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Rosatom

Rosatom (Russian: Росатом, IPA: [rɐsˈatəm]), also known as Rosatom State Nuclear Energy Corporation, the State Atomic Energy Corporation Rosatom, or Rosatom State Corporation, is a Russian state corporation headquartered in Moscow that specializes in nuclear energy, nuclear non-energy goods and high-tech products.[4] Established in 2007, the nonprofit organization comprises more than 350 enterprises, including scientific research organizations, a nuclear weapons complex, and the world's only nuclear icebreaker fleet.[5]

State Atomic Energy Corporation Rosatom
Rosatom's headquarters at Bolshaya Ordynka Street in Moscow
Native name
Государственная корпорация по атомной энергии «Росатом»
TypeState-owned
IndustryNuclear power
Wind power
Hydrogen fuel
PredecessorFederal Agency on Atomic Energy
Founded1 December 2007; 16 years ago (2007-12-01)[1]
FounderVladimir Putin by signed law[2]
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Alexey Likhachev [ru](General Director)
ProductsNuclear reactors
Nuclear fuel
Uranium mining
Uranium enrichment
Nuclear decommissioning
Nuclear medicine
Wind power
Hydrogen fuel
Additive manufacturing
Composites
Revenue₽1,207.4 billion[3] (2020)
Total assets₽4,722.4 billion[3] (2020)
OwnerRussian government
Number of employees
276,100[3] (2020)
SubsidiariesSee organization
Websiterosatom.ru/en/

The organization is the largest electricity generating company in Russia, producing 215.746 TWh of electricity, 20.28% of the country's total electricity production. The corporation ranks first in overseas NPP construction, responsible for 76% of global nuclear technology exports: 35 nuclear power plant units, at different stages of development, in 12 countries, as of December 2020.[6] Rosatom also manufactures equipment, produces isotopes for nuclear medicine, carries out research, and conducts material studies. It also produces supercomputers and software as well as different nuclear and non-nuclear products. Rosatom plans to further develop renewable energy and wind power. Two nuclear power plants are being built in Russia at Kursk-2 NPP with plans announced for 2 more units at Kola NPP.[7] Rosatom has a 38% world market share and in 2019 led in global uranium enrichment services (36%) and covers 16% of the global nuclear fuel market.[8][9][10]

In 2020, Rosatom approved an updated strategy with the intent to branch into 100 new business areas, including nuclear medicine, composites, wind energy, hydrogen, waste management, additive technology, and production of hydrogen.[3]

The state corporation is authorized on behalf of the state to fulfill Russia's international obligations in the field of the use of nuclear energy and of non-proliferation of nuclear materials.[4] Rosatom is also involved with large-scale projects such as ITER and FAIR.

As of February 2021, the total portfolio orders of Rosatom reached $250 billion.[11][12] According to the 2020 corporate report, its 10-year foreign order portfolio stood at $138.3 billion, while revenue reached $7.5 billion. The 10-year order portfolio for new products stood at ₽1,602.1 billion while revenue reached ₽261.1 billion.[13][14]

History edit

Origins and establishment edit

Several Soviet and Russian government entities with different tasks are among the Rosatom predecessors.[4] On 26 June 1953, the Council of Ministers transformed the First Main Directorate in charge of nuclear weapons program into the Ministry of Medium Machine Building (MinSredMash). The ministry was entrusted with the development of the civic nuclear power program. In 1989, Minsredmash and the Ministry of Atomic Energy merged to form the Ministry of Nuclear Engineering and Industry of the USSR.[15][16]

The Ministry for Atomic Energy of the Russian Federation [(Russian: Министерство по атомной энергии Российской Федерации, also known as Minatom (Russian: Минaтом)] was established as a successor to the Russian part of the Ministry of Nuclear Engineering and Industry of the USSR on 29 January 1992, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The newly created ministry received about 80% of the enterprises of the union department, including 9 nuclear power plants with 28 power units. Under this name, the ministry existed until 9 March 2004, when it was transformed into the Federal Agency on Atomic Energy.[15][16]

On 1 December 2007, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law adopted by the Federal Assembly under which the Federal Atomic Energy Agency was to be abolished, and its powers and assets were to be transferred to the newly created "State Atomic Energy Corporation Rosatom." On 12 December of the same year, the agency transformed into a state corporation.[15][17] In 2015, the company's revenue amounted to 126 billion rubles.[18]

Involvement in international markets edit

Between 2000 and 2015, Rosatom "was the supplier in around half of all international agreements on nuclear power plant construction, reactor, and fuel supply, decommissioning or waste".[19] Russia has various diplomatic ties with different countries via nuclear energy diplomacy.[20] Some form of formalized agreement exists with 54 countries as of 2023, although some plans for Russian-built nuclear power plants were canceled after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[19]

Wind power investments edit

In 2017, Rosatom decided to invest in wind power, believing that rapid cost reductions in the renewable industry will become a competitive threat to nuclear power, and started to build wind turbine. Rosatom was also concerned that nuclear export opportunities were becoming exhausted. In October, Rosatom was reported to be considering postponing commissioning new nuclear plants in Russia due to excess generation capacity and that new nuclear electricity prices are higher than for existing plant. The Russian government is considering reducing support for new nuclear under its support contracts, called Dogovor Postavki Moshnosti (DPM), which guarantees developers a return on investment through increased payments from consumers for 20 years.[21][22][23]

2017 ruthenium plume controversy edit

Ruthenium, a byproduct of uranium-235 fission, is used by nuclear monitoring sites as an indicator of a nuclear accident.[24] In October 2017, a plume of ruthenium-106 was detected by multiple laboratories throughout Europe. Rosatom denied that there had been a leak or accident at its nuclear sites and suggested that the plume was caused by a satellite burning upon reentry.[25] A 2019 study ruled out the satellite hypothesis. By analyzing air sample data from multiple monitoring sites, the scientists determined that the most likely cause of the plume was a fire or explosion while attempting to process ruthenium into cerium-144.[25] Rosatom continues to deny that there was a leak or explosion.

Other events (2017–2020) edit

On 28 June 2017, The Financial Times criticized Rosatom for lack of transparency regarding an alleged expansionist agenda through its role as a "Kremlin-controlled company".[26] On 20 March 2018, this criticism was underlined by the Bellona Foundation, who focused on the scarce data available on Rosatom's progress in Sudan.[27]

On 20 August 2020, Rosatom marked the 75th anniversary of the Russian nuclear industry. As part of the celebration, Rosatom launched its rebranding campaign “United Rosatom,” which made subsidiaries in the nuclear industry utilize the Rosatom's Möbius strip logo. In 2020, Rosatom set a goal of tripling its revenue to ₽4 trillion by 2030, 40% of which is set to come from new lines of business, with primarily focus on sustainable tech.[28][6][29]

2022 invasion of Ukraine edit

Nations supporting Ukraine following the 2022 Russian invasion sanctioned key Russian industries, including Rosatom and its subsidiaries. The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office of the United Kingdom announced direct sanctions against Rosatom and its executives.[30] The United States Department of the Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned UMATEX Joint-Stock Company and its subsidiaries in Russia and the Czech Republic pursuant to Executive Order 14024, as part of a drive against Russia's suppliers of carbon fibers.[31]

Within the next two days after Russian military forces occupied Ukraine's Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant on 24 February 2022, Rosatom employees had gained unauthorized access to the plant, threatened the Ukrainian personnel, and demanded the plant's manuals, procedures and other documentation.[32]

Since 12 March 2022,[33] once Russian military forces occupied Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, Rosatom employees have gained access and set a base there without permission of the plant's owner Energoatom. Rosatom engineers have demanded documentation and manuals on the plant's operation. Rosatom spokeswoman said that its employees are present at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant to ensure the safety of the plant and are not involved in its management or security.[34]

On 29 September 2022, the International Atomic Energy Agency was told by a Ukrainian ambassador that Rosatom had sent more officials to Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant to enforce the change in ownership from Ukraine to Russia and to give the plant employees two weeks to apply for work with Rosatom. Allowing Russia to claim ownership of Zaporizhzhia would represent the biggest nuclear theft in history.[35]

Organization edit

As of early 2021, Rosatom included 356 of various organizational and legal forms. Some belong to the enterprises of the nuclear power complex, which comprises organizations of nuclear energy, nuclear engineering, and the nuclear fuel cycle, such as enterprises for the exploration and production of natural uranium, conversion and enrichment of uranium, production of nuclear fuel, electricity and equipment, development of new technologies for the nuclear fuel and gas centrifuge platform.[6] Others belong to the growing number of new businesses outside of nuclear power, including wind energy, composite materials, additive technologies, and nuclear medicine, among others. The civilian assets of the Russian nuclear industry are concentrated within Rosatom's holding company Atomenergoprom, which unites 204 enterprises as of December 2020.[13][36]

The Rosatom companies are integrated into multiple divisions:[13][37]

Mining division edit

The holding company of the Rosatom mining division is JSC Atomredmetzoloto, which consolidates Russian uranium mining assets. Key daughter companies include JSC Khiagda and JSC Dalur. Uranium One is a separate global mining company that operates directly under Rosatom with a diverse portfolio of assets in Kazakhstan, United States, and Tanzania.

Fuel division edit

 
Work on a fuel cassette of the nuclear power reactor at the Novosibirsk Chemical Concentrates Plant, a TVEL subsidiary

The managing company of the Rosatom fuel division is JSC TVEL, which is a leading organization on the global nuclear fuel cycle front-end market and the only supplier of nuclear fuel for Russian NPPs and the nuclear-powered icebreaker fleet.

Key daughter companies include Bochvar National Research Institute for Inorganic Materials, Siberian Chemical Combine, and Chepetskiy Mechanical Plant.

The division's tasks include the fabrication of nuclear fuel, conversion and enrichment of uranium, and the production of gas centrifuges.

Uranium enrichment is carried out at four TVEL Fuel Company plants, including Angarsk Electrochemical Plant in Angarsk, Irkutsk Oblast, Zelenogorsk Electrochemical Plant in Zelenogorsk, Krasnoyarsk Krai, Ural Electrochemical Plant in Novouralsk, Sverdlovsk Oblast, and the Siberian Chemical Plant in Seversk, Tomsk Oblast.[38] Uranium is enriched using an advanced gas centrifuge technology to separate uranium isotopes. Depleted uranium hexafluoride is converted to an oxide form at the W-ECP unit of Zelenogorsk Electrochemical Plant.[39][40]

Nuclear fuel is produced at Rosatom's Machine-building plant (JSC MSZ) and Novosibirsk Chemical Concentrates Plant (JSC NCCP). The plants produce UO2-based (enriched fresh and reprocessed uranium) nuclear fuel for all models of Russian power and research reactors, as well as for many foreign power and research reactor models and for Russian ship-based power installations. The development of accident-tolerant fuel for VVER and PWR reactors has now entered the stage of testing.[41]

MOX fuel for fast sodium reactors is produced at the Mining and Chemical Combine, while uranium-plutonium mixed fuel will be produced at the Siberian Chemical Plant, which is currently under construction. A uranium-plutonium fuel REMIX (regenerated mixture) is being tested for VVER reactors; its commercial production is expected to take place at the Mining and Chemical Combine.

SNF reprocessing is carried out at the Mayak Production Association at the RT-1 plant. The plant is currently processing the spent nuclear fuel (of various compositions) from power reactors (BN-350, VVER-440, BN-600, RBMK-1000, VVER-1000; BN-MOX), from the research reactors of Russian and foreign scientific centers, and from the reactors of submarine and surface naval fleet transport power plants.[37]

Mechanical engineering division edit

The managing company is JSC Atomenergomash. It is one of Russia's largest groups of mechanical engineering enterprises offering a full range of solutions for the design, manufacture, and supply of equipment for the nuclear power industry. The division comprises more than 10 production sites, including production enterprises, engineering centers, and research organizations in Russia, Ukraine, the Czech Republic, and Hungary.

According to the group's own data, 14% of nuclear power plants in the world and 40% of thermal power stations in the CIS and the Baltic states use the holding equipment. In addition, the division is the largest producer of equipment for the VVER reactor and the world's only producer of the fast-neutron reactor (BN reactor). Its enterprises are also responsible for the design and manufacturing of reactors for SMR nuclear power plants, both onshore and offshore, as well as nuclear icebreakers. Key companies include OKB Gidropress, OKBM Afrikantov, JSC Machine-Building Factory of Podolsk, and AEM-technology.

Engineering division edit

The managing company is JSC ASE EC, which has extensive capabilities for managing the construction of complex engineering facilities. The main business areas of the division include the design and construction of large NPPs in Russia and abroad, and developing digital technologies for managing complex engineering facilities based on the Multi-D platform. Key companies include JSC Atomenergoproekt, and JSC ATOMPROEKT.

Power engineering division edit

The managing company is JSC Rosenergoatom. It is the only NPP operator in Russia and a key player in the Russian electricity market. Its main business areas include power and heat generation at NPPs and acting as the operator of nuclear facilities (nuclear power plants), radiation sources, and facilities storing nuclear materials and radioactive substances. Key companies include all Russian NPPs, JSC AtomEnergoRemont, JSC AtomEnergoSbyt, and TITAN-2 construction holding.

Back-end division edit

The managing company is JSC Federal Center for Nuclear and Radiation Safety. It is dedicated to a centralized system for management of spent nuclear fuel and radioactive waste, as well as decommissioning of hazardous nuclear and radiological facilities. Key companies include FSUE Mining and Chemical Combine , FSUE Radon, NO RWM.

R&D division edit

The managing company is JSC Science and Innovations. Key companies include Russian Scientific Center (RSC) – A.I. Leipunskiy IPPE, NII NPO Luch, and the Research Institute of Atomic Reactors.

Northern Sea Route edit

The development of the Northern Sea Route has become a Rosatom priority after the company was appointed its infrastructure operator in late 2018. Rosatom seeks to organize ship navigation within the NSR, develop the infrastructure of seaports, including energy, create a navigation safety system, as well as navigational and hydrographic support. In addition, several Rosatom entities are involved in the development of international transit sea freight traffic along the Northern Sea Transit Corridor. Key companies include FSUE Atomflot, Directorate of the Northern Sea Route, Rusatom Cargo.

Wind power division edit

In 2017, Rosatom decided to invest in wind turbine manufacturing, believing that rapid cost reductions in the renewable industry will become a competitive threat to nuclear power. Russia had recently offered subsidies for domestically built renewable technology.[21] The managing company is JSC NovaWind. This Rosatom's division concentrates its efforts in advanced areas of wind energy generation technology. Key companies include WindSGC, WindSGC-2, and Atompowerindustry Trade.

Nuclear medicine division edit

The managing company is JSC Rusatom Healthcare. It has been historically developed at various enterprises of the Russian nuclear industry. In 2017, Rosatom established the division to bring together assets and expertise in healthcare. The nuclear medicine division is in charge of nuclear medicine, manufacturing and distribution of radioisotope products and radiation sterilisation equipment, as well as creation of integrated turnkey solutions for medicine. Key companies include JSC Isotope and NIITFA. In February 2022, Rusatom Healthcare acquired 25,001% of shares of Medscan group, the rest of shares still being hold by its major shareholder, Yevgeny Tugolukov.[42]

Advanced materials and technologies division edit

The managing company is JSC UMATEX, which is engaged in production of carbon fiber and fiber-based items, as well as R&D and engineering support to its partners. Key companies include JSC Khimprominzhiniring, R&D centre, and LLC ALABUGA-FIBRE.

Digital products division edit

The managing company is the Digitalization Unit of Rosatom, which is engaged in solving tasks in three main areas:

The participation in the digitalization of Russia, as Rosatom is the center of competences of the Federal Project Digital Technologies within the National Program Digital Economy, the development of digital products for nuclear power and beyond and the internal digitalization of the Russian nuclear industry, making it independent from foreign technologies in critical areas.

Infrastructure solutions division edit

 
Arctic climatic complex presented at the "Army-2022" exhibition

The managing company is JSC Rusatom Infrastructure Solutions. The company develops, builds, modernizes, maintains water supply, water purification and water treatment facilities for energy, petrochemical, food, and other industries.

Additive manufacturing division edit

The managing company is Rusatom Additive Technologies. It connects together the scientific and production companies of Rosatom in order to develop the area of additive production in Russia. It controls design and production of 3D-printers, additive powders, complete sets, software, and 3D-printing services.

Energy storage systems division edit

The managing company is LLC RENERA, which is engaged in the development of lithium-ion traction batteries for electric transport and fixed systems for energy accumulation, as well as products for emergency and uninterruptible power supply and storage systems for renewable energy.

Process control systems and electrical engineering division edit

The managing company is JSC Rusatom Automated Control Systems. It builds comprehensive solutions for automation of production processes, manufactures and supplies electrical equipment, designs and constructs electricity supply facilities.

Environmental solutions division edit

The managing company is FSUE Federal Environmental Operator.

Operations edit

Nuclear power plants edit

The management company Rosenergoatom operates all of Russia's nuclear power plants and represents the electric power division of the state corporation Rosatom. As of April 2021, 11 nuclear power plants (38 power units) operated in Russia with a total capacity of 30.5 GW, producing about 20.28% of all electricity produced in Russia.[43]

In operation edit

As a result of reforms and reassignments in the period from 2012 to 2014, Rosatom's engineering activities were concentrated within the management company Atomenergoproekt-Atomstroyexport (NIAEP-ASE), based in Nizhny Novgorod. Earlier, Atomstroyexport was engaged in foreign construction, and a number of independent engineering institutes with the name Atomenergoproekt were engaged in the design and construction of facilities in Russia: Moscow, St. Petersburg, and Nizhny Novgorod. Since October 2014 on the basis of NIAEP-ASE, Rosatom forms a unified engineering division, not including design company on nuclear power facilities and technologies Atomproekt. According to Kommersant, such a strategy is aimed at eliminating internal competition, deliberately created earlier. This measure can be effective from the economic point of view in view of a large number of domestic and foreign orders.[44]

Floating nuclear power plants edit

Under construction edit

 
Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant II under construction on 20 July 2010

Rosatom is one of the world leaders in the number of simultaneously constructed power units. As of late 2021, Rosatom is building two new power units in Russia at Kursk Nuclear Power Plant II, and there are 35 power units at different stages of implementation abroad.[45] Construction of a nuclear power plant in Kaliningrad started on 25 February 2010, but was suspended for the project to be redesigned.[46][47][48][49][50]

There are also plans to build two more units at Leningrad NPP, two units at Smolensk NPP, two more units at Novovoronezh NPP and two more units at Kursk NPP.[51][52][53][54] In mid-June 2021, Rosatom announced that two 600 MW VVER reactors will be added to Kola NPP with the first coming online in 2034.[55] In early June 2021, construction of the BREST-OD-300 reactor started. It will be the world's first experimental demonstration power unit featuring a lead-cooled fast neutron reactor.[56]

Plant name Location Unit number Reactor type Power (MW) Construction start Expected completion date
Baltic NNP Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad Oblast 1 VVER-1200 1,170 2021 Project suspended
Kursk NPP II Makarovka, Kursk Oblast 1 VVER-1300/510 1,255 2018 2025
2 VVER-1300/510 1,255 2019 2026-7
As of 15 April 2021[57]

Abroad edit

 
Tianwan Nuclear Power Plant in Lianyungang, China on 8 October 2010.

Rosatom has the world's largest portfolio of foreign NNP construction projects with a market share of 74%.[13] At the time of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Rosatom had 73 projects in 29 countries.[19]

37% of nuclear reactors under construction worldwide being built by Rosatom itself, usually the OKB Gidropress' VVER type. Rosatom received $66.5 billion of foreign orders in 2012, including $28.9 billion for nuclear plant construction, $24.7 billion for uranium products and $12.9 billion for nuclear fuel exports and associated activities. In 2020, Rosatom received $138.3 billion of foreign orders, including $89.1 billion for nuclear plant construction, $13.3 billion for uranium products and $35.8 billion for nuclear fuel exports and associated activities.[3] Nuclear power plants in China, India, and Iran, were either designed and built by Rosatom or with the corporation's participation.

 
Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant in Koodankulam, India on 6 January 2014

In December 2013, Rosatom signed a €6.4 billion contract with Fennovoima in Finland of the single-unit Hanhikivi NPP using OKB Gidropress' VVER-1200 pressurized water reactor in the town of Pyhäjoki, with construction planned to start after 2021,[58] but the contract was cancelled in May 2022 by Finland for Russian invasion of Ukraine.[59] In December 2014, Rosatom and the MVM Group of Hungary signed an agreement for the construction of new station units of the Paks NPP with construction planned to start in 2022.[60] Rosatom also started construction of Turkey's Akkuyu NPP on 3 April 2018.[61]

Failed bids includes the cancellation of Units 3 and 4 of Khmelnytskyi NPP in Ukraine.[62][63]

International NPP projects in the Russian nuclear industry
Plant name Country Location Unit number Status Type Power (MW) Construction start Completion date
Akkuyu Turkey Akkuyu, Mersin 1 Under construction VVER-1200/491 1,200 April 2018[61] 2023 (planned)[64]
2 April 2020[65] 2024 (planned)
3 March 2021[66] 2025 (planned)
4 2022 [67] 2026 (planned)[68]
Belarusian Belarus Astravets, Grodno Region 1 Operational VVER-1200/491 1,200 6 November 2013 10 June 2021 [69]
2 13 May 2023
Bushehr Iran Bushehr 1[70] Operational VVER-1000/446 1,000 1 May 1975; 1995 23 September 2013
2[71] Under construction VVER-1000 September 2019[72] August 2025[73]
El Dabaa Egypt El Dabaa, North Coast 1 Under construction VVER-1200 1,200 2022 -
2 -
3
4 planned
Hanhikivi Finland Pyhäjoki, Northern Ostrobothnia 1 Cancelled in 2022[74] VVER-1200 1,200 - -
Kudankulam India Koodankulam, Tamil Nadu 1 Operational VVER-1000/412 917 31 March 2002 22 October 2013[75]
2 August 2016 31 March 2017
3 Under construction 29 June 2017[76] -
4 October 2017[77]
5 30 June 2021 -
6
Paks Hungary Paks, Tolna County 5 Approved[78] VVER-1200 1,200 2022 -
6
Rooppur Bangladesh Rooppur, Ishwardi 1 Under construction VVER-1200 1,200 November 2017 2023 (planned)
2 July 2018 2024 (planned)
Tianwan China Lianyungang, Jiangsu 1 Operational VVER-1000/428 990 20 October 1999 17 May 2007
2 20 October 2000 16 August 2007
3 VVER-1000/428М 1,050 27 December 2012 15 February 2018[79]
4 27 September 2013 22 December 2018[80]
7 Approved[81] VVER-1200 1,150 May 2021 -
8 2022 -
Xudabao China Xingcheng, Huludao, Liaoning 3 Approved VVER-1200 1,150 2021 -
4 2022 -
Mochovce Slovakia Mochovce, Nitra Region 1 Operational VVER 440/213 436 November 1982 29 October 1998
2 11 April 2000
3 November 2008 1 February 2023
4 Under construction November 2008 2025 (planned)[82]

Small reactors and floating nuclear plants edit

Rosatom has practical experience operating small reactors in the Far North, including the four EGP-6 reactor-equipped power units of Bilibino NPP.[83] In 2019, the floating nuclear power plant Akademik Lomonosov, equipped with two KLT-40 reactors, was connected to the grid in the Russian town of Pevek. Akademic Lomonosov has an electric power capacity of 70 MW and a thermal power capacity of 50 Gcal/h. Rosatom's new floating nuclear power plant projects will be equipped with RITM-200 reactors, which are used in Project 22220 icebreakers. Rosatom also has ground-based small nuclear power plant projects equipped with RITM-200 reactors. In November 2020, Rosatom announced plans to place a land-based RITM-200 SMR in the isolated town of Ust-Kuyga, Yakutia.[84] In early August 2021, the Russian nuclear regulator granted a license to Rusatom Overseas JSC, allowing the company to build nuclear installations at nuclear power plants within the framework of the project in Yakutia.[85]

Rosatom offers land, water, and submarine versions of the small modular reactor “Shelf” for consumers in the ≤ 10 MW power range. The company also developed the SVBR-100 lead-bismuth fast reactor for consumers in the ≤ 100 MW power range, though the latter project is currently frozen.[86]

Research reactors edit

According to the Research Reactor Database (RRDB), maintained by the IAEA, Russia has 54 research reactors, which are largely based at Rosatom enterprises and institutes.[87] Most of Russia's research reactors were built in the USSR, in the early stages of the development of the nuclear energy sector. Today, Rosatom's largest research reactor project is the Multipurpose Fast Neutron Research Reactor (MBIR), which is currently under construction.[88] Based in Dimitrovgrad, Ulyanovsk oblast, the reactor will be the world leader among high-flux research facilities.[89] Its unique physical characteristics are best suited for material science experiments, such as testing innovative fuel and new coolants.[89]

Rosatom provides support to its foreign partners in the creation of nuclear science and technology centres, including scientific laboratories and research reactors. The company is currently building the first centre of such type in Bolivia, which will be commissioned in 2024. Another contract to build similar facilities in Zambia was signed in 2018.[90]

Two-component structure of nuclear power edit

In 2018, Rosatom adopted a long-term strategy through year 2100, for the development of nuclear energy in accordance with the following goals:[91]

  • To form the basis for the generation of carbon-free energy and be competitive in other forms of generation of electric and thermal energy;
  • To promote the highest possible high-tech export of nuclear power plants, research reactors, nuclear fuel, equipment, and services in the nuclear technology market;
  • To ensure the conservation of organic uranium reserves for non-energy use;
  • To solve environmental problems and fulfill Russia's international obligations of carbon dioxide emissions reduction.

In pursuit of achieving these goals, Rosatom is transitioning to a two-component nuclear power structure that operates in a closed-loop heavy metal (uranium, plutonium, and minor actinides) fuel cycle that simultaneously involves thermal and fast reactors. VVER reactors, with their improved adjustments, were selected as thermal reactors and BN (sodium-cooled) and BREST/BR (lead-cooled) reactors were selected as fast reactors. In such a system, spent nuclear fuel is considered a valuable raw material instead of nuclear waste, as it could be further used for fresh fuel fabrication. Rosatom is currently at the first stage of transitioning to a two-component structure.[91]

Icebreaker fleet edit

 
Arktika-class icebreaker Yamal

Since 2008, the structure of Rosatom includes the Russian nuclear icebreaker fleet, which is the largest in the world with five nuclear-powered icebreakers , a container ship, and four service vessels. Its tasks include navigation on the routes of the Northern Sea Route and rescue operations in ice.[92] Operation and maintenance of the fleet is carried out by FSUE Atomflot, also known as Rosatomflot, a company based in Murmansk.[93]

Corporate governance edit

Supervisory Board edit

 
Russian President Vladimir Putin with the head of Rosatom, Sergey Kiriyenko, in January 2014

The highest executive body of Rosatom is the supervisory board, consisting of nine people, including the chairman. The board is headed since 2005 by chairman Sergey Kiriyenko. Other Board members are:[94]

Management Board edit

Strategies, policies and objectives of Rosatom are established by its management board, consisting of fourteen people, including the General Director. The board is headed since 2016 by General Director Alexey Likhachev.[95]

  • Alexey Likhachev - General Director of Rosatom
  • Ivan Kamenskikh - First Deputy Director General for Nuclear Weapons
  • Kirill Komarov - First Deputy Director General for Corporate Development and International Business
  • Alexander Lokshin - First Deputy Director General for Operations Management
  • Nikolay Solomon - First Deputy Director General for Corporate Functions and CFO
  • Konstantin Denisov - Deputy Director General for Security
  • Sergey Novikov - State Secretary – Deputy Director General for Execution of State Powers and Budgeting
  • Nikolay Spassky - Deputy Director General for International Relations
  • Oleg Kryukov - Director for Public Policy on Radioactive Waste, Spent Nuclear Fuel and Nuclear Decommissioning
  • Andrey Nikipelov - CEO of Atomenergomash
  • Sergey Obozov - Director for Rosatom Production System, Member of Rosenergoatom's Board of Directors
  • Yuri Olenin - Deputy Director General for Innovation Management
  • Andrei Petrov - Director General of Rosenergoatom
  • Yuri Yakovlev - Deputy Director General for the State Safety Policy in the Defense Uses of Atomic Energy

General Director edit

The sole executive body of Rosatom is the General Director, who manages the day-to-day operations. Sergey Kiriyenko, who headed the Russian nuclear industry in 2005, became general director of Rosatom since its creation until he got replaced on 5 October 2016, by Alexey Likhachev, former Deputy Minister for Economic Development.[96]

  • Sergey Kiriyenko (1 December 2007 – 5 October 2016)
  • Alexey Likhachev (5 October 2016–present)

Public Council edit

The Public Council of Rosatom works with civic organizations to utilize nuclear power, protect the environment, and ensure nuclear and radiation safety. Objectives of the council are:

  • Raise public awareness of Rosatom's activities
  • Involve civic organizations in making policies on nuclear power
  • Negotiate nuclear issues with the general public
  • Communicate efficiently with stakeholders

Council members are:[97]

  • Alexey Likhachev - General Director of Rosatom, Chairman of the Public Council
  • Alexander Lokshin - First Deputy Director General for Operations Management
  • Sergey Baranovsky - President of the Russian Green Cross, Chairman of the Russian Ecological Congress, Deputy Chairman of the Public Council
  • Rudolf Aleksakhin - Leading Ecologist of ROSATOM's Proriv (Breakthrough) Project
  • Rafael Arutyunyan - First Deputy Director of the Institute for Safe Development of Nuclear Energy of Russian Academy of Sciences
  • Valery Bochkarev - Head of Radiation Safety Division, Federal Centre for Nuclear and Radiation Safety
  • Natalia Davydova - Director of "Environmental Projects Consulting Institute"
  • Mark Glinsky - First Deputy CEO of the Gidrospetsgeologia Geological Survey
  • Vladimir Grachev - Advisor to the ROSATOM CEO, Chairman of the Public Council with the Federal Nuclear, Industrial, and Environmental Regulatory Authority of Russia (Rostekhnadzor)
  • Alexander Harichev - Head of Local Communities Relations Unit, Advisor to the ROSATOM CEO (Secretary of the Public Council)
  • Viktor Ivanov - Deputy Director of the Russian Academy of Medicine Research Centre for Medical Radiology, Chairman of the Russian Federation Commission on Radiation Protection
  • Valery Menschikov - Member of the council with the Russian Environmental Policy Centre
  • Oleg Muratov - Executive Secretary of North-West Section of Russian Nuclear Society, Member of the Academy of Ecology, Safety of Human and Nature
  • Alexander Nikitin - Chairman of the Bellona Foundation (Saint Petersburg office)
  • Vladimir Ognev - Chairman of the Interregional Public Movement of Nuclear Industry and Power Veterans
  • Natalia Shandala - Deputy General Director of Burnazyan Federal Medical and Biophysical Centre
  • Yuriy Tebin - Vice-president of Chamber for Trade and Commerce of Moscow Oblast
  • Albert Vasiliev - Chief Scientific Officer at the Dollezhal Research and Design Institute for Power Engineering
  • Valeriy Vassilyev - Мember of the Citizens’ Assembly of Krasnodarsk Area, Public Council of the Russian Federation
  • Andrey Vazhenin - Chief Doctor of Chelyabinsk Regional Clinical Oncologic Treatment Center, Сorresponding member of Russian Academy of Medical Science
  • Yan Vlasov - Chairman of the Public Council for Protection of Patients’ Rights at Roszdravandzor, Co-chairman of All-Russia Union of Patients’ Public Organizations
  • Sergey Zhavoronkin - Secretary of the Public Council for Nuclear Safety in Murmansk Oblast
  • Elena Yakovleva - Chief Editor of the International Magazine Safety of Nuclear Technologies and Environment, Head of the Internet-project of Russian Nuclear Society
  • Sergey Yudintsev - Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Head of the Laboratory of Radiogeology and Radiogeoecology, Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits, Petrography, Mineralogy, and Geochemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences[98]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Official website (in English)
  • Facebook profile
  • Twitter profile (Russian)
  • Instagram profile (Russian)

rosatom, this, article, about, corporation, established, 2007, government, body, 2004, 2008, federal, agency, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, removing, promotional, content, inappropriate, external, . This article is about a corporation established in 2007 For Rosatom government body in 2004 2008 see Rosatom Federal Agency This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Rosatom Russian Rosatom IPA rɐsˈatem also known as Rosatom State Nuclear Energy Corporation the State Atomic Energy Corporation Rosatom or Rosatom State Corporation is a Russian state corporation headquartered in Moscow that specializes in nuclear energy nuclear non energy goods and high tech products 4 Established in 2007 the nonprofit organization comprises more than 350 enterprises including scientific research organizations a nuclear weapons complex and the world s only nuclear icebreaker fleet 5 State Atomic Energy Corporation RosatomRosatom s headquarters at Bolshaya Ordynka Street in MoscowNative nameGosudarstvennaya korporaciya po atomnoj energii Rosatom TypeState ownedIndustryNuclear powerWind powerHydrogen fuelPredecessorFederal Agency on Atomic EnergyFounded1 December 2007 16 years ago 2007 12 01 1 FounderVladimir Putin by signed law 2 HeadquartersMoscow RussiaArea servedWorldwideKey peopleAlexey Likhachev ru General Director ProductsNuclear reactorsNuclear fuelUranium miningUranium enrichmentNuclear decommissioningNuclear medicineWind powerHydrogen fuelAdditive manufacturingCompositesRevenue 1 207 4 billion 3 2020 Total assets 4 722 4 billion 3 2020 OwnerRussian governmentNumber of employees276 100 3 2020 SubsidiariesSee organizationWebsiterosatom wbr ru wbr en wbr The organization is the largest electricity generating company in Russia producing 215 746 TWh of electricity 20 28 of the country s total electricity production The corporation ranks first in overseas NPP construction responsible for 76 of global nuclear technology exports 35 nuclear power plant units at different stages of development in 12 countries as of December 2020 6 Rosatom also manufactures equipment produces isotopes for nuclear medicine carries out research and conducts material studies It also produces supercomputers and software as well as different nuclear and non nuclear products Rosatom plans to further develop renewable energy and wind power Two nuclear power plants are being built in Russia at Kursk 2 NPP with plans announced for 2 more units at Kola NPP 7 Rosatom has a 38 world market share and in 2019 led in global uranium enrichment services 36 and covers 16 of the global nuclear fuel market 8 9 10 In 2020 Rosatom approved an updated strategy with the intent to branch into 100 new business areas including nuclear medicine composites wind energy hydrogen waste management additive technology and production of hydrogen 3 The state corporation is authorized on behalf of the state to fulfill Russia s international obligations in the field of the use of nuclear energy and of non proliferation of nuclear materials 4 Rosatom is also involved with large scale projects such as ITER and FAIR As of February 2021 the total portfolio orders of Rosatom reached 250 billion 11 12 According to the 2020 corporate report its 10 year foreign order portfolio stood at 138 3 billion while revenue reached 7 5 billion The 10 year order portfolio for new products stood at 1 602 1 billion while revenue reached 261 1 billion 13 14 Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins and establishment 1 2 Involvement in international markets 1 3 Wind power investments 1 4 2017 ruthenium plume controversy 1 5 Other events 2017 2020 1 6 2022 invasion of Ukraine 2 Organization 2 1 Mining division 2 2 Fuel division 2 3 Mechanical engineering division 2 4 Engineering division 2 5 Power engineering division 2 6 Back end division 2 7 R amp D division 2 8 Northern Sea Route 2 9 Wind power division 2 10 Nuclear medicine division 2 11 Advanced materials and technologies division 2 12 Digital products division 2 13 Infrastructure solutions division 2 14 Additive manufacturing division 2 15 Energy storage systems division 2 16 Process control systems and electrical engineering division 2 17 Environmental solutions division 3 Operations 3 1 Nuclear power plants 3 1 1 In operation 3 1 2 Floating nuclear power plants 3 1 3 Under construction 3 1 4 Abroad 3 1 5 Small reactors and floating nuclear plants 3 1 6 Research reactors 3 1 7 Two component structure of nuclear power 3 2 Icebreaker fleet 4 Corporate governance 4 1 Supervisory Board 4 2 Management Board 4 3 General Director 4 4 Public Council 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editFurther information Ministry of Nuclear Engineering and Industry of the Soviet Union and Federal Agency on Atomic Energy Russia Origins and establishment edit Several Soviet and Russian government entities with different tasks are among the Rosatom predecessors 4 On 26 June 1953 the Council of Ministers transformed the First Main Directorate in charge of nuclear weapons program into the Ministry of Medium Machine Building MinSredMash The ministry was entrusted with the development of the civic nuclear power program In 1989 Minsredmash and the Ministry of Atomic Energy merged to form the Ministry of Nuclear Engineering and Industry of the USSR 15 16 The Ministry for Atomic Energy of the Russian Federation Russian Ministerstvo po atomnoj energii Rossijskoj Federacii also known as Minatom Russian Minatom was established as a successor to the Russian part of the Ministry of Nuclear Engineering and Industry of the USSR on 29 January 1992 after the dissolution of the Soviet Union The newly created ministry received about 80 of the enterprises of the union department including 9 nuclear power plants with 28 power units Under this name the ministry existed until 9 March 2004 when it was transformed into the Federal Agency on Atomic Energy 15 16 On 1 December 2007 Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law adopted by the Federal Assembly under which the Federal Atomic Energy Agency was to be abolished and its powers and assets were to be transferred to the newly created State Atomic Energy Corporation Rosatom On 12 December of the same year the agency transformed into a state corporation 15 17 In 2015 the company s revenue amounted to 126 billion rubles 18 Involvement in international markets edit Between 2000 and 2015 Rosatom was the supplier in around half of all international agreements on nuclear power plant construction reactor and fuel supply decommissioning or waste 19 Russia has various diplomatic ties with different countries via nuclear energy diplomacy 20 Some form of formalized agreement exists with 54 countries as of 2023 although some plans for Russian built nuclear power plants were canceled after the Russian invasion of Ukraine 19 Wind power investments edit This section may be confusing or unclear to readers Please help clarify the section There might be a discussion about this on the talk page July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 2017 Rosatom decided to invest in wind power believing that rapid cost reductions in the renewable industry will become a competitive threat to nuclear power and started to build wind turbine Rosatom was also concerned that nuclear export opportunities were becoming exhausted In October Rosatom was reported to be considering postponing commissioning new nuclear plants in Russia due to excess generation capacity and that new nuclear electricity prices are higher than for existing plant The Russian government is considering reducing support for new nuclear under its support contracts called Dogovor Postavki Moshnosti DPM which guarantees developers a return on investment through increased payments from consumers for 20 years 21 22 23 2017 ruthenium plume controversy edit Ruthenium a byproduct of uranium 235 fission is used by nuclear monitoring sites as an indicator of a nuclear accident 24 In October 2017 a plume of ruthenium 106 was detected by multiple laboratories throughout Europe Rosatom denied that there had been a leak or accident at its nuclear sites and suggested that the plume was caused by a satellite burning upon reentry 25 A 2019 study ruled out the satellite hypothesis By analyzing air sample data from multiple monitoring sites the scientists determined that the most likely cause of the plume was a fire or explosion while attempting to process ruthenium into cerium 144 25 Rosatom continues to deny that there was a leak or explosion Other events 2017 2020 edit This section may be confusing or unclear to readers Please help clarify the section There might be a discussion about this on the talk page July 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message On 28 June 2017 The Financial Times criticized Rosatom for lack of transparency regarding an alleged expansionist agenda through its role as a Kremlin controlled company 26 On 20 March 2018 this criticism was underlined by the Bellona Foundation who focused on the scarce data available on Rosatom s progress in Sudan 27 On 20 August 2020 Rosatom marked the 75th anniversary of the Russian nuclear industry As part of the celebration Rosatom launched its rebranding campaign United Rosatom which made subsidiaries in the nuclear industry utilize the Rosatom s Mobius strip logo In 2020 Rosatom set a goal of tripling its revenue to 4 trillion by 2030 40 of which is set to come from new lines of business with primarily focus on sustainable tech 28 6 29 2022 invasion of Ukraine edit Nations supporting Ukraine following the 2022 Russian invasion sanctioned key Russian industries including Rosatom and its subsidiaries The Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office of the United Kingdom announced direct sanctions against Rosatom and its executives 30 The United States Department of the Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned UMATEX Joint Stock Company and its subsidiaries in Russia and the Czech Republic pursuant to Executive Order 14024 as part of a drive against Russia s suppliers of carbon fibers 31 Within the next two days after Russian military forces occupied Ukraine s Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant on 24 February 2022 Rosatom employees had gained unauthorized access to the plant threatened the Ukrainian personnel and demanded the plant s manuals procedures and other documentation 32 Since 12 March 2022 33 once Russian military forces occupied Ukraine s Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant Rosatom employees have gained access and set a base there without permission of the plant s owner Energoatom Rosatom engineers have demanded documentation and manuals on the plant s operation Rosatom spokeswoman said that its employees are present at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant to ensure the safety of the plant and are not involved in its management or security 34 On 29 September 2022 the International Atomic Energy Agency was told by a Ukrainian ambassador that Rosatom had sent more officials to Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant to enforce the change in ownership from Ukraine to Russia and to give the plant employees two weeks to apply for work with Rosatom Allowing Russia to claim ownership of Zaporizhzhia would represent the biggest nuclear theft in history 35 Organization editAs of early 2021 Rosatom included 356 of various organizational and legal forms Some belong to the enterprises of the nuclear power complex which comprises organizations of nuclear energy nuclear engineering and the nuclear fuel cycle such as enterprises for the exploration and production of natural uranium conversion and enrichment of uranium production of nuclear fuel electricity and equipment development of new technologies for the nuclear fuel and gas centrifuge platform 6 Others belong to the growing number of new businesses outside of nuclear power including wind energy composite materials additive technologies and nuclear medicine among others The civilian assets of the Russian nuclear industry are concentrated within Rosatom s holding company Atomenergoprom which unites 204 enterprises as of December 2020 13 36 The Rosatom companies are integrated into multiple divisions 13 37 Mining division edit The holding company of the Rosatom mining division is JSC Atomredmetzoloto which consolidates Russian uranium mining assets Key daughter companies include JSC Khiagda and JSC Dalur Uranium One is a separate global mining company that operates directly under Rosatom with a diverse portfolio of assets in Kazakhstan United States and Tanzania Fuel division edit nbsp Work on a fuel cassette of the nuclear power reactor at the Novosibirsk Chemical Concentrates Plant a TVEL subsidiaryThe managing company of the Rosatom fuel division is JSC TVEL which is a leading organization on the global nuclear fuel cycle front end market and the only supplier of nuclear fuel for Russian NPPs and the nuclear powered icebreaker fleet Key daughter companies include Bochvar National Research Institute for Inorganic Materials Siberian Chemical Combine and Chepetskiy Mechanical Plant The division s tasks include the fabrication of nuclear fuel conversion and enrichment of uranium and the production of gas centrifuges Uranium enrichment is carried out at four TVEL Fuel Company plants including Angarsk Electrochemical Plant in Angarsk Irkutsk Oblast Zelenogorsk Electrochemical Plant in Zelenogorsk Krasnoyarsk Krai Ural Electrochemical Plant in Novouralsk Sverdlovsk Oblast and the Siberian Chemical Plant in Seversk Tomsk Oblast 38 Uranium is enriched using an advanced gas centrifuge technology to separate uranium isotopes Depleted uranium hexafluoride is converted to an oxide form at the W ECP unit of Zelenogorsk Electrochemical Plant 39 40 Nuclear fuel is produced at Rosatom s Machine building plant JSC MSZ and Novosibirsk Chemical Concentrates Plant JSC NCCP The plants produce UO2 based enriched fresh and reprocessed uranium nuclear fuel for all models of Russian power and research reactors as well as for many foreign power and research reactor models and for Russian ship based power installations The development of accident tolerant fuel for VVER and PWR reactors has now entered the stage of testing 41 MOX fuel for fast sodium reactors is produced at the Mining and Chemical Combine while uranium plutonium mixed fuel will be produced at the Siberian Chemical Plant which is currently under construction A uranium plutonium fuel REMIX regenerated mixture is being tested for VVER reactors its commercial production is expected to take place at the Mining and Chemical Combine SNF reprocessing is carried out at the Mayak Production Association at the RT 1 plant The plant is currently processing the spent nuclear fuel of various compositions from power reactors BN 350 VVER 440 BN 600 RBMK 1000 VVER 1000 BN MOX from the research reactors of Russian and foreign scientific centers and from the reactors of submarine and surface naval fleet transport power plants 37 Mechanical engineering division edit The managing company is JSC Atomenergomash It is one of Russia s largest groups of mechanical engineering enterprises offering a full range of solutions for the design manufacture and supply of equipment for the nuclear power industry The division comprises more than 10 production sites including production enterprises engineering centers and research organizations in Russia Ukraine the Czech Republic and Hungary According to the group s own data 14 of nuclear power plants in the world and 40 of thermal power stations in the CIS and the Baltic states use the holding equipment In addition the division is the largest producer of equipment for the VVER reactor and the world s only producer of the fast neutron reactor BN reactor Its enterprises are also responsible for the design and manufacturing of reactors for SMR nuclear power plants both onshore and offshore as well as nuclear icebreakers Key companies include OKB Gidropress OKBM Afrikantov JSC Machine Building Factory of Podolsk and AEM technology Engineering division edit The managing company is JSC ASE EC which has extensive capabilities for managing the construction of complex engineering facilities The main business areas of the division include the design and construction of large NPPs in Russia and abroad and developing digital technologies for managing complex engineering facilities based on the Multi D platform Key companies include JSC Atomenergoproekt and JSC ATOMPROEKT Power engineering division edit The managing company is JSC Rosenergoatom It is the only NPP operator in Russia and a key player in the Russian electricity market Its main business areas include power and heat generation at NPPs and acting as the operator of nuclear facilities nuclear power plants radiation sources and facilities storing nuclear materials and radioactive substances Key companies include all Russian NPPs JSC AtomEnergoRemont JSC AtomEnergoSbyt and TITAN 2 construction holding Back end division edit The managing company is JSC Federal Center for Nuclear and Radiation Safety It is dedicated to a centralized system for management of spent nuclear fuel and radioactive waste as well as decommissioning of hazardous nuclear and radiological facilities Key companies include FSUE Mining and Chemical Combine FSUE Radon NO RWM R amp D division edit The managing company is JSC Science and Innovations Key companies include Russian Scientific Center RSC A I Leipunskiy IPPE NII NPO Luch and the Research Institute of Atomic Reactors Northern Sea Route edit The development of the Northern Sea Route has become a Rosatom priority after the company was appointed its infrastructure operator in late 2018 Rosatom seeks to organize ship navigation within the NSR develop the infrastructure of seaports including energy create a navigation safety system as well as navigational and hydrographic support In addition several Rosatom entities are involved in the development of international transit sea freight traffic along the Northern Sea Transit Corridor Key companies include FSUE Atomflot Directorate of the Northern Sea Route Rusatom Cargo Wind power division edit In 2017 Rosatom decided to invest in wind turbine manufacturing believing that rapid cost reductions in the renewable industry will become a competitive threat to nuclear power Russia had recently offered subsidies for domestically built renewable technology 21 The managing company is JSC NovaWind This Rosatom s division concentrates its efforts in advanced areas of wind energy generation technology Key companies include WindSGC WindSGC 2 and Atompowerindustry Trade Nuclear medicine division edit The managing company is JSC Rusatom Healthcare It has been historically developed at various enterprises of the Russian nuclear industry In 2017 Rosatom established the division to bring together assets and expertise in healthcare The nuclear medicine division is in charge of nuclear medicine manufacturing and distribution of radioisotope products and radiation sterilisation equipment as well as creation of integrated turnkey solutions for medicine Key companies include JSC Isotope and NIITFA In February 2022 Rusatom Healthcare acquired 25 001 of shares of Medscan group the rest of shares still being hold by its major shareholder Yevgeny Tugolukov 42 Advanced materials and technologies division edit The managing company is JSC UMATEX which is engaged in production of carbon fiber and fiber based items as well as R amp D and engineering support to its partners Key companies include JSC Khimprominzhiniring R amp D centre and LLC ALABUGA FIBRE Digital products division edit The managing company is the Digitalization Unit of Rosatom which is engaged in solving tasks in three main areas The participation in the digitalization of Russia as Rosatom is the center of competences of the Federal Project Digital Technologies within the National Program Digital Economy the development of digital products for nuclear power and beyond and the internal digitalization of the Russian nuclear industry making it independent from foreign technologies in critical areas Infrastructure solutions division edit nbsp Arctic climatic complex presented at the Army 2022 exhibitionThe managing company is JSC Rusatom Infrastructure Solutions The company develops builds modernizes maintains water supply water purification and water treatment facilities for energy petrochemical food and other industries Additive manufacturing division edit The managing company is Rusatom Additive Technologies It connects together the scientific and production companies of Rosatom in order to develop the area of additive production in Russia It controls design and production of 3D printers additive powders complete sets software and 3D printing services Energy storage systems division edit The managing company is LLC RENERA which is engaged in the development of lithium ion traction batteries for electric transport and fixed systems for energy accumulation as well as products for emergency and uninterruptible power supply and storage systems for renewable energy Process control systems and electrical engineering division edit The managing company is JSC Rusatom Automated Control Systems It builds comprehensive solutions for automation of production processes manufactures and supplies electrical equipment designs and constructs electricity supply facilities Environmental solutions division edit The managing company is FSUE Federal Environmental Operator Operations editNuclear power plants edit The management company Rosenergoatom operates all of Russia s nuclear power plants and represents the electric power division of the state corporation Rosatom As of April 2021 11 nuclear power plants 38 power units operated in Russia with a total capacity of 30 5 GW producing about 20 28 of all electricity produced in Russia 43 In operation edit See also Nuclear power in Russia Nuclear power reactorsNuclear Power Plants within Russia nbsp Balakovo nbsp Beloyarsk nbsp Bilibino nbsp Kalinin nbsp Kola nbsp Kursk nbsp Leningrad nbsp Leningrad II nbsp Novovoronezh nbsp Novovoronezh II nbsp Rostov nbsp SmolenskAs a result of reforms and reassignments in the period from 2012 to 2014 Rosatom s engineering activities were concentrated within the management company Atomenergoproekt Atomstroyexport NIAEP ASE based in Nizhny Novgorod Earlier Atomstroyexport was engaged in foreign construction and a number of independent engineering institutes with the name Atomenergoproekt were engaged in the design and construction of facilities in Russia Moscow St Petersburg and Nizhny Novgorod Since October 2014 on the basis of NIAEP ASE Rosatom forms a unified engineering division not including design company on nuclear power facilities and technologies Atomproekt According to Kommersant such a strategy is aimed at eliminating internal competition deliberately created earlier This measure can be effective from the economic point of view in view of a large number of domestic and foreign orders 44 Floating nuclear power plants edit nbsp Akademik LomonosovUnder construction edit nbsp Leningrad Nuclear Power Plant II under construction on 20 July 2010Rosatom is one of the world leaders in the number of simultaneously constructed power units As of late 2021 Rosatom is building two new power units in Russia at Kursk Nuclear Power Plant II and there are 35 power units at different stages of implementation abroad 45 Construction of a nuclear power plant in Kaliningrad started on 25 February 2010 but was suspended for the project to be redesigned 46 47 48 49 50 There are also plans to build two more units at Leningrad NPP two units at Smolensk NPP two more units at Novovoronezh NPP and two more units at Kursk NPP 51 52 53 54 In mid June 2021 Rosatom announced that two 600 MW VVER reactors will be added to Kola NPP with the first coming online in 2034 55 In early June 2021 construction of the BREST OD 300 reactor started It will be the world s first experimental demonstration power unit featuring a lead cooled fast neutron reactor 56 Plant name Location Unit number Reactor type Power MW Construction start Expected completion dateBaltic NNP Kaliningrad Kaliningrad Oblast 1 VVER 1200 1 170 2021 Project suspendedKursk NPP II Makarovka Kursk Oblast 1 VVER 1300 510 1 255 2018 20252 VVER 1300 510 1 255 2019 2026 7As of 15 April 2021 57 Abroad edit nbsp Tianwan Nuclear Power Plant in Lianyungang China on 8 October 2010 Rosatom has the world s largest portfolio of foreign NNP construction projects with a market share of 74 13 At the time of Russia s invasion of Ukraine Rosatom had 73 projects in 29 countries 19 37 of nuclear reactors under construction worldwide being built by Rosatom itself usually the OKB Gidropress VVER type Rosatom received 66 5 billion of foreign orders in 2012 including 28 9 billion for nuclear plant construction 24 7 billion for uranium products and 12 9 billion for nuclear fuel exports and associated activities In 2020 Rosatom received 138 3 billion of foreign orders including 89 1 billion for nuclear plant construction 13 3 billion for uranium products and 35 8 billion for nuclear fuel exports and associated activities 3 Nuclear power plants in China India and Iran were either designed and built by Rosatom or with the corporation s participation nbsp Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant in Koodankulam India on 6 January 2014In December 2013 Rosatom signed a 6 4 billion contract with Fennovoima in Finland of the single unit Hanhikivi NPP using OKB Gidropress VVER 1200 pressurized water reactor in the town of Pyhajoki with construction planned to start after 2021 58 but the contract was cancelled in May 2022 by Finland for Russian invasion of Ukraine 59 In December 2014 Rosatom and the MVM Group of Hungary signed an agreement for the construction of new station units of the Paks NPP with construction planned to start in 2022 60 Rosatom also started construction of Turkey s Akkuyu NPP on 3 April 2018 61 Failed bids includes the cancellation of Units 3 and 4 of Khmelnytskyi NPP in Ukraine 62 63 International NPP projects in the Russian nuclear industry Plant name Country Location Unit number Status Type Power MW Construction start Completion dateAkkuyu Turkey Akkuyu Mersin 1 Under construction VVER 1200 491 1 200 April 2018 61 2023 planned 64 2 April 2020 65 2024 planned 3 March 2021 66 2025 planned 4 2022 67 2026 planned 68 Belarusian Belarus Astravets Grodno Region 1 Operational VVER 1200 491 1 200 6 November 2013 10 June 2021 69 2 13 May 2023Bushehr Iran Bushehr 1 70 Operational VVER 1000 446 1 000 1 May 1975 1995 23 September 20132 71 Under construction VVER 1000 September 2019 72 August 2025 73 El Dabaa Egypt El Dabaa North Coast 1 Under construction VVER 1200 1 200 2022 2 34 plannedHanhikivi Finland Pyhajoki Northern Ostrobothnia 1 Cancelled in 2022 74 VVER 1200 1 200 Kudankulam India Koodankulam Tamil Nadu 1 Operational VVER 1000 412 917 31 March 2002 22 October 2013 75 2 August 2016 31 March 20173 Under construction 29 June 2017 76 4 October 2017 77 5 30 June 2021 6Paks Hungary Paks Tolna County 5 Approved 78 VVER 1200 1 200 2022 6Rooppur Bangladesh Rooppur Ishwardi 1 Under construction VVER 1200 1 200 November 2017 2023 planned 2 July 2018 2024 planned Tianwan China Lianyungang Jiangsu 1 Operational VVER 1000 428 990 20 October 1999 17 May 20072 20 October 2000 16 August 20073 VVER 1000 428M 1 050 27 December 2012 15 February 2018 79 4 27 September 2013 22 December 2018 80 7 Approved 81 VVER 1200 1 150 May 2021 8 2022 Xudabao China Xingcheng Huludao Liaoning 3 Approved VVER 1200 1 150 2021 4 2022 Mochovce Slovakia Mochovce Nitra Region 1 Operational VVER 440 213 436 November 1982 29 October 19982 11 April 20003 November 2008 1 February 20234 Under construction November 2008 2025 planned 82 Small reactors and floating nuclear plants edit Rosatom has practical experience operating small reactors in the Far North including the four EGP 6 reactor equipped power units of Bilibino NPP 83 In 2019 the floating nuclear power plant Akademik Lomonosov equipped with two KLT 40 reactors was connected to the grid in the Russian town of Pevek Akademic Lomonosov has an electric power capacity of 70 MW and a thermal power capacity of 50 Gcal h Rosatom s new floating nuclear power plant projects will be equipped with RITM 200 reactors which are used in Project 22220 icebreakers Rosatom also has ground based small nuclear power plant projects equipped with RITM 200 reactors In November 2020 Rosatom announced plans to place a land based RITM 200 SMR in the isolated town of Ust Kuyga Yakutia 84 In early August 2021 the Russian nuclear regulator granted a license to Rusatom Overseas JSC allowing the company to build nuclear installations at nuclear power plants within the framework of the project in Yakutia 85 Rosatom offers land water and submarine versions of the small modular reactor Shelf for consumers in the 10 MW power range The company also developed the SVBR 100 lead bismuth fast reactor for consumers in the 100 MW power range though the latter project is currently frozen 86 Research reactors edit According to the Research Reactor Database RRDB maintained by the IAEA Russia has 54 research reactors which are largely based at Rosatom enterprises and institutes 87 Most of Russia s research reactors were built in the USSR in the early stages of the development of the nuclear energy sector Today Rosatom s largest research reactor project is the Multipurpose Fast Neutron Research Reactor MBIR which is currently under construction 88 Based in Dimitrovgrad Ulyanovsk oblast the reactor will be the world leader among high flux research facilities 89 Its unique physical characteristics are best suited for material science experiments such as testing innovative fuel and new coolants 89 Rosatom provides support to its foreign partners in the creation of nuclear science and technology centres including scientific laboratories and research reactors The company is currently building the first centre of such type in Bolivia which will be commissioned in 2024 Another contract to build similar facilities in Zambia was signed in 2018 90 Two component structure of nuclear power edit In 2018 Rosatom adopted a long term strategy through year 2100 for the development of nuclear energy in accordance with the following goals 91 To form the basis for the generation of carbon free energy and be competitive in other forms of generation of electric and thermal energy To promote the highest possible high tech export of nuclear power plants research reactors nuclear fuel equipment and services in the nuclear technology market To ensure the conservation of organic uranium reserves for non energy use To solve environmental problems and fulfill Russia s international obligations of carbon dioxide emissions reduction In pursuit of achieving these goals Rosatom is transitioning to a two component nuclear power structure that operates in a closed loop heavy metal uranium plutonium and minor actinides fuel cycle that simultaneously involves thermal and fast reactors VVER reactors with their improved adjustments were selected as thermal reactors and BN sodium cooled and BREST BR lead cooled reactors were selected as fast reactors In such a system spent nuclear fuel is considered a valuable raw material instead of nuclear waste as it could be further used for fresh fuel fabrication Rosatom is currently at the first stage of transitioning to a two component structure 91 Icebreaker fleet edit nbsp Arktika class icebreaker YamalSince 2008 the structure of Rosatom includes the Russian nuclear icebreaker fleet which is the largest in the world with five nuclear powered icebreakers a container ship and four service vessels Its tasks include navigation on the routes of the Northern Sea Route and rescue operations in ice 92 Operation and maintenance of the fleet is carried out by FSUE Atomflot also known as Rosatomflot a company based in Murmansk 93 Corporate governance editSupervisory Board edit nbsp Russian President Vladimir Putin with the head of Rosatom Sergey Kiriyenko in January 2014The highest executive body of Rosatom is the supervisory board consisting of nine people including the chairman The board is headed since 2005 by chairman Sergey Kiriyenko Other Board members are 94 Igor Borovkov the head of the apparatus of the Military Industrial Commission Larisa Brychyova Assistant to the President of Russia Alexey Likhachev General Director of Rosatom Andrei Klepach Deputy Minister for Economic Development Sergey Korolev Director for Economic Security of the Federal Security Service Alexander Novak Minister of Energy of Russia Yuriy P Trutnev representative of the President of Russia in the Far Eastern Federal District Yuriy V Ushakov Assistant to the President of RussiaManagement Board edit Strategies policies and objectives of Rosatom are established by its management board consisting of fourteen people including the General Director The board is headed since 2016 by General Director Alexey Likhachev 95 Alexey Likhachev General Director of Rosatom Ivan Kamenskikh First Deputy Director General for Nuclear Weapons Kirill Komarov First Deputy Director General for Corporate Development and International Business Alexander Lokshin First Deputy Director General for Operations Management Nikolay Solomon First Deputy Director General for Corporate Functions and CFO Konstantin Denisov Deputy Director General for Security Sergey Novikov State Secretary Deputy Director General for Execution of State Powers and Budgeting Nikolay Spassky Deputy Director General for International Relations Oleg Kryukov Director for Public Policy on Radioactive Waste Spent Nuclear Fuel and Nuclear Decommissioning Andrey Nikipelov CEO of Atomenergomash Sergey Obozov Director for Rosatom Production System Member of Rosenergoatom s Board of Directors Yuri Olenin Deputy Director General for Innovation Management Andrei Petrov Director General of Rosenergoatom Yuri Yakovlev Deputy Director General for the State Safety Policy in the Defense Uses of Atomic EnergyGeneral Director edit The sole executive body of Rosatom is the General Director who manages the day to day operations Sergey Kiriyenko who headed the Russian nuclear industry in 2005 became general director of Rosatom since its creation until he got replaced on 5 October 2016 by Alexey Likhachev former Deputy Minister for Economic Development 96 Sergey Kiriyenko 1 December 2007 5 October 2016 Alexey Likhachev 5 October 2016 present Public Council edit The Public Council of Rosatom works with civic organizations to utilize nuclear power protect the environment and ensure nuclear and radiation safety Objectives of the council are Raise public awareness of Rosatom s activities Involve civic organizations in making policies on nuclear power Negotiate nuclear issues with the general public Communicate efficiently with stakeholdersCouncil members are 97 Alexey Likhachev General Director of Rosatom Chairman of the Public Council Alexander Lokshin First Deputy Director General for Operations Management Sergey Baranovsky President of the Russian Green Cross Chairman of the Russian Ecological Congress Deputy Chairman of the Public Council Rudolf Aleksakhin Leading Ecologist of ROSATOM s Proriv Breakthrough Project Rafael Arutyunyan First Deputy Director of the Institute for Safe Development of Nuclear Energy of Russian Academy of Sciences Valery Bochkarev Head of Radiation Safety Division Federal Centre for Nuclear and Radiation Safety Natalia Davydova Director of Environmental Projects Consulting Institute Mark Glinsky First Deputy CEO of the Gidrospetsgeologia Geological Survey Vladimir Grachev Advisor to the ROSATOM CEO Chairman of the Public Council with the Federal Nuclear Industrial and Environmental Regulatory Authority of Russia Rostekhnadzor Alexander Harichev Head of Local Communities Relations Unit Advisor to the ROSATOM CEO Secretary of the Public Council Viktor Ivanov Deputy Director of the Russian Academy of Medicine Research Centre for Medical Radiology Chairman of the Russian Federation Commission on Radiation Protection Valery Menschikov Member of the council with the Russian Environmental Policy Centre Oleg Muratov Executive Secretary of North West Section of Russian Nuclear Society Member of the Academy of Ecology Safety of Human and Nature Alexander Nikitin Chairman of the Bellona Foundation Saint Petersburg office Vladimir Ognev Chairman of the Interregional Public Movement of Nuclear Industry and Power Veterans Natalia Shandala Deputy General Director of Burnazyan Federal Medical and Biophysical Centre Yuriy Tebin Vice president of Chamber for Trade and Commerce of Moscow Oblast Albert Vasiliev Chief Scientific Officer at the Dollezhal Research and Design Institute for Power Engineering Valeriy Vassilyev Member of the Citizens Assembly of Krasnodarsk Area Public Council of the Russian Federation Andrey Vazhenin Chief Doctor of Chelyabinsk Regional Clinical Oncologic Treatment Center Sorresponding member of Russian Academy of Medical Science Yan Vlasov Chairman of the Public Council for Protection of Patients Rights at Roszdravandzor Co chairman of All Russia Union of Patients Public Organizations Sergey Zhavoronkin Secretary of the Public Council for Nuclear Safety in Murmansk Oblast Elena Yakovleva Chief Editor of the International Magazine Safety of Nuclear Technologies and Environment Head of the Internet project of Russian Nuclear Society Sergey Yudintsev Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences Head of the Laboratory of Radiogeology and Radiogeoecology Institute of Geology of Ore Deposits Petrography Mineralogy and Geochemistry Russian Academy of Sciences 98 See also edit nbsp Russia portal nbsp Energy portal nbsp Nuclear technology portalEnergy policy of Russia Nuclear power in Russia Atomenergoprom civil nuclear activities including Tekhsnabexport fuel uranium exporter Rosenergoatom Ministry of Medium Machine Building of the USSR Soviet ministry in charge of civil nuclear activities in the USSR Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics Institute for High Energy Physics List of companies of Russia Uranium One controversy Companies similar to Rosatom Korea Hydro amp Nuclear Power Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Mitsubishi FBR Systems Orano Toshiba Westinghouse Electric CompanyReferences edit Putin ratifies law on formation of Rosatom Archived from the original on 18 February 2011 World Nuclear Association World Nuclear News a b c d e GOSUDARSTVENNAYa KORPORACIYa PO ATOMNOJ ENERGII ROSATOM ITOGI DEYaTELNOSTI 2020 PDF in Russian a b c Szulecki Kacper Overland Indra April 2023 Russian nuclear energy diplomacy and its implications for energy security in the context of the war in Ukraine Nature Energy 8 4 413 421 doi 10 1038 s41560 023 01228 5 ISSN 2058 7546 Manaranche Martin 4 May 2020 Russia Signs Contract to Build World s Largest Nuclear Powered Icebreaker Naval News Retrieved 23 December 2021 a b c Astrasheuskaya Nastassia 20 June 2021 Russia s Rosatom seeks to tap global transition to low carbon fuels Financial Times Retrieved 23 December 2021 Kola II construction to start in 2028 New Nuclear World Nuclear News world nuclear news org Retrieved 23 December 2021 About us rosatom ru Retrieved 1 February 2018 Patel Sonal 10 March 2022 Pressure on U S Nuclear Power Could Mount if Sanctions Imposed on Russian Uranium POWER Magazine Retrieved 7 July 2022 Nouvelle L Usine 13 April 2022 Pourquoi le nucleaire russe n est pas vise par les sanctions occidentales L Usine Nouvelle in French Rosatom s 10 year foreign order portfolio at about 140 bln Interfax com Retrieved 23 December 2021 Rosatom claims its foreign business will double over the next five years Bellona org 13 May 2019 Retrieved 23 December 2021 a b c d STATE ATOMIC ENERGY CORPORATION ROSATOM PERFORMANCE IN 2019 PDF Portfel zarubezhnyh zakazov Rosatoma na 10 let prevysil 100 mlrd Interfax ru in Russian 11 December 2014 Retrieved 8 February 2018 a b c Rosatom Archived 2014 12 19 at the Wayback Machine RBK Innovacii a b Otechestvennyj lokomotiv ekonomicheskogo progressa Delovaya gazeta Dekabr 2010 S 66 67 Putin ratifies law on formation of Rosatom www world nuclear news org Retrieved 26 February 2018 Goskorporaciya Rosatom www rusprofile ru in Russian Retrieved 27 October 2023 a b c Szulecki Kacper Overland Indra 2023 Russian nuclear energy diplomacy and its implications for energy security in the context of the war in Ukraine Nature Energy 8 4 413 421 Bibcode 2023NatEn 8 413S doi 10 1038 s41560 023 01228 5 ISSN 2058 7546 S2CID 257239333 Szulecki Kacper Overland Indra April 2023 Russian nuclear energy diplomacy and its implications for energy security in the context of the war in Ukraine Nature Energy 8 4 413 421 Bibcode 2023NatEn 8 413S doi 10 1038 s41560 023 01228 5 ISSN 2058 7546 S2CID 257239333 a b Foy Henry 28 June 2017 Rosatom powers through nuclear industry woes Financial Times Retrieved 2 July 2017 Cottee Matthew 2 August 2017 China s nuclear export ambitions run into friction Financial Times Retrieved 6 August 2017 Rosatom considers delaying reactor commissioning Nuclear Engineering International 30 October 2017 Retrieved 6 November 2017 Fore Meredith A Strange Radioactive Cloud Likely Came From Russia Wired ISSN 1059 1028 Retrieved 14 July 2023 a b Howes Laura 29 July 2019 What caused a plume of radioactive ruthenium in Europe in 2017 Chemical amp Engineering News Retrieved 14 July 2023 Foy Henry 28 June 2017 Rosatom powers through nuclear industry woes Financial Times Retrieved 4 September 2018 Rosatom reportedly offering unlikely floating nuclear power deal to Sudan Bellona org 20 March 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Rosatom chief outlines commercial vision World Nuclear News 8 March 2017 Retrieved 10 March 2017 Rosatom marks 75th anniversary of Russian nuclear industry Corporate World Nuclear News www world nuclear news org Retrieved 21 August 2020 New sanctions ban every item Russia is using on the battlefield GOV UK Retrieved 24 February 2023 Targeting Key Sectors Evasion Efforts and Military Supplies Treasury Expands and Intensifies Sanctions Against Russia U S Department of the Treasury Retrieved 24 February 2023 Inside Chernobyl We stole Russian fuel to prevent catastrophe BBC News 9 April 2022 Retrieved 27 August 2022 Rosatom participates in raiding of Zaporizhia NPP Energoatom head Parkinson Drew Hinshaw and Joe 17 June 2022 Russians Hunt for Spies at Ukrainian Nuclear Power Plant Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 7 July 2022 Russia Forcing Ukraine Workers Into Rosatom After Nuclear Theft Bloomberg com 30 September 2022 Retrieved 2 October 2022 All enterprises www rosatom ru Retrieved 21 February 2018 a b Radiochemical production po mayak ru Federal State Unitary Enterprise Mayak Production Association Retrieved 23 December 2021 Enriched Uranium Product TVEL Retrieved 23 December 2021 Fuel and enrichment rosatom ru Retrieved 15 February 2018 Obogashenie urana rosatom ru Retrieved 15 February 2018 Rosatom enters next stage of ATF development Uranium amp Fuel World Nuclear News world nuclear news org Retrieved 23 December 2021 Rosatom kupil 25 v kompanii Medskan Evgeniya Tugolukova in Russian Forbes Rossiya 16 February 2022 PRIS Country Details Edinyj atomnyj podryadchik Gazeta Kommersant 14 October 2014 p 11 Retrieved 15 February 2018 PRIS Country Details pris iaea org Retrieved 23 December 2021 Rosatom nachal stroitelstvo Baltijskoj AES RIA Novosti in Russian 25 February 2010 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Baltijskaya AES primerno vosem reaktorov moshnostyu 40 MVt kazhdyj Bellona ru Bellona ru in Russian 13 June 2013 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Genpodryadchik podtverdil priostanovku proekta Baltijskoj AES moshnostyu 2GVt Interfax ru in Russian 13 June 2013 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Stroyashiesya AES rosatom ru Retrieved 15 February 2018 Atomnyj ekspert 1 2 2014 Scribd Retrieved 15 February 2018 Two more new units for Leningrad NPP Nuclear Engineering International www neimagazine com Retrieved 23 December 2021 Four New NPP Units Will be Built in Russia rosatom europe com Retrieved 23 December 2021 Na Novovoronezhskoj AES v seredine 2030 yh godov postroyat eshyo dva novyh energobloka Atomnaya energiya 2 0 in Russian 5 April 2021 Retrieved 23 December 2021 KURSKAYa AES 2 ROSENERGOATOM Archived from the original on 22 October 2020 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Kola II construction to start in 2028 New Nuclear World Nuclear News world nuclear news org Retrieved 23 December 2021 Rosatom State Atomis Energy Corporation ROSATOM global leader in nuclear technologies nuclear energy rosatom ru Retrieved 23 December 2021 Stroyashiesya AES www rosatom ru Archived from the original on 30 August 2018 Retrieved 20 February 2018 Fennovoima Hanhikivi 1 Project Fennovoima Retrieved 27 December 2021 Kauranen Anne 2 May 2022 Finnish group ditches Russian built nuclear plant plan Reuters Retrieved 25 August 2022 V Rosatome zayavili chto pandemiya ne povliyala na grafik stroitelstva AES Akkuyu TASS in Russian 10 March 2021 a b PRIS Reactor Details AKKUYU 1 pris iaea org Retrieved 28 December 2021 Yacenyuk Ukraina dostroit AES bez uchastiya rossiyan Rosbalt Retrieved 21 February 2018 Atomnyj ekspert 1 2 2014 Scribd Retrieved 21 February 2018 Construction licence issued for Akkuyu 4 New Nuclear World Nuclear News www world nuclear news org Retrieved 28 December 2021 PRIS Reactor Details AKKUYU 2 pris iaea org Retrieved 28 December 2021 PRIS Reactor Details pris iaea org Retrieved 28 December 2021 V Rosatome zayavili chto pandemiya ne povliyala na grafik stroitelstva AES Akkuyu TASS in Russian Retrieved 28 December 2021 Akkuyu construction to be completed by 2026 says project CEO New Nuclear World Nuclear News www world nuclear news org Retrieved 10 August 2023 Ostrovets unit 1 enters commercial operation Nuclear Power Reactor Details BUSHEHR 1 International Atomic Energy Agency Archived from the original on 26 August 2010 Retrieved 13 August 2010 Nuclear Power Reactor Details BUSHEHR 2 International Atomic Energy Agency Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 13 August 2010 Iran and Russia celebrate start of Bushehr II World Nuclear News 12 September 2016 Retrieved 23 January 2017 Oficialnyj start proekta AES Busher 2 v Irane namechen na 10 sentyabrya RIA Novosti in Russian 1 September 2016 Retrieved 21 March 2018 Fennovoima pulls the plug on Russian built nuclear plant Yle News 2 May 2022 Retrieved 2 May 2022 Kudankulam nuclear plant begins power generation Mumbai Mirror 2013 10 22 Retrieved on 2013 12 06 Construction of Kudankulam NPP 2nd stage has commenced www rosatom ru Retrieved 21 March 2018 Construction work for Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project 3 4 units to begin soon Scientist The Indian Express 26 January 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2017 Hungary Russia sign 3 Paks implementation accords 9 December 2014 Retrieved 27 July 2016 China National Nuclear Corporation Tianwan Unit 4 embraces first fuel loading Electric Energy Online Retrieved 29 July 2019 Rosatom Goskorporaciya Rosatom yadernye tehnologii atomnaya energetika AES yadernaya medicina www rosatom ru Retrieved 29 July 2019 AtomStroyExport unveils schedule for China projects World Nuclear News www world nuclear news org Retrieved 29 July 2019 MOCHOVCE 4 Power Reactor Information System PRIS IAEA Retrieved 13 January 2020 The world s 10 smallest nuclear reactors Power Technology 11 December 2013 Retrieved 28 December 2021 Rosatom plans ground based SMR for Yakutia Nuclear Engineering International www neimagazine com Retrieved 28 December 2021 Rusatom Overseas received a licence for Yakutia NPP Nuclear Engineering International www neimagazine com Retrieved 28 December 2021 Advances in Small Modular Reactor Technology Developments PDF International Atomic Energy Agency September 2020 RRDB nucleus iaea org Retrieved 28 December 2021 The floor slab of Russia s MBIR research reactor installed Nuclear Engineering International www neimagazine com Retrieved 28 December 2021 a b Rosatom presents latest projects at European conference on research reactors Nuclear Engineering International www neimagazine com Retrieved 28 December 2021 Rosatom State Atomis Energy Corporation ROSATOM global leader in nuclear technologies nuclear energy www rosatom ru Retrieved 28 December 2021 a b Plan na 100 let Rosatom prinyal dolgosrochnuyu strategiyu razvitiya yadernoj energetiki in Russian Retrieved 28 December 2021 Henderson Isaiah M 18 July 2019 Cold Ambition The New Geopolitical Faultline The California Review Retrieved 19 July 2019 The Nuclear icebreaker fleet www rosatom ru Retrieved 21 February 2018 Supervisory Board www rosatom ru Retrieved 14 February 2018 Management Board www rosatom ru Retrieved 21 February 2018 Director General rosatom ru Retrieved 14 February 2018 Public Council www rosatom ru Retrieved 1 March 2018 Public Council www rosatom ru Retrieved 26 February 2018 External links editOfficial website in English Facebook profile Twitter profile Russian Instagram profile Russian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rosatom amp oldid 1193365334, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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