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Temelín Nuclear Power Station

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Temelín nuclear plant in winter
Model of the plant at the infocentre. The light green area was designed for four more cooling towers.

The Temelín Nuclear Power Station is located by Temelín, a village in South Bohemia in the Czech Republic. It is operated by state-owned company ČEZ. 49°10′33.10″N 14°22′54.15″E / 49.1758611°N 14.3817083°E / 49.1758611; 14.3817083

The first plans for the power station were drafted in late 1980s, final project was submitted in 1985, construction of operating units began in 1987. After the Velvet revolution in 1989 a decision was made to build only two reactors instead of the previously planned four. Plans for four reactors have been reopened in 2005[1]

In the 1990s, several alterations to the original design were made to raise the power station’s reliability and safety to the West-European standards. The reactor vessel contains 163 fuel assemblies, each with 313 fuel rods, and 61 regulating rods.

Castle Vysoký Hrádek, located next to the power plant, serves as an information centre.

Technical data:

Station Reactor type Net capacity Initial criticality Grid date Exp. shutdown
Temelín 1 VVER 1000/320 980 MWe Dec 2000 Jun 2002 2042
Temelín 2 VVER 1000/320 1020 MWe Dec 2002 Apr 2003 2043

Protests

In April 2007 Austrian opposers of the plant started blocking the Czech-Austrian highway, as of May 2007, the problem has still not been resolved.

See also

References

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