Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Loviisa Nuclear Power Plant

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Country
  
Status
  
Operational

Reactor supplier
  
Atomenergoexport

Phone
  
+358 10 4555011

Location
  
Loviisa

Reactor type
  
Owner
  
Fortum

Construction began
  
1 May 1971

Loviisa Nuclear Power Plant

Commission date
  
May 9, 1977 (May 9, 1977)

Address
  
Atomitie 700, 07900 Loviisa, Finland

Similar
  
VVER, Olkiluoto Nuclear Power Pl, Rheinsberg Nuclear Power Pl, Stendal Nuclear Power Pl, Juragua Nuclear Power Pl

Loviisa nuclear power plant finland


The Loviisa Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) (Finnish: Loviisan ydinvoimalaitos, Swedish: Lovisa kärnkraftverk) is located close to the Finnish town of Loviisa. It houses two Soviet-designed VVER-440/213 PWR reactors, each with a capacity of 510 MW.

The reactors at Loviisa NPP went into commercial operation in 1977 and 1980 respectively. To comply with Finnish nuclear regulation, Westinghouse and Siemens supplied equipment and engineering expertise. This unorthodox mix of US and Soviet enterprise led to the project developers being given the nickname "Eastinghouse". The plant is operated by Fortum Oyj.

The pressure vessel of Unit 1 was successfully heat annealed in 1996 in order to clear embrittlement caused by neutron bombardment and impurities of the welding seam between the two halves of the vessel.

The operating licence for both units has been renewed for a 50-year lifetime, Loviisa-1 to 2027 and Loviisa-2 to 2030.

A third reactor was proposed for the Loviisa site by Fortum Power and Heat Oy. The single reactor unit could produce up to 1000 MWt of district heating supply and from 800 - 1,600 MW of electrical generation. On 21 April 2010, the Finnish government declined the application by Fortum to build a new reactor at Loviisa.

Spent fuel from the reactors will be stored permanently at the Onkalo spent nuclear fuel repository.

In 2014 Rolls-Royce took over the modernisation of safety-related systems for both units from an AREVA-Siemens consortium. The project should be completed by 2018.

References

Loviisa Nuclear Power Plant Wikipedia