Source: https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/Articles/Chinese-long-distance-nuclear-heating-project-begi

China’s first project to bring nuclear-generated heat to multiple prefecture-level cities has begun operation in Shandong province, supplying heat from the Haiyang nuclear power plant to the cities of Haiyang and Rushan through a 23 km pipeline.

The project is the third phase of a commercial heating project called Warm Nuclear No 1 operated by the State Power Investment Corporation (SPIC). After trials the previous winter to provide heat to the plant’s dormitory and some local residents, the Haiyang plant officially started providing district heat to the surrounding area in November 2020, and then to the whole Haiyang city.

The Warm Nuclear No 1 project now reaches an area of 12.5 million square metres, and can meet the clean heating needs of about 400,000 people in winter, SPIC said.

Work began on the long-distance supply pipe in February, and the project has required coordination and communication between the different provincial and municipal bodies involved. Since the start of the Warm Nuclear Core No 1 project, some 83 km of nuclear energy heating main network and 11 first-level heat exchange stations have been built, with an investment of nearly CNY4 billion (USD555 million), SPIC said. To date, it has provided a total of 4.56 million Gigajoules (GJ) of zero-carbon heat, replaced 390,000 tons of raw coal consumption, and reduced carbon dioxide emissions by 720,000 tons, as well as improving winter air quality in Haiyang City.

The Haiyang nuclear power plant is home to two AP1000 pressurised water reactors which entered commercial operation in 2018 and 2019 respectively. Two CAP1000 pressurised water reactors are now under construction at the site with grid connection pencilled in for 2027.

  • KevonLooney
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    11 months ago

    I have no problem with the technical specifications. I’m sure they’re perfect. The problem is: research is performed by the brightest minds, but engineering is done by the lowest bidder.

    On to the important part that you skipped: is this currently being installed in any buildings where leadership lives / works? If the Secretary of Energy lived in a house heated with this steam I would consider it.

    That’s how you know if it’s good; do they “eat their own cooking”?

    • Collectifission@greennuclear.online
      cake
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      11 months ago

      @KevonLooney I skipped that part because, in my opinion, it is completely irrelevant. But I do think that out of those 400,000 people receiving nuclear heat, there are bound to be party officials and other ‘higher ups’.

      • KevonLooney
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        11 months ago

        You think the engineering part is irrelevant? Many things are theoretically safe, but fail catastrophically when actually built.

        It sounds like you value progress at any cost. But I value knowing it’s safe. If it’s better and safer, top leadership will be falling all over each other to have this in their homes.

        • Svante@mastodon.xyz
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          1
          ·
          11 months ago

          @KevonLooney @collectifission

          »Leaders« are not much better educated in engineering questions than you, and their assessment is thus probably not much more accurate than yours.

          Look where the engineers want to go.

          Anyway, I, for one, want something like one of those NASA kilopower things in my basement. I would feel much safer than with gas.

          Or some caskets of used nuclear fuel buried in my garden, where I can use the residual heat for a heat pump.

          I know it’s safe.

          • Svante@mastodon.xyz
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            11 months ago

            @KevonLooney @collectifission You make it sound as if nuclear energy was some experimental shit someone is trying for the first time. That couldn’t be farther from the truth. On the contrary, especially in relation to the amounts of energy handled, it is by far the most mature and safe technology sector in the world, and it has a culture and mindset of continuous improvement on top of that.

            And you have the gall to call these engineers incompetent, in the face of all evidence against it.