Damaged Guangdong Nuclear Reactor Shut Down: Operator

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2021-07-30 HKT 22:07

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  • The Taishan nuclear plant under construction in 2013. File photo: AFP

    The Taishan nuclear plant under construction in 2013. File photo: AFP

A reactor at a Guangdong nuclear plant has been shut down because it is damaged, the operator said Friday, but it insisted there were no major safety issues.

Mainland authorities last month blamed minor fuel rod damage for a build-up of radioactive gases at the Taishan plant, about 140 kilometres from Hong Kong, describing it as a "common phenomenon" with no need for concern.

French nuclear firm Framatome, which helps operate the plant, last month reported a "performance issue" which caused the US government to look into the possibility of a leak.

"After lengthy conversations between French and Chinese technical personnel, Taishan Nuclear Power Plant... decided to shut down Unit 1 for maintenance," China General Nuclear Power Group (CGN) said on Friday in an online statement.

The company added that "a small amount of fuel damage" had occurred.

CGN said both reactors at the plant have "maintained safe and stable operations throughout" and that the faulty unit is "completely under control". Engineers will now "find the cause of fuel damage and replace the damaged fuel", the statement added.

There are more than 60,000 fuel rods in the reactor and the proportion of damaged rods is "less than 0.01 percent", the environment ministry and nuclear regulator previously said.

They called the damage "inevitable" due to factors including fuel manufacturing and transportation.

French energy giant EDF – the majority owner of Framatome – also previously blamed the build-up of radioactive gases on deteriorating coating on some uranium fuel rods.

EDF said it was first informed about the fuel rod problem in October, but only learned about the gas build-up in mid-June.

Official environmental monitoring data shows a slight increase in radiation near Taishan compared with other nuclear plants in China, but experts say this remains within the normal range of environmental radiation levels in Guangdong.

The shutdown follows the French firm stating last week that it would have shut down a nuclear reactor in France if it suffered problems similar to those reported at the Taishan plant. (AFP)

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