by the American company Westinghouse. This fuel load has paved the way for Ukraine's successful diversification of nuclear fuel supplies. Since 2018, power unit No. 3, and since 2020, power unit No. 2 of the SUNPP have been operating on Westinghouse fuel only.Safety of NPPs
The policy of Energoatom prioritizes the issues of security over economic, technical, scientific and other objectives. The objective of increasing and maintaining the current level of operating power units' safety has the highest priority in the activities of the operating organization. Energoatom's nuclear power plants use the nuclear and radiation technologies; therefore, the main mission of the company is an unconditional observance of nuclear and radiation safety with cost-effective generation and reliable supply of electricity and heat to consumers. In the NPP surveillance zones, the Automated Radiation Monitoring Systems (ARMS) have been created for continuous monitoring of the radiation situation. International experts have monitored the safety of Ukrainian nuclear power plants for many years: the periodic meetings are held at the IAEA to comply with the provisions of the Convention on Nuclear Safety; there is a safety monitoring by international experts (OSART, ASSET, WANO missions) organized within the framework of cooperation. Increasing the reliability and efficiency of operating NPPs is implemented through the Comprehensive Consolidated Safety Upgrade Program of Power Units of Nuclear Power Plants (CCSUP - approved by the Ordinance of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine (CMU) dated 07.12.2011 No. 1270. The Ordinance of the CMU dated 08.05.2019 No. 390 amended the Ordinance of the CMU dated 07.12.2011 No. 1270 and extended the period of validity of the CCSUP until 12.31.2023. The Ordinance of the CMU dated 07.11.2018 No. 924 increased the amount of funding for the CCSUP. Due to the military aggression of the Russian federation, Energoatom on its own initiative developed a draft ordinance on amending the Ordinance of the CMU dated 07.12.2011 No. 1270 regarding the extension of the term of the CCSUP until 31.12.2025) and the Comprehensive Consolidated Program for Improving the Efficiency and Reliability of NPP Power Units Operation. CCSUP was developed based on the recommendations of the joint project of the European Commission, the IAEA and Ukraine on improving safety and implementing post-Fukushima measures at NPP power units in order to increase the level of safety and reliability of operation of nuclear power units; reducing risks of the accidents at nuclear power plants during natural disasters or other extreme situations; increasing the efficiency of managing project and off-project accidents at nuclear power plants, minimizing their consequences. Date of Implementation of the Program: 2011–2023. The purpose of the implementation of the Comprehensive Consolidated Safety Upgrade Program of Power Units of Nuclear Power Plants is: * implementation of the recommendations of the IAEA and other international organizations regarding the improvement of the safety level of power units of Ukrainian nuclear power plants; * fulfillment of the requirements of the current domestic nuclear legislation and legislation in the field of civil defense regarding the company's readiness to act in conditions of threat and occurrence of nuclear and radiation accidents, man-made and natural emergencies. * implementation of measures aimed at preventing accidents similar to the accident at the Fukushima NPP; * replacement of the safety important equipment with the modern one. The CCSUP contains 1,295 measures, of which 1,070 have been implemented as of 2022. Energoatom also implements post-Fukushima measures aimed at preventing accidents during natural disasters or other extreme situations, minimizing the consequences of such accidents; increasing the efficiency of project and off-project accident management at nuclear power plants, minimizing their consequences. In total, 90% of the 238 post-Fukushima measures have already been implemented as of 2022.Construction of new Nuclear Power Units in Ukraine
On August 31, 2021, in Washington ( USA), Energoatom and Westinghouse signed a Memorandum of Understanding, which provides for the construction of five nuclear power units in Ukraine using AP1000 technology. On 2 June 2022, at the site of the Khmelnytskyi NPP, a Declaration was signed on the start of practical implementation of the joint project of Energoatom and Westinghouse on the construction of AP1000 power units at the site of the Khmelnytskyi NPP. On the same day, Energoatom and Westinghouse signed a Memorandum on expanding cooperation, which provides for an increase in the number of AP1000 power units planned for construction from five to nine, as well as the establishment of a Westinghouse engineering center in Ukraine to support AP1000 projects planned for implementation in Ukraine and Europe. In addition, this Memorandum provides for operation support of the operating power units of Ukraine's NPPs and future decommissioning works. Key stages of the pilot project implementation: * preparation and conclusion of an intergovernmental agreement on cooperation between Ukraine and the United States in the construction of AP1000 nuclear power units in Ukraine; * preparation and adoption of a draft law of Ukraine "On the placement, design and construction of power units at the Khmelnytskyi NPP site"; * obtaining licenses for the construction and commissioning of two AP1000 power units at the Khmelnytskyi NPP site.Managing spent nuclear fuel at Ukrainian NPPs
Ukraine fulfills its obligations in all aspects of handling spent nuclear fuel in accordance with the requirements of the "Joint Convention on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and on the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management" (Joint Convention) ratified by theDry spent nuclear fuel storage at Zaporizhzhia NPP
Ukraine has obtained a positive experience in coping with spent nuclear fuel management issues. In the 1990s, due to yet another restriction imposed by the Russian federation regarding the repatriation of spent nuclear fuel, Zaporizhzhia NPP power units faced the peril of being stopped. This has prompted the plant to build and commission in 2001 a temporal dry storage of a container type for its spent fuel with Duke Engineering&Services and Sierra Nuclear Corporation design, which allows storing for a fifty-year period.Centralized repository for spent nuclear fuel (CRSNF)
In 2003 Energoatom announced an international tender to determine the company for construction of a centralized repository for spent nuclear fuel of dry type in Ukraine for previously mentioned NPPs. The US company Holtec International won the tender and at the end of 2005 signed an agreement on designing, licensing, construction and commissioning the repository designed for 100 years of storage. According to Ukrainian legislation, the CRSNF site is located between the former villages of Stara Krasnytsia, Buriakivka, Chystogolivka, and Stechanka in the Kyiv region on the territory of the Exclusion Zone, which suffered from the Chornobyl nuclear catastrophe causing radioactive contamination. Storage of spent fuel at the CRSNF is implemented with the "dry" technology introduced by Holtec International. This technology obtained a license from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and was tested in the US,Company's investment projects
Investment projects implemented by "Energoatom" intend to guarantee the safe and reliable operation of its NPPs, prolong the term of power units' operation and create the enabling environment for the energy independence of Ukraine. The main projects are: * Carrying out preparatory work for the construction start of the KhNPP power units No. 5 and No. 6. * Implementation of the construction project of new power units with AP1000 design (Westinghouse) at existing and perspective sites. * Establishing the production of fuel assemblies with Westinghouse design in Ukraine. * Start of operation of the CRSNF and SNF acceptance from three Ukrainian NPPs. * Commission and connection of the Tashlyk Pumped-Storage Power Plant hydropower unit No. 3 * Commissioning of spray pools No. 3, 4, 5 at the SUNPP. * Electricity export to the EU countries. * Research on the feasibility of SMR technology deployment in Ukraine.Military actions at Ukrainian NPPs
Zaporizhzhia NPP occupation
On 4 March 2022, the Zaporizhzhia NPP came under temporary occupation. The armed seizure of the plant by the Russian military resulted in shelling that damaged one of the ZNNP Training Center buildings, the reactor building, the block transformer, as well as household premises, some buildings, structures and equipment. An immediate threat occurred to the lives of plant personnel, along with a threat of nuclear and radiation hazards and an accident. The "Zaporizhska" overhead line and the "Southern Donbaska" overhead line bore damage as well. After the occupation of the ZNPP more than 500 troops of the Russian military force and 50 units of military equipment were located at the plant's site. The Russian military deployed at least 14 military trucks with weapons, ammunition loads explosives in the engine hall of the ZNPP power unit No. 1 in the vicinity to the nuclear reactor blocking access of firefighting equipment and vehicles in case of fire. Right after the occupation, the Russian enterprises "Rosatom" and "Rosenergoatom" sent a group of their employees to the ZNPP site. The "Rosenergoatom" personnel rotated three times since that. On June 2, 2022, a team of 10 Rosenergoatom employees headed by the chief engineer of the Kalininska NPP arrived at the Zaporizhzhya NPP. In August–September 2022, there is constantly shelling at the ZNPP causing substantial damage to the equipment, buildings, structures, pipelines, installations of the ZNPP, which led to the emergence of nuclear and radiation hazards and a high threat of nuclear accident due to damage to power units, chemical blocks and other equipment and buildings that ensure the operation of the NPP. On 5 August 2022, three shelling attacks occurred at the plant's site close to one of the power units. A hit appeared between the Training Center and the 750 open switchyard damaging the high-voltage line 150 kV ZNPP – ZaTPS that led to the power outage of the auxiliary transformers No. 1, 2 and the HVL 330 kV ZNPP – ZaTPS, and decreased total capacity of the ZNPP to 1000 MWe. The electric substation "Luch" bore substantial damages in a consequence of the shelling of the town of Energodar: 6 out of 7 microdistrics remained without electricity. The water intake station ceased working and the town lost its water supply as well. On 6 August 2022, military forces shelled the ZNPP and its satellite-town Energodar and hit in the vicinity of the dry spent nuclear fuel storage of the plant. Three radiation monitoring sensors around the ZNPP DSFSF were damaged. On 8 August 2022, the Russian military forces continued to shell the town hitting residential buildings. On 11 August 2022, the occupiers shelled the fire station that was aimed for the plant's needs in case of emergency. On 13 August 2022 the damage occurred at the open switchyard 750 kW. On 20 August 2022, in a consequence of the shelling, windows in one of the transitional galleries were shattered. On 25 August 2022 due to the fires at the Zaporizhzhia TPS ash damps located in the vicinity of the ZNPP, the fourth power line connecting the ZNPP with the Ukrainian power grid – overhead line 750 kW ZNPP – "Dniprovska" - went offline twice. The previous shelling had damaged three other lines. As a result, two operating power units of the plant were disconnected from the grid. The actions of the Russian military led to the complete disconnection of the ZNPP from the power grid for the first time in the plant's history. On 21 September 2022 at 01:13 am another shelling damaged the connection equipment of unit No. 6 with the plant's open switchyard. The attack caused the disconnection of unit transformer and house load transformers. The loss of power actuated two emergency diesel generators of the safety systems to ensure cooling of the nuclear fuel from pumps. The safety of NPPs in circumstances of warfare and occupation is a new challenge, as none of NPP in the world have ever been designed with protection from potential hostilities, bombing and missile shelling. One person died and 10 people were seriously injured due to shelling of the ZNPP site and the satellite-town of Energodar. The occupation forces exert psychological pressure and torture of local residents and personnel of the NPP. Over 100 people were detained and their location is not yet known.Military attacks on other NPPs
On 19 September 2022 the Russian military forces fired a missile attack on industrial zone of the South Ukraine Nuclear Power Plant (SUNPP) using most likely the "Iskander" missile of the "earth – earth" class. The missile hit in approximately 300 meters from the nuclear reactors. The hit weave damaged the NPP premises by shattering over 100 windows. The attack caused the shutdown of one of hydroelectric units of Oleksandrivka hydro power plant, which is a part of the SUNPP energy complex, and the high-voltage power line.The IAEA mission
On 18 August 2022, theSee also
* TurboatomNotes
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