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Barsebäck Nuclear Power Plant

Coordinates: 55°44′40″N 12°55′15″E / 55.74444°N 12.92083°E / 55.74444; 12.92083
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Barsebäck 2)
Barsebäck nuclear power plant
Barsebäck NPP
Map
CountrySweden
Coordinates55°44′40″N 12°55′15″E / 55.74444°N 12.92083°E / 55.74444; 12.92083
StatusDecommissioned
Construction began1969
Commission date15 May 1975
Decommission dateReactor 1: 30 November 1999
Reactor 2: 31 May 2005
  • Barsebäck Kraft
OperatorBarsebäck Kraft AB
Nuclear power station
Reactor typeBWR
Power generation
Units decommissioned2 x 615 MW
Capacity factor33.2%
Annual net output3572 GWh
External links
Websitehttps://www.uniper.energy/barseback/
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Barsebäck (Swedish pronunciation: [ˈbâʂːɛˌbɛk]) is a boiling water nuclear power plant currently undergoing the process of nuclear decommissioning.[1] The plant is situated in Barsebäck, Kävlinge Municipality, Skåne, Sweden.

Located 20 kilometers from the Danish capital, Copenhagen, the Danish government pressed for its closure during the entirety of its operating lifetime. As a result of a now former Swedish nuclear power phase-out, its two reactors have been closed down. The first reactor, Barsebäck 1, was closed on 30 November 1999, and the second, Barsebäck 2, ceased operations on 31 May 2005.[2] At the time of closure, each reactor had a net capacity of 600 megawatts. Unit 1 supplied 93,8 TWh and unit 2 supplied 108,5 TWh to the electrical grid.

Barsebäck

Land for the plant was bought in 1965 by the energy company Sydkraft, and the first of the two BWR reactors was ordered from Asea-Atom in 1969. Unit one first attained criticality on 18 January 1975 and commercial operation began on May 15. The second reactor attained criticality on 21 March 1977 and commercial operation began on 1 July.[3] Following a decision in the Riksdag in 1997, the Government of Sweden decided that the first reactor was to on close 1 July 1998, and the second 1 July 2001. Due to the operator's appeal against the decision and lack of emission-free replacement, the closure was postponed.

The demolition of the facility will await the construction of a storage facility, scheduled to be ready in the 2020s. In December 2018 a strategy was outlined for the "radiological demolition" to be carried out between 2020 and 2028. This will allow the land to be used for other nuclear power related purposes.[4]

The plant is operated by Barsebäck Kraft AB, a subsidiary of Sydkraft Nuclear Power AB, owned by Uniper.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "StackPath".
  2. ^ "Nuclear Power in Sweden Appendix 1: Barsebäck Closure - World Nuclear Association".
  3. ^ "StackPath".
  4. ^ "Uniper to coordinate demolition of Swedish reactors". World Nuclear News. 21 December 2018. Retrieved 22 December 2018.
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