The National Energy Administration (NEA) said Monday that it has
launched a series of research and development (R&D) projects to
improve emergency response mechanisms for nuclear power plants in case
of extreme disasters.
Learning from Japan's Fukushima nuclear crisis, which occurred after a
devastating earthquake and tsunami on March 11 last year, the projects
are aimed at improving safety-related technology used in China's nuclear power plants, the NEA said in a statement on its website.
The 13 R&D projects, conducted by the China National Nuclear Corporation, China Guangdong Nuclear Power Holding Corporation and the
Institute of Nuclear and New Energy Technology in cooperation with
Tsinghua University, are expected to be completed around 2013, according
to the NEA.
Engineers and researchers will work to develop advanced nuclear power
safety technology through targeted research and site analyses of nuclear
power plants, the NEA said.
The NEA said it will use the research results to lower the core damage
frequencies (CDFs) and large early release frequencies (LERFs) of the
reactors.
CDFs and LERFs are risk assessment indicators used to predict the
possibility of an incident that could damage a nuclear reactor core.
Lower indicators are required for the construction of third-generation
nuclear power plants.
In January, Wang Binghua, chairman of the State Nuclear Power Technology
Corporation (SNPTC), said China's first AP1000 nuclear power reactor is
expected to go into operation as scheduled by 2013.
China began building its first third-generation pressurized water reactors in 2009, which were also the first to use AP1000 technology
developed by the U.S.-based Westinghouse Electric Company.
China had to slow its construction efforts over safety concerns after the Fukushima nuclear crisis.
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