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BEIJING, Nov. 9 -- The Zhejiang-based Qinshan Nuclear
Power Joint Venture Co. Ltd has signed agreements with engineering and
construction supervision companies to expand the Qinshan nuclear project by
adding two more reactors.
The Qinshan plant, China's first nuclear base,
already has five reactors. There are currently nine in the country in total.
The venture is a subsidiary of the China National
Nuclear Corp (CNNC), which last month got government approval to add two new
nuclear reactors to the Qinshan plant.
Yesterday in Beijing the venture inked contracts with
three subsidiaries of the China Nuclear Engineering Group Corp and two local
companies in Shanghai and Zhejiang for infrastructure construction, equipment
installation and supervision of the expansion project.
The CNNC has budgeted some 400 billion yuan (US$49.3
billion) to build at least 30 nuclear plants which will produce 4 per cent of
the country's total electricity generation by 2020.
"The three pacts are the most important agreements
reached for nuclear plant expansion and mark a significant development of the
Qinshan project," Li Yongjiang, chairman of the venture's board told the signing
ceremony yesterday.
The accords involve an investment of 2.5 billion yuan
(US$308 million).
The whole project, including buying procurement and
designing technology, Li said, cost around 14 billion yuan (US$1.7 billion) to
15 billion yuan (US$1.8 billion)
Seventy per cent of the two new reactors' components
will be supplied by domestic manufacturers.
The Shanghai Electric Group and the Harbin Power
Equipment Co are the two main domestic equipment suppliers for the expansion
project. The remaining 30 per cent of the equipment will come from foreign firms
such as Areva and Mitsubishi, Li told China Daily.
The expansion project is expected to begin in the
first quarter of next year, with the first new reactor scheduled to go
operational in December 2010 and the second 10 months later, a CNNC statement
said.
The nation's power consumption is estimated to more
than double to 4.6 trillion kilowatt-hours between now and 2020.
(Source: China Daily) |