Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire

Major Energy and Environmental News and Commentary affecting the Nuclear Industry.

Friday, January 8, 2010

Shaw sees potential in nuclear-reactor uprate market

Shaw sees potential in nuclear-reactor uprate market
More U.S. companies are electing to uprate their nuclear reactors, creating a market worth $25 billion, the Shaw Group said. Thirty-seven of the country's 104 reactors have finished or are in the process of raising their generating capacities, with the engineering company taking part in more than half of them, Shaw Chairman Jim Bernhard said. World Nuclear News

http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/C-Shaw_eyes_US_reactor_uprate_market-0701104.html

Shaw's chairman Jim Bernhard said that 37 reactors out of the USA's total of 104 had already completed or were in the process of implementing power uprates. He added that Shaw had participated in over half of these uprates, helping to add over 3000 MWe to the grid - roughly the equivalent of three new reactors.

This, Bernhard said, leaves a further 67 American reactors that could potentially be uprated. With the average cost of uprating a unit at $250-500 million, he put the value of this potential market at around $25 billion. Shaw noted that both Exelon and Entergy have announced plans to uprate some of their reactors, to which Shaw already provides fleet-wide maintenance services.


Uprate options

The NRC recognises three categories of power uprates:

'Measurement uncertainty recapture' power uprates, which involve implementing enhanced techniques for calculating reactor power and can typically increase reactor capacity by up to 2%;

'Stretch' power uprates, which usually involve changes to instrumentation settings but are within the design capacity of the plant and can typically add up to about 7% capacity; and

'Extended' power uprates, which involve significant modifications to major plant equipment and can result in up to 20% capacity increases.


Since 1977, the NRC has approved some 124 nuclear power plant uprates, representing about 5640 MWe of added capacity.


Exelon operates the largest nuclear fleet in the USA and the third largest fleet in the world. The company's ten plants - comprising 17 reactors - currently represent some 20% of the US nuclear industry's power capacity. In June 2009, Exelon launched a series of power uprates at its reactors, which in total will add between 1300 and 1500 MWe of additional generating capacity by 2017. According to Shaw, the total cost of these uprates will be in the region of $3.5 billion, making them more economic and far less risky than a new nuclear build project of the same capacity.

Uprates are underway at Exelon's Quad Cities, Dresden and LaSalle plants in Illinois, as well as the Limerick and Peach Bottom plans in Pennsylvania. These are expected to account for almost one-quarter of the new generating capacity. Additional uprate projects at nine other Exelon reactors, beginning this year, will add the remainder of the new capacity by 2017.

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