Apr 01, 2006 -- BBC Monitoring
Guangdong is expected to start construction of three nuclear
power plants this year, including the biggest such energy project
on the country's drawing board, the Yangjiang power station, a
China Business News report said. The Yangjiang plant would cover
472,485 sq.m. in western Guangdong and feature six generating
units with capacities of at least 1m kW each. The first two
generating units at the more than 8bn US dollars Yangjiang reactor
will begin generating power around 2012 while the remaining units
will come on line in 15 to 20 years.
Another power project planned to be started this year
is the Yaogu nuclear power plant in Taishan, which was originally
scheduled to start in 2010. Authorities had already signalled that
work would begin this year on the Lingdong nuclear power plant,
the second phase of the existing Lingao plant. It will have two
generating units, each with an installed capacity of 1m kW.
Guangdong has two nuclear plants - the Daya Bay and Lingao
reactors - with a combined production capacity of 4m kW. The
output of the province's nuclear projects is expected to rise to
15m kW and produce more than 20 per cent of its power production
when the three new reactors are operational. Cheng Jiansan, a
deputy director from the Guangdong Academy of Social Sciences,
said nuclear plants contributed about 8 per cent of the total
amount of electricity consumed in the province each year and that
figure was expected to rise to about 15 per cent in the future.
Source: South China Morning Post website, Hong Kong, in English
1 Apr 06
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