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BEIJING, Oct.5 --Chinese scientists are planning
super-efficient nuclear reactors that can maximize uranium burn-up and minimize
waste in the generation of electricity.
If the first experimental reactor, set to be in operation by 2010, is successfl, the technology could help relieve China's uranium supply problems as the country
accelerates nuclear power plant construction.
China Academy of Atomic Science President Zhao
Zhixiang said a team of scientists has already mapped a detailed plan to speed
up research and utilization of the so-called next-generation fast reactors.
The new reactors are expected to burn 60-70 per cent
of their uranium fuel - a conventional reactor consumes only 0.7 per cent of the
uranium it is fed.
"This kind of reactor can greatly improve the
efficiency of fuel burn-up, and we are trying our best to put the experimental
reactor into use over the next five years," Zhao said.
Current reactors are only able to harness the power
of 0.7 per cent of the radioactive isotopes found in natural uranium.
In the fast reactor, the process is optimized so that
more of the previously untapped isotopes can be used to generate electricity,
burning-up fuel at least 60 times more efficiently than in a normal reactor.
"We will have no concerns over fuel supply if such
reactors are used to generate electricity commercially," Zhao said.
China started research into fast nuclear reactor
technology in 1995 and invested 1.38 billion yuan (US$170.2 million) into the
construction of the experimental reactor.
"I hope an experimental reactor with a capacity of
200,000 kilowatts can be put into use by 2010," Zhao said. He added that
construction of the reactor is close to completion but did not identify the site
of the project under the High and New Technology Research and Development
Programme of the Chinese Government.
He also said plans for a fast-reactor prototype are
expected to be included in the country's medium- and long-term science and
technology development blueprints.
The prototype reactor, with a capacity of 600,000
kilowatts, will be constructed and put into operation by 2020, Zhao said,
adding: "After that, we will consider commercial operation of the reactor."
As China's economy keeps developing rapidly, demand
for power also keeps increasing. To meet its growing energy demands, China has
mapped out a national plan to increase nuclear generating capacity to 36,000
megawatts by 2020, up from 8,700 megawatts today. The proportion of national
power output supplied by nuclear energy is expected to rise from 2.3 per cent
now to 4 per cent.
A senior official from the National Development and
Reform Commission told China Daily that the country will have an even more
ambitious plan to generate nuclear power after 2020.
"All the plans urged our researchers to develop our
own core technologies for the reactors," said the official, who declined to be
named. "And I personally believe the fast reactor will play a leading role
during the 2040-50 period in China's nuclear plant construction."
Apart from fast reactor research, China has also made
a breakthrough in gas-cooled nuclear reactors, which can generate considerably
higher temperatures than conventional nuclear reactors, leading to a high power
generating capacity.
Using helium as a coolant, the reactor, mainly
developed by researchers from Tsinghua University, is also able to shut down and
cool automatically in an emergency. Senior State Council officials have called
for early commercial application of China's first gas-cooled nuclear reactor to
help restructure China's energy supply strategy.
Most of the nuclear reactors currently in operation
in China rely on technology imported from France and Russia.
(Source: China Daily) |