Exactly
25 years after, India's then prime minister Rajiv Gandhi and USSR
premier Gorbachev signed their historic agreement in 1988, for the
export of two 1,000-MW VVER (Voda Voda Energo Reactor, or,
pressurised light water reactor) by USSR to India, the first of the
reactors at Kudankulam has fed few Megawatts of electrical power to
power hungry southern electrical grid this week, even though on an
experimental basis.
This
token achievement is still a great achievement, as the project was
dogged by endless number of controversies and litigation resulting in
protests and delays. Even though the project was given a signal in
1988, physical work on the project or “first [pouring] of concrete”
was started only on March 31, 2002. The Atomic Energy regulatory
board gave its nod for initial fuel-loading on August 10, 2012, and
subsequently granted clearance for the “first approach to
criticality” on July 11, 2013.
As the
project work started, the anti-KKNPP (Kudankulam Nuclear Power
Project) agitation also gained momentum in neighbouring Idinthakarai.
This temporarily impeded the project’s progress. Government says
that this agitation was funded by some foreign NGO's. Whosoever was
behind the agitation, it created many hurdles for the project. The
agitation gathered further steam with Japan’s 2011 Fukushima
nuclear power plant accident. As Kudankulam Nuclear plant is located
on the coastline hit by the 2004 Asian tsunami, opponents of the
plant say that a disaster similar to the one at Fukushima in Japan
in 2011 can hit the plant in case of a Tsunami. The agitators managed
to drum up a massively supported agitation last year. The matter was
then referred to Supreme court of India.
Finally,
way was cleared for the Nuclear power station, when in May 2013,
Supreme Court ruled that the power station could start operations as
it was "safe and secure." The first reactor at Kudankulam
attained criticality at 11.50 p.m. on July 13, 2013. There was
further delay as some of the Russian-origin components needed fine
adjustments, which delayed commencement of power-generation.
The first reactor, having reached criticality earlier, was on 22nd October 2013, synchronised with the southern regional electrical grid at 2.45 a.m., generating about 75MW first and then gradually notched up 160 MW. However it does not mean that the reactor would now on be connected to the power grid on permanent basis. After about an hour and half, the generators were desynchronised from the southern grid again, as elaborate checks and inspections have been planned for next few days.
Site
director Site Director, R.S. Sundar says:
“Though
the reactor will continue to generate steam, the turbine will not be
allowed to function as it has been stopped [to enable engineers] to
study its performance during and after synchronisation. The
functioning of the valves and the pipelines connected to the turbine
is being evaluated. Moreover, the functioning of the generator is
also being reviewed. All these tests and readings are being submitted
to the AERB online and clearances being obtained then and there. So
far, every part of the reactor, turbine and generator has performed
extremely well. We are very much satisfied,”
He also says that it would be resynchronised with the grid in next
few days and then the power will be further output raised to 500
megawatts, 750 megawatts and 1,000 megawatts in stages,as the plant
clears various tests.
The
power hungry southern grid may still have to wait for few more days,
after all this delay.
24th
October 2013
p.s.
The Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project crossed the much-awaited milestone on Saturday afternoon as the first reactor of the upcoming nuclear park attained its maximum capacity of 1,000 MWe at 1.20 p.m. on 7th June 2014.
7th June 2014
p.s.
The Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project crossed the much-awaited milestone on Saturday afternoon as the first reactor of the upcoming nuclear park attained its maximum capacity of 1,000 MWe at 1.20 p.m. on 7th June 2014.
7th June 2014
Very happy to hear about the successful completion of the power station. The world needs more of these. The Indian engineers who worked on this project will be in great demand in USA, because if ever US wants to build such a plant, there is nobody here who knows how to do it. Those who did the work before are all too old to work, Probably too old to remember their name, if not already dead.
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