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Vogtle Electric Generating Plant

The Alvin W. Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, also known as Plant Vogtle (/ˈvɡəl/),[1] is a four-unit nuclear power plant located in Burke County, near Waynesboro, Georgia, in the southeastern United States.

It is named after a former Alabama Power and Southern Company board chairman, Alvin Vogtle.

In 2013, it became the largest nuclear power plant in the United States, once construction of Units 3 & 4 began.

Each unit is a Westinghouse pressurized water reactor (PWR), with a General Electric steam turbine and electric generator. Units 1 and 2 were completed in 1987 and 1989, respectively. Each unit has a gross electricity generation capacity of 1,215 MW, for a combined capacity of 2,430 MW.[2] The twin natural-draft cooling towers are 548 ft (167 m) tall and provide cooling to the plant's main condensers. Four smaller mechanical draft cooling towers provide nuclear service cooling water (NSCW) to safety and auxiliary non-safety components, as well as remove the decay heat from the reactor when the plant is offline. One natural-draft tower and two NSCW towers serve each unit. In 2009, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) renewed the licenses for both units for an additional 20 years[3] to January 16, 2047 for Unit 1,[4] and September 2, 2049 for Unit 2.[5][6] During the construction of Vogtle's first two units, capital investment required jumped from an estimated $660 million to $8.87 billion.[7] ($17.1 billion in 2021 dollars[8])

Two additional units utilizing Westinghouse AP1000 reactors were under construction since 2009, with Unit 3 being completed in July 2023.[9][10][11] This last report blames the latest increase in costs on the contractor not completing work as scheduled. Another complicating factor in the construction process is the bankruptcy of Westinghouse in 2017.[12] In 2018 costs were estimated to be about $25 billion.[13] By 2021 they were estimated to be over $28.5 billion.[14] In 2023 costs had increased to $34 billion, with work still to be completed on Vogtle 4[15]

Unit 3 began commercial operations on July 31, 2023, becoming the first new nuclear reactor in the United States in 7 years.[9]

Once construction of Units 3 & 4 began in 2013, Vogtle became the largest nuclear power plant in the United States.

Reactor Data Edit

Reactor unit Reactor type Capacity (MWe) Construction
started
Grid
connection
Commercial
operation
Shutdown
Net (Summer) Gross
Vogtle-1[16] Westinghouse
4-loop
1150 1229 August 1, 1976 March 27, 1987 June 1, 1987
Vogtle-2[17] 1152 April 10, 1989 May 20, 1989
Vogtle-3[18] AP1000 1117 1250 March 12, 2013[19] April 1, 2023[20] July 31, 2023[21]
Vogtle-4[22] November 19, 2013 Fourth quarter of 2023
(Projected)[20]
(2024)

Units 1 and 2 Edit

Plant Vogtle 1 & 2
 
 
Official nameAlvin W. Vogtle Electric Generating Plant
CountryUnited States
LocationBurke County, Georgia
Coordinates33°8′30″N 81°45′43″W / 33.14167°N 81.76194°W / 33.14167; -81.76194
StatusOperational
Construction beganUnit 1–2: August 1, 1976
Commission dateUnit 1: June 1, 1987
Unit 2: May 20, 1989
Construction costUnits 1–2: $8.87 billion (1989 USD)[7]
($17.1 billion in 2021 dollars[8])
Owner(s)Georgia Power (45.7%)
OPCTooltip Oglethorpe Power Corporation (30%)
MEAG (22.7%)
Dalton Utilities (1.6%)
Operator(s)Southern Nuclear
Nuclear power station
Reactor typePWR
Reactor supplierWestinghouse
Cooling towers2 × Natural Draft
(for Units 1–2)
Cooling sourceSavannah River
Thermal capacity2 × 3626 MWth
Power generation
Units operational1 × 1150 MWe
1 × 1152 MWe
Make and model2 × WH 4-loop (DRYAMB)
Units cancelled2 × 1113 MW
Nameplate capacity2302 MWe
Capacity factor95.09% (2017)
91.25% (lifetime)
Annual net output19,786 GWh (2021)
External links
WebsitePlant Vogtle
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Vogtle units 1 and 2 are a set of identical Westinghouse 4-Loop reactors. Like many North American nuclear power stations, each of the Vogtle units are constructed of a steel-lined, prestressed, post-tensioned concrete cylinder with a hemispherical dome. The containment was designed by the Los Angeles Regional Office of the Bechtel Corporation.[23]

Power Uprate Edit

In 2008, reactors 1 and 2 were increased in power by 1.7% by an "Appendix K" uprate,[24] also called a Measurement Uncertainty Recapture (MUR) uprate. Measurement uncertainty recapture power uprates are less than 2 percent, and are achieved by implementing enhanced techniques for calculating reactor power. This involves the use of state-of-the-art feedwater flow measurement devices to more precisely measure feedwater flow, which is used to calculate reactor power. More precise measurements reduce the degree of uncertainty in the power level, which is used by analysts to predict the ability of the reactor to be safely shut down under postulated accident conditions.[25] Because the reactor power can be calculated with much greater accuracy than with the older venturi type measurement, the plant can safely run within a tighter margin of error to its limits. The newer ultrasonic flowmeter works by comparing the time it takes ultrasonic sound pulses to travel upstream versus downstream inside the pipe, and uses the time differential to figure the flow rate of the water in the pipe.

The NRC approved Vogtle's License Amendment Request (LAR) in March 2008. The NRC staff determined that Southern Nuclear could safely increase the reactor's power output primarily through more accurate means of measuring feedwater flow. NRC staff also reviewed Southern Nuclear's evaluations showing that the plant's design can handle the increased power level.[26] Unit 1 was uprated during its Spring 2008 refueling outage, and Unit 2 was uprated in the Fall outage of the same year.

Electricity production Edit

Generation (MWh) of Vogtle Electric Generating Plant[27]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual (Total)
2001 1,771,298 1,595,018 1,741,308 1,016,060 1,589,508 1,677,918 1,728,650 1,590,577 1,668,988 1,756,972 1,700,826 1,763,938 19,601,061
2002 1,766,985 1,595,144 1,003,394 1,063,031 1,748,812 1,680,300 1,727,932 1,723,792 1,668,444 993,370 851,998 1,234,136 17,057,338
2003 1,756,418 1,597,739 1,594,304 1,699,505 1,659,413 1,679,656 1,727,929 1,431,140 1,477,732 1,078,977 1,673,705 1,770,700 19,147,218
2004 1,758,609 1,605,957 1,628,483 1,314,845 1,224,113 1,669,584 1,717,020 1,646,446 1,674,477 1,744,280 1,588,754 1,758,389 19,330,957
2005 1,688,533 1,588,104 1,195,063 1,369,839 1,481,221 1,380,875 1,713,562 1,715,446 1,298,644 1,225,946 1,692,494 1,463,302 17,813,029
2006 1,753,949 1,186,635 1,422,733 1,403,832 1,733,444 1,654,782 1,715,255 1,574,770 1,226,224 867,031 1,672,989 1,735,509 17,947,153
2007 1,736,443 1,557,456 923,930 813,673 1,577,666 1,636,196 1,685,127 1,674,106 1,606,215 1,703,033 1,665,714 1,717,334 18,296,893
2008 1,722,551 1,607,474 1,242,777 950,508 1,725,749 1,652,026 1,704,667 1,704,456 1,159,653 1,040,027 1,501,696 1,765,969 17,777,553
2009 1,772,030 1,599,207 1,739,139 1,701,696 1,743,997 1,672,730 1,730,046 1,727,776 1,325,345 1,067,476 1,681,867 1,524,615 19,285,924
2010 1,771,935 1,601,769 1,044,133 1,466,689 1,740,841 1,668,687 1,721,356 1,719,760 1,678,059 1,736,954 1,697,292 1,763,002 19,610,477
2011 1,772,047 1,577,982 998,399 1,471,153 1,743,916 1,670,138 1,719,965 1,696,948 1,227,831 1,378,417 1,706,924 1,765,579 18,729,299
2012 1,767,029 1,650,456 1,751,254 1,621,961 1,738,311 1,678,238 1,716,979 1,723,812 1,238,671 1,200,884 1,708,873 1,761,729 19,558,197
2013 1,759,700 1,521,749 1,064,929 1,593,994 1,742,955 1,444,462 1,719,712 1,722,736 1,674,648 1,405,239 1,671,106 1,757,723 19,078,953
2014 1,766,152 1,573,760 1,289,366 1,045,619 1,734,271 1,664,928 1,559,250 1,572,578 1,123,013 1,260,339 1,707,757 1,763,157 18,060,190
2015 1,767,479 1,597,689 1,639,709 1,690,751 1,699,520 1,666,461 1,715,610 1,720,074 1,358,956 1,029,560 1,701,017 1,754,382 19,341,208
2016 1,770,487 1,651,326 1,073,319 1,698,641 1,686,965 1,658,443 1,715,368 1,718,451 1,673,737 1,744,574 1,705,910 1,763,008 19,860,229
2017 1,760,272 1,463,126 1,181,658 1,560,675 1,736,830 1,636,063 1,726,003 1,726,126 1,272,373 1,634,109 1,708,479 1,772,149 19,177,863
2018 1,778,425 1,595,567 1,769,826 1,708,980 1,746,083 1,677,112 1,666,049 1,728,966 1,251,325 1,545,491 1,716,325 1,774,977 19,959,126
2019 1,776,734 1,596,282 1,113,145 1,624,150 1,742,464 1,660,324 1,579,918 1,720,092 1,671,583 1,743,399 1,717,369 1,728,840 19,674,300
2020 1,769,498 1,649,399 1,064,981 1,676,789 1,749,791 1,586,667 1,722,035 1,274,347 1,350,907 1,749,984 1,500,222 1,763,198 18,857,818
2021 1,771,536 1,599,483 1,758,828 1,682,038 1,748,480 1,677,184 1,726,530 1,691,270 1,140,978 1,528,661 1,716,082 1,745,838 19,786,908
2022 1,766,154 1,581,724 1,005,105 1,488,894 1,634,978 1,680,528 1,690,426 1,734,548 1,688,918 1,763,780 1,708,724 1,771,427 19,515,206
2023

Loss of power incident Edit

A loss of electrical power in the plant occurred on March 20, 1990.

At 9:20 a.m., a truck carrying fuel and lubricants in the plant's 230 kV switchyard backed into a support column for the feeder line supplying power to the Unit 1-A reserve auxiliary transformer (RAT). At the time, the 1-B RAT was de-energized for maintenance and RAT 1-A was powering both trains of emergency electrical power. The non-emergency electrical trains were being powered by back-feeding from the switchyard through the main step-up transformer to the 1-A and 1-B unit auxiliary transformers (UAT). Additionally, emergency diesel generator (EDG) 1-B was out of service for planned maintenance. After the power loss, EDG 1-A failed to start due to a protective safety trip. The resulting loss of electrical power in the plant's "vital circuits" shut down the residual heat removal (RHR) pump that was cooling the core of Unit 1 (which was nearing the end of a refueling outage) and prevented the backup RHR from activating. Even though Unit 1 was offline at the time, residual heat from the natural decay of the radioactive fuel must be removed to prevent a dangerous rise in core temperature. While the non-safety power was not interrupted, there was no physical connection between the vital and non-vital electrical trains, preventing the vital trains from receiving power from the unaffected path through the UATs.

At 9:40 a.m., the plant operators declared a site area emergency (SAE) per existing procedures which called for an SAE whenever "vital" power is lost for more than 15 minutes. At 9:56 a.m., after trying multiple times to start the 1-A EDG normally, plant operators performed an emergency startup of the EDG by activating the generator's emergency start "break-glass" which bypassed most of the EDG's safeties and forced it to start. The startup was successful. RHR-A was then started using power from EDG-A. With core cooling restored, the SAE was downgraded to an alert at 10:15 a.m. At 11:40 a.m., crews energized RAT 1-B which had been shut down for maintenance, restoring power to the "B" safety electrical train. At 12:57 p.m., the "A" safety train was switched from the EDG to RAT 1-B and the EDG was shut down. With both trains receiving offsite power, the alert was terminated at 1:47 p.m.

The temperature of the Unit 1 core coolant increased from 90 °F (32 °C) to 136 °F (58 °C) during the 36 minutes required to re-energize the A-side bus. Throughout the event, non-vital power was continuously available to Unit 1 from off-site sources. However, the Vogtle electrical system was not designed to permit easy interconnection of the Unit 1 vital busses to non-vital power or the Unit 2 electrical busses.[28] Since this incident, Plant Vogtle has implemented changes to the plant that allow the non-vital electrical buses to transfer power to the vital buses in this type of scenario.

This electrical fault also affected Unit 2 by causing breakers in the 230 kV switchyard to trip, cutting off power to RAT 2-B and vital bus "B." EDG 2-B subsequently started and restored power to the vital bus. At the same time, the electrical disturbance from the falling line striking the ground was detected by protective safeties on the Unit 2 main step-up transformer and a protective relay actuated, opening the transformer's output breaker. This caused a full load rejection to Unit 2, leading to a turbine trip and subsequently, a reactor scram. After Unit 2 tripped, the "B" non-vital electrical train lost power as it attempted to transfer from UAT 2-B (powered by the turbine generator) to the failed RAT 2-B, causing two of the reactor coolant pumps and one of the main feedwater pumps to trip. Despite this, plant cool-down proceeded safely. At 9:03 p.m., the RAT 2-B breakers in the switchyard were reset and offsite power was restored to the vital and non-vital "B" electrical trains, allowing reactor coolant pumps 2 and 4 to be restarted. EDG 2-B was shutdown. It was later determined that the fault disturbance caused by the line falling was not of significant magnitude to trip the protective relay per design and should not have caused Unit 2 to shut down. Further investigation found that current transformers on the main transformer were improperly set. The controls were adjusted to the proper setting. Had the CTs been properly set initially, the Unit 2 would have remained online.

Units 3 and 4 Edit

Plant Vogtle 3 & 4
 
 
Official nameAlvin W. Vogtle Electric Generating Plant
CountryUnited States
LocationBurke County, Georgia
Coordinates33°8′30″N 81°46′12″W / 33.14167°N 81.77000°W / 33.14167; -81.77000
StatusUnder construction
Construction beganUnit 3: March 12, 2013
Unit 4: November 19, 2013
Commission dateUnit 3: July 31, 2023
Unit 4: late 2023–early 2024 (estimated)
Construction costUnits 3–4: $34 Billion (estimated) [29]
Owner(s)Georgia Power (45.7%)
OPCTooltip Oglethorpe Power Corporation (30%)
MEAG (22.7%)
Dalton Utilities (1.6%)
Operator(s)Southern Nuclear
Nuclear power station
Reactor typePWR
Reactor supplierWestinghouse
Cooling towers2 × Natural Draft
Cooling sourceSavannah River
Thermal capacity2 × 3400 MWth
Power generation
Units operational1 × 1117 MWe
Make and modelWH AP1000
Units under const.1 × 1117 MWe
Nameplate capacity2234 MWe
External links
WebsitePlant Vogtle
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Planning phase Edit

 
Construction underway at Vogtle, October 2011
Vogtle Unit 3 Condenser B time-lapse video

On August 15, 2006, Southern Nuclear formally applied for an Early Site Permit (ESP)[30] for two additional units, and on March 31, 2008, submitted an application for a Combined Construction and Operating License (COL).[31] On April 9, 2008, Georgia Power Company reached a contract agreement for two AP1000 reactors designed by Westinghouse; owned by Toshiba. Westinghouse partnered with the Shaw Group (Baton Rouge, LA) and its Stone & Webster division to manage the project with Westinghouse responsible for engineering, design, and overall management, and Shaw responsible for manufacturing the pre-fabricated component modules and managing the on-site construction.[32] The contract represented the first agreement for new nuclear development in the United States since the Three Mile Island accident in 1979, and it received approval from the Georgia Public Service Commission on March 17, 2009.[32][33]

Construction Edit

On August 26, 2009, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) issued an Early Site Permit and a Limited Work Authorization. Limited construction at the new reactor sites began, with Unit 3 then expected to be operational in 2016, followed by Unit 4 in 2017, pending final issuance of the Combined Construction and Operating License by the NRC.[34][35]

In December 2011, a 19th revision was written for the AP1000 Design Certification, which effectively included a complete redesign of the containment building:

The wall is appropriately reinforced and sized where the composite wall module joins the reinforced concrete sections and as appropriate to accommodate seismic loads and aircraft loads. This design is new to the amendment; previously the structure was all reinforced concrete. [emphasis added]

As this change to the design requirements was made after engineering contracts were already signed and manufacturing had begun on the reactor's long-lead-time components, it resulted in a halting of construction as the containment building had to be redesigned.[36]

On February 16, 2010, President Barack Obama announced $8.33 billion in federal loan guarantees toward the construction cost,[37] although as of December 2013, Georgia Power had not availed itself of those guarantees, at first awaiting the construction license, and after the construction stop lawsuit outcome. The expected building cost for the two reactors was $14 billion.[38] Georgia Power's share was around $6.1 billion, while the remaining ownership of the two reactors is split among Oglethorpe Power Corp., the Municipal Electric Authority of Georgia (MEAG Power), and Dalton Utilities.[39]

In February 2012, the NRC approved the construction license of the two proposed AP1000 reactors at Vogtle.[40] NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko cast the lone dissenting vote on plans to build and operate the two new nuclear power reactors, citing safety concerns stemming from Japan's 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster, saying, "I cannot support issuing this license as if Fukushima never happened."[41] One week after Southern Company received the license to begin construction, many environmental and anti-nuclear groups sued to stop the expansion project, claiming "public safety and environmental problems since Japan's Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear reactor accident have not been taken into account".[42] On July 11, 2012, the lawsuit was rejected by the Washington D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.[43]

In February 2013, the project's construction contractor, Shaw, was purchased by Chicago Bridge & Iron Company (CB&I). On March 12, 2013, construction on Unit 3 officially began with the pour of the basemat concrete for the nuclear island.[44] This operation was completed on March 14.[45] During the weekend of June 1, 2013, assembly of the containment vessel began with the bottom head of the vessel being lifted into place on the nuclear island.[46] By June 2013, the construction schedule had been extended by at least 14 months.[47] On November 21, 2013, the basemat pour for Unit 4 was completed.[48]

In February 2014, the Department of Energy approved a $6.5 billion loan guarantee for Southern Company subsidiary Georgia Power and Oglethorpe Power Corp. The Department of Energy initially demanded a credit subsidy fee, but the demand was ultimately dropped given the financial strength of Southern Co. and the Vogtle project.[49][50][51]

Further delays and cost increases were incorporated in a revised schedule in early 2015. As a result of the increased delays and cost overruns, contractor CB&I exited the project and Westinghouse took direct control of the project as contractor and hired construction firm Fluor to replace CB&I/Shaw on-site managing the day-to-day work. Westinghouse purchased certain assets of the former Shaw Group from CB&I to allow the project to go forward. In 2016, Southern Company and Westinghouse added construction firm Bechtel to the project to share construction management responsibilities.[52]

Recent construction milestones include setting the final of the "big six" structural modules for Unit 3 (CA-02 and CA-03, which form the walls of a storage tank that is part of the reactor's passive cooling system). The "big six" modules also include the previously installed CA-01, CA-04, and CA-05 in-containment structural modules, as well as the previously installed CA-20 structural module which forms part of the internal structure of the auxiliary building, containing many of the reactor's support systems. CA-02 and CA-03 were placed within the containment vessel in May 2016. The setting of these modules is a fairly significant milestone and allows other construction activities to commence. In June 2016, the final reactor coolant pump for Unit 3 was received on site. In November 2016, the reactor vessel for Unit 3 was set within the nuclear island. 2017 progress includes the installation of the reactor coolant loop piping and both steam generators at Unit 3. Progress has also been made in the turbine, auxiliary, and annex building. Unit 4 has also seen progress with the installation of the final two "big six" structural modules. Construction of both cooling towers is complete, with each nearly 600 ft (180 m) tall.[citation needed]

Westinghouse bankruptcy 2017 Edit

In March 2017, Westinghouse Electric Company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy due to losses from its two U.S. nuclear construction projects.[53] The U.S. government has given $8.3 billion of loan guarantees to help finance construction of the Vogtle reactors,[54] and a way forward to completing the plant has been agreed upon.[55] On July 31, 2017 Southern Company division, Southern Nuclear, officially took over construction from Westinghouse and opened a bid for a new construction management contract to manage the day-to-day work on the site. Southern received bids from Fluor and Bechtel. On August 31, 2017, Southern announced its decision to move forward with Bechtel to be the day-to-day construction manager for the remainder of the project. Bechtel replaced Fluor, who would no longer be involved in the project.[56]

Continuation of construction approved, 2017 Edit

In November 2017 the Georgia Public Service Commission (GPSC) requested additional documentation following concerns that design blueprints had not been approved by appropriately licensed engineers, which has legal implications. On December 21, 2017, the PSC approved the continuation of construction on Units 3 and 4, with conditions that reduced the costs that can be recovered from ratepayers over the life of the project,[57] causing a scheduled monthly consumer rate increase of $3.78 after first power.[20]

In the February 2018 Vogtle Construction Monitoring Report (VCM), GPSC approved November 2021 and November 2022 as the target in-service dates for Units 3 & 4 respectively. The report notes that the project is being completed on an accelerated schedule and is tracking ahead of the 2021 & 2022 in-service target dates.[58]

In August 2018 a $2.3 billion increase in costs was recognized.[59] The total cost, including financing costs, is estimated at about $25 billion.[13] In September 2018, in order to sustain the project, Georgia Power agreed to pay an additional proportion of the costs of the smaller project partners if the cost of completion went beyond $9.2 billion.[60]

In March 2019 further federal loan guarantees of $3.7 billion were given to the various build partners, taking total federal loan guarantees up to $12 billion. The Georgia Power CEO said the loan guarantees played a key role in reducing financing costs for the build.[61] Also in March 2019, Georgia Power confirmed that the Unit 3 containment cap had been lowered into place and the reactor would be ready to load nuclear fuel in 2020.[62] This was preceded by the containment vessel third ring, as well as reactor coolant pump and polar crane installation in unit 3 during 2018 and 2019. The containment vessel's top head was set during a site visit by Secretary of Energy Rick Perry and executives of the plant's owners. Recent progress on unit 4 includes the installation of the final steam generator and pressurizer. Unit 4 is being constructed utilizing lessons learned from Unit 3 and from the failed Virgil C. Summer Nuclear Generating Station (V.C. Summer) project and as a result, the order in which some components are being installed has been modified.[citation needed] On November 22, 2019 the third ring of the containment vessel was set for unit 4, and on December 8, 2019 the unit 3 shield building roof was set above the unit 3 containment vessel. On December 16, 2019 the control room of unit 3 became operational and available for testing systems. On February 11, 2020, Southern Nuclear announced that the final concrete placement inside the Unit 3 containment vessel was completed, allowing installation of the reactor's fueling machine. As of February 2020, assembly continued on the final topmost vertical feature of the overall Unit 3 reactor building, the passive containment cooling system storage tank, which will be set on top of the Shield Building Roof.

A three-month delay to completion of both units was announced in October 2021, with unit 3 expected operational in the third quarter of 2022 and unit 4 in the second quarter of 2023.[63] In August 2022 a further delay was announced, first quarter of 2023 for unit 3 and the fourth quarter of 2023 for unit 4. Costs were expected to rise to over $30 billion due to the delays.[64]

Commissioning process Edit

On October 14, 2022, It was announced that Vogtle Unit 3 had begun loading nuclear fuel.[65] In this process, technicians from Southern Nuclear and Westinghouse work together on the transferring of 157 fuel assemblies from the fuel pool to the reactor one at a time. Once this process is completed, the startup testing phase begins, where the integrity of the primary coolant system and steam systems is verified, and their functioning at design temperatures and pressures is ensured. Operators will also bring the units from a cold start to first criticality, where a sustained chain reaction is achieved. The unit will then be synchronized to the electric grid, as power is systematically raised to 100%. Vogtle Unit 3 was projected to enter service in the first quarter of 2023.[66]

During start-up and pre-operational testing in February 2023 the plant's cooling system suffered from unexpected vibrations. Measures were taken to remedy the problem. The time-plan was set back so that the beginning of regular service was expected for May or June 2023.[67] On March 6, 2023, Vogtle Unit 3 reached criticality for the first time. The unit was connected to the grid on April 1 and entered commercial operation on July 31.[68][69][20][21]

On May 2, 2023, Georgia Power announced that Vogtle Unit 4 had completed hot functional testing which confirmed that the reactor was ready for its first fuel load.[70] On August 18, 2023, fuel loading begins with 264 fuel elements at Unit 4.[71]

In October 2023, a reactor coolant pump in unit 4 developed a motor fault, which will delay unit 4's in-service date to the first quarter of 2024.[72]

Surrounding population Edit

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission defines two emergency planning zones around nuclear power plants: a plume exposure pathway zone with a radius of 10 miles (16 km), concerned primarily with exposure to, and inhalation of, airborne radioactive contamination, and an ingestion pathway zone of about 50 miles (80 km), concerned primarily with ingestion of food and liquid contaminated by radioactivity.[73]

In 2010, the population within 10 miles (16 km) of Vogtle was 5,845, a decrease of 16.3 percent over the previous decade. The population within 50 miles (80 km) was 726,640, an increase of 8.8 percent since 2000. Cities within 50 miles (80 km) include Augusta (26 miles (42 km) to city center).[74]

Seismic risk Edit

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's estimate of the risk each year of an earthquake intense enough to cause core damage to either reactor at Vogtle was 1 in 140,845, according to an NRC study published in August 2010.[75][76]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Inside the Nuclear Energy Renaissance: Plant Vogtle". Southern Company. January 7, 2014. Archived from the original on December 13, 2021. Retrieved May 26, 2017.
  2. ^ . Southern Company. Archived from the original on February 5, 2007. Retrieved March 2, 2007.
  3. ^ Pavey, Rob (June 4, 2009). "Licenses for Vogtle current reactors renewed". Augusta Chronicle. Retrieved June 5, 2009.
  4. ^ "Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit 1". NRC. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. February 10, 2017. Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  5. ^ "Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit 1". NRC. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. February 10, 2017. Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  6. ^ Gertner, Jon (July 16, 2006). "Atomic Balm?". The New York Times.
  7. ^ a b Moens, John (March 18, 2005). "U.S. Nuclear Plants - Vogtle". Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy. Archived from the original on July 26, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2007.
  8. ^ a b Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved January 1, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series.
  9. ^ a b Clifford, Catherine (July 31, 2023). "America's first new nuclear reactor in nearly seven years starts operations". CNBC. Retrieved August 4, 2023.
  10. ^ Pavey, Rob (November 22, 2009). "Vogtle lays groundwork for first U.S. reactors in decades". Augusta Chronicle. Retrieved October 22, 2009.
  11. ^ "Seventeenth Semi-Annual Construction Monitoring Report for Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4". Georgia Power. August 2017.
  12. ^ Yamazaki, Makiko; Kelly, Tim (March 29, 2017). "Toshiba's Westinghouse files for bankruptcy as charges jump". reuters.com. Retrieved March 29, 2017.
  13. ^ a b Walton, Rod (August 9, 2018). "Vogtle Cost Upgrade Causes Rethinking of $25B Nuclear Plant's Future". Power Engineering. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  14. ^ "'Outrageous' price tag: Plant Vogtle cost doubles to $28.5 billion as other owners balk". The Augusta Chronicle. Retrieved July 28, 2023.
  15. ^ https://georgiarecorder.com/2023/08/31/georgia-power-state-regulators-agree-to-division-of-vogtle-nuclear-plant-costs/#:~:text=Construction%20and%20financing%20costs%20for,other%20one%20in%20early%202024.
  16. ^ "Vogtle-1". PRIS. IAEA. March 18, 2018. Retrieved March 18, 2018.
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External links Edit

  • Southern Company: Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4
  • NRC: Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit 1
  • NRC: Vogtle Electric Generating Plant, Unit 2
  • NRC: Vogtle, Units 3 & 4 Application

vogtle, electric, generating, plant, alvin, also, known, plant, vogtle, four, unit, nuclear, power, plant, located, burke, county, near, waynesboro, georgia, southeastern, united, states, named, after, former, alabama, power, southern, company, board, chairman. The Alvin W Vogtle Electric Generating Plant also known as Plant Vogtle ˈ v oʊ ɡ el 1 is a four unit nuclear power plant located in Burke County near Waynesboro Georgia in the southeastern United States It is named after a former Alabama Power and Southern Company board chairman Alvin Vogtle In 2013 it became the largest nuclear power plant in the United States once construction of Units 3 amp 4 began Each unit is a Westinghouse pressurized water reactor PWR with a General Electric steam turbine and electric generator Units 1 and 2 were completed in 1987 and 1989 respectively Each unit has a gross electricity generation capacity of 1 215 MW for a combined capacity of 2 430 MW 2 The twin natural draft cooling towers are 548 ft 167 m tall and provide cooling to the plant s main condensers Four smaller mechanical draft cooling towers provide nuclear service cooling water NSCW to safety and auxiliary non safety components as well as remove the decay heat from the reactor when the plant is offline One natural draft tower and two NSCW towers serve each unit In 2009 the Nuclear Regulatory Commission NRC renewed the licenses for both units for an additional 20 years 3 to January 16 2047 for Unit 1 4 and September 2 2049 for Unit 2 5 6 During the construction of Vogtle s first two units capital investment required jumped from an estimated 660 million to 8 87 billion 7 17 1 billion in 2021 dollars 8 Two additional units utilizing Westinghouse AP1000 reactors were under construction since 2009 with Unit 3 being completed in July 2023 9 10 11 This last report blames the latest increase in costs on the contractor not completing work as scheduled Another complicating factor in the construction process is the bankruptcy of Westinghouse in 2017 12 In 2018 costs were estimated to be about 25 billion 13 By 2021 they were estimated to be over 28 5 billion 14 In 2023 costs had increased to 34 billion with work still to be completed on Vogtle 4 15 Unit 3 began commercial operations on July 31 2023 becoming the first new nuclear reactor in the United States in 7 years 9 Once construction of Units 3 amp 4 began in 2013 Vogtle became the largest nuclear power plant in the United States Contents 1 Reactor Data 2 Units 1 and 2 2 1 Power Uprate 2 2 Electricity production 2 3 Loss of power incident 3 Units 3 and 4 3 1 Planning phase 3 2 Construction 3 2 1 Westinghouse bankruptcy 2017 3 3 Continuation of construction approved 2017 3 4 Commissioning process 4 Surrounding population 5 Seismic risk 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksReactor Data EditReactor unit Reactor type Capacity MWe Constructionstarted Gridconnection Commercialoperation ShutdownNet Summer GrossVogtle 1 16 Westinghouse4 loop 1150 1229 August 1 1976 March 27 1987 June 1 1987Vogtle 2 17 1152 April 10 1989 May 20 1989Vogtle 3 18 AP1000 1117 1250 March 12 2013 19 April 1 2023 20 July 31 2023 21 Vogtle 4 22 November 19 2013 Fourth quarter of 2023 Projected 20 2024 Units 1 and 2 EditPlant Vogtle 1 amp 2 nbsp Vogtle 1 amp 2 containment buildings and cooling towers nbsp Official nameAlvin W Vogtle Electric Generating PlantCountryUnited StatesLocationBurke County GeorgiaCoordinates33 8 30 N 81 45 43 W 33 14167 N 81 76194 W 33 14167 81 76194StatusOperationalConstruction beganUnit 1 2 August 1 1976Commission dateUnit 1 June 1 1987Unit 2 May 20 1989Construction costUnits 1 2 8 87 billion 1989 USD 7 17 1 billion in 2021 dollars 8 Owner s Georgia Power 45 7 OPCTooltip Oglethorpe Power Corporation 30 MEAG 22 7 Dalton Utilities 1 6 Operator s Southern NuclearNuclear power stationReactor typePWRReactor supplierWestinghouseCooling towers2 Natural Draft for Units 1 2 Cooling sourceSavannah RiverThermal capacity2 3626 MWthPower generationUnits operational1 1150 MWe 1 1152 MWeMake and model2 WH 4 loop DRYAMB Units cancelled2 1113 MWNameplate capacity2302 MWeCapacity factor95 09 2017 91 25 lifetime Annual net output19 786 GWh 2021 External linksWebsitePlant VogtleCommonsRelated media on Commons edit on Wikidata Vogtle units 1 and 2 are a set of identical Westinghouse 4 Loop reactors Like many North American nuclear power stations each of the Vogtle units are constructed of a steel lined prestressed post tensioned concrete cylinder with a hemispherical dome The containment was designed by the Los Angeles Regional Office of the Bechtel Corporation 23 Power Uprate Edit In 2008 reactors 1 and 2 were increased in power by 1 7 by an Appendix K uprate 24 also called a Measurement Uncertainty Recapture MUR uprate Measurement uncertainty recapture power uprates are less than 2 percent and are achieved by implementing enhanced techniques for calculating reactor power This involves the use of state of the art feedwater flow measurement devices to more precisely measure feedwater flow which is used to calculate reactor power More precise measurements reduce the degree of uncertainty in the power level which is used by analysts to predict the ability of the reactor to be safely shut down under postulated accident conditions 25 Because the reactor power can be calculated with much greater accuracy than with the older venturi type measurement the plant can safely run within a tighter margin of error to its limits The newer ultrasonic flowmeter works by comparing the time it takes ultrasonic sound pulses to travel upstream versus downstream inside the pipe and uses the time differential to figure the flow rate of the water in the pipe The NRC approved Vogtle s License Amendment Request LAR in March 2008 The NRC staff determined that Southern Nuclear could safely increase the reactor s power output primarily through more accurate means of measuring feedwater flow NRC staff also reviewed Southern Nuclear s evaluations showing that the plant s design can handle the increased power level 26 Unit 1 was uprated during its Spring 2008 refueling outage and Unit 2 was uprated in the Fall outage of the same year Electricity production Edit Generation MWh of Vogtle Electric Generating Plant 27 Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual Total 2001 1 771 298 1 595 018 1 741 308 1 016 060 1 589 508 1 677 918 1 728 650 1 590 577 1 668 988 1 756 972 1 700 826 1 763 938 19 601 0612002 1 766 985 1 595 144 1 003 394 1 063 031 1 748 812 1 680 300 1 727 932 1 723 792 1 668 444 993 370 851 998 1 234 136 17 057 3382003 1 756 418 1 597 739 1 594 304 1 699 505 1 659 413 1 679 656 1 727 929 1 431 140 1 477 732 1 078 977 1 673 705 1 770 700 19 147 2182004 1 758 609 1 605 957 1 628 483 1 314 845 1 224 113 1 669 584 1 717 020 1 646 446 1 674 477 1 744 280 1 588 754 1 758 389 19 330 9572005 1 688 533 1 588 104 1 195 063 1 369 839 1 481 221 1 380 875 1 713 562 1 715 446 1 298 644 1 225 946 1 692 494 1 463 302 17 813 0292006 1 753 949 1 186 635 1 422 733 1 403 832 1 733 444 1 654 782 1 715 255 1 574 770 1 226 224 867 031 1 672 989 1 735 509 17 947 1532007 1 736 443 1 557 456 923 930 813 673 1 577 666 1 636 196 1 685 127 1 674 106 1 606 215 1 703 033 1 665 714 1 717 334 18 296 8932008 1 722 551 1 607 474 1 242 777 950 508 1 725 749 1 652 026 1 704 667 1 704 456 1 159 653 1 040 027 1 501 696 1 765 969 17 777 5532009 1 772 030 1 599 207 1 739 139 1 701 696 1 743 997 1 672 730 1 730 046 1 727 776 1 325 345 1 067 476 1 681 867 1 524 615 19 285 9242010 1 771 935 1 601 769 1 044 133 1 466 689 1 740 841 1 668 687 1 721 356 1 719 760 1 678 059 1 736 954 1 697 292 1 763 002 19 610 4772011 1 772 047 1 577 982 998 399 1 471 153 1 743 916 1 670 138 1 719 965 1 696 948 1 227 831 1 378 417 1 706 924 1 765 579 18 729 2992012 1 767 029 1 650 456 1 751 254 1 621 961 1 738 311 1 678 238 1 716 979 1 723 812 1 238 671 1 200 884 1 708 873 1 761 729 19 558 1972013 1 759 700 1 521 749 1 064 929 1 593 994 1 742 955 1 444 462 1 719 712 1 722 736 1 674 648 1 405 239 1 671 106 1 757 723 19 078 9532014 1 766 152 1 573 760 1 289 366 1 045 619 1 734 271 1 664 928 1 559 250 1 572 578 1 123 013 1 260 339 1 707 757 1 763 157 18 060 1902015 1 767 479 1 597 689 1 639 709 1 690 751 1 699 520 1 666 461 1 715 610 1 720 074 1 358 956 1 029 560 1 701 017 1 754 382 19 341 2082016 1 770 487 1 651 326 1 073 319 1 698 641 1 686 965 1 658 443 1 715 368 1 718 451 1 673 737 1 744 574 1 705 910 1 763 008 19 860 2292017 1 760 272 1 463 126 1 181 658 1 560 675 1 736 830 1 636 063 1 726 003 1 726 126 1 272 373 1 634 109 1 708 479 1 772 149 19 177 8632018 1 778 425 1 595 567 1 769 826 1 708 980 1 746 083 1 677 112 1 666 049 1 728 966 1 251 325 1 545 491 1 716 325 1 774 977 19 959 1262019 1 776 734 1 596 282 1 113 145 1 624 150 1 742 464 1 660 324 1 579 918 1 720 092 1 671 583 1 743 399 1 717 369 1 728 840 19 674 3002020 1 769 498 1 649 399 1 064 981 1 676 789 1 749 791 1 586 667 1 722 035 1 274 347 1 350 907 1 749 984 1 500 222 1 763 198 18 857 8182021 1 771 536 1 599 483 1 758 828 1 682 038 1 748 480 1 677 184 1 726 530 1 691 270 1 140 978 1 528 661 1 716 082 1 745 838 19 786 9082022 1 766 154 1 581 724 1 005 105 1 488 894 1 634 978 1 680 528 1 690 426 1 734 548 1 688 918 1 763 780 1 708 724 1 771 427 19 515 2062023Loss of power incident Edit A loss of electrical power in the plant occurred on March 20 1990 At 9 20 a m a truck carrying fuel and lubricants in the plant s 230 kV switchyard backed into a support column for the feeder line supplying power to the Unit 1 A reserve auxiliary transformer RAT At the time the 1 B RAT was de energized for maintenance and RAT 1 A was powering both trains of emergency electrical power The non emergency electrical trains were being powered by back feeding from the switchyard through the main step up transformer to the 1 A and 1 B unit auxiliary transformers UAT Additionally emergency diesel generator EDG 1 B was out of service for planned maintenance After the power loss EDG 1 A failed to start due to a protective safety trip The resulting loss of electrical power in the plant s vital circuits shut down the residual heat removal RHR pump that was cooling the core of Unit 1 which was nearing the end of a refueling outage and prevented the backup RHR from activating Even though Unit 1 was offline at the time residual heat from the natural decay of the radioactive fuel must be removed to prevent a dangerous rise in core temperature While the non safety power was not interrupted there was no physical connection between the vital and non vital electrical trains preventing the vital trains from receiving power from the unaffected path through the UATs At 9 40 a m the plant operators declared a site area emergency SAE per existing procedures which called for an SAE whenever vital power is lost for more than 15 minutes At 9 56 a m after trying multiple times to start the 1 A EDG normally plant operators performed an emergency startup of the EDG by activating the generator s emergency start break glass which bypassed most of the EDG s safeties and forced it to start The startup was successful RHR A was then started using power from EDG A With core cooling restored the SAE was downgraded to an alert at 10 15 a m At 11 40 a m crews energized RAT 1 B which had been shut down for maintenance restoring power to the B safety electrical train At 12 57 p m the A safety train was switched from the EDG to RAT 1 B and the EDG was shut down With both trains receiving offsite power the alert was terminated at 1 47 p m The temperature of the Unit 1 core coolant increased from 90 F 32 C to 136 F 58 C during the 36 minutes required to re energize the A side bus Throughout the event non vital power was continuously available to Unit 1 from off site sources However the Vogtle electrical system was not designed to permit easy interconnection of the Unit 1 vital busses to non vital power or the Unit 2 electrical busses 28 Since this incident Plant Vogtle has implemented changes to the plant that allow the non vital electrical buses to transfer power to the vital buses in this type of scenario This electrical fault also affected Unit 2 by causing breakers in the 230 kV switchyard to trip cutting off power to RAT 2 B and vital bus B EDG 2 B subsequently started and restored power to the vital bus At the same time the electrical disturbance from the falling line striking the ground was detected by protective safeties on the Unit 2 main step up transformer and a protective relay actuated opening the transformer s output breaker This caused a full load rejection to Unit 2 leading to a turbine trip and subsequently a reactor scram After Unit 2 tripped the B non vital electrical train lost power as it attempted to transfer from UAT 2 B powered by the turbine generator to the failed RAT 2 B causing two of the reactor coolant pumps and one of the main feedwater pumps to trip Despite this plant cool down proceeded safely At 9 03 p m the RAT 2 B breakers in the switchyard were reset and offsite power was restored to the vital and non vital B electrical trains allowing reactor coolant pumps 2 and 4 to be restarted EDG 2 B was shutdown It was later determined that the fault disturbance caused by the line falling was not of significant magnitude to trip the protective relay per design and should not have caused Unit 2 to shut down Further investigation found that current transformers on the main transformer were improperly set The controls were adjusted to the proper setting Had the CTs been properly set initially the Unit 2 would have remained online Units 3 and 4 EditPlant Vogtle 3 amp 4 nbsp Vogtle 3 amp 4 containment buildings nbsp Official nameAlvin W Vogtle Electric Generating PlantCountryUnited StatesLocationBurke County GeorgiaCoordinates33 8 30 N 81 46 12 W 33 14167 N 81 77000 W 33 14167 81 77000StatusUnder constructionConstruction beganUnit 3 March 12 2013Unit 4 November 19 2013Commission dateUnit 3 July 31 2023Unit 4 late 2023 early 2024 estimated Construction costUnits 3 4 34 Billion estimated 29 Owner s Georgia Power 45 7 OPCTooltip Oglethorpe Power Corporation 30 MEAG 22 7 Dalton Utilities 1 6 Operator s Southern NuclearNuclear power stationReactor typePWRReactor supplierWestinghouseCooling towers2 Natural DraftCooling sourceSavannah RiverThermal capacity2 3400 MWthPower generationUnits operational1 1117 MWeMake and modelWH AP1000Units under const 1 1117 MWeNameplate capacity2234 MWeExternal linksWebsitePlant VogtleCommonsRelated media on Commons edit on Wikidata Planning phase Edit nbsp Construction underway at Vogtle October 2011 nbsp Wikinews has related news US regulators approve new nuclear reactors for first time in 34 years source source source source source Vogtle Unit 3 Condenser B time lapse videoOn August 15 2006 Southern Nuclear formally applied for an Early Site Permit ESP 30 for two additional units and on March 31 2008 submitted an application for a Combined Construction and Operating License COL 31 On April 9 2008 Georgia Power Company reached a contract agreement for two AP1000 reactors designed by Westinghouse owned by Toshiba Westinghouse partnered with the Shaw Group Baton Rouge LA and its Stone amp Webster division to manage the project with Westinghouse responsible for engineering design and overall management and Shaw responsible for manufacturing the pre fabricated component modules and managing the on site construction 32 The contract represented the first agreement for new nuclear development in the United States since the Three Mile Island accident in 1979 and it received approval from the Georgia Public Service Commission on March 17 2009 32 33 Construction Edit On August 26 2009 the Nuclear Regulatory Commission NRC issued an Early Site Permit and a Limited Work Authorization Limited construction at the new reactor sites began with Unit 3 then expected to be operational in 2016 followed by Unit 4 in 2017 pending final issuance of the Combined Construction and Operating License by the NRC 34 35 In December 2011 a 19th revision was written for the AP1000 Design Certification which effectively included a complete redesign of the containment building The wall is appropriately reinforced and sized where the composite wall module joins the reinforced concrete sections and as appropriate to accommodate seismic loads and aircraft loads This design is new to the amendment previously the structure was all reinforced concrete emphasis added As this change to the design requirements was made after engineering contracts were already signed and manufacturing had begun on the reactor s long lead time components it resulted in a halting of construction as the containment building had to be redesigned 36 On February 16 2010 President Barack Obama announced 8 33 billion in federal loan guarantees toward the construction cost 37 although as of December 2013 Georgia Power had not availed itself of those guarantees at first awaiting the construction license and after the construction stop lawsuit outcome The expected building cost for the two reactors was 14 billion 38 Georgia Power s share was around 6 1 billion while the remaining ownership of the two reactors is split among Oglethorpe Power Corp the Municipal Electric Authority of Georgia MEAG Power and Dalton Utilities 39 In February 2012 the NRC approved the construction license of the two proposed AP1000 reactors at Vogtle 40 NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko cast the lone dissenting vote on plans to build and operate the two new nuclear power reactors citing safety concerns stemming from Japan s 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster saying I cannot support issuing this license as if Fukushima never happened 41 One week after Southern Company received the license to begin construction many environmental and anti nuclear groups sued to stop the expansion project claiming public safety and environmental problems since Japan s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactor accident have not been taken into account 42 On July 11 2012 the lawsuit was rejected by the Washington D C Circuit Court of Appeals 43 In February 2013 the project s construction contractor Shaw was purchased by Chicago Bridge amp Iron Company CB amp I On March 12 2013 construction on Unit 3 officially began with the pour of the basemat concrete for the nuclear island 44 This operation was completed on March 14 45 During the weekend of June 1 2013 assembly of the containment vessel began with the bottom head of the vessel being lifted into place on the nuclear island 46 By June 2013 the construction schedule had been extended by at least 14 months 47 On November 21 2013 the basemat pour for Unit 4 was completed 48 In February 2014 the Department of Energy approved a 6 5 billion loan guarantee for Southern Company subsidiary Georgia Power and Oglethorpe Power Corp The Department of Energy initially demanded a credit subsidy fee but the demand was ultimately dropped given the financial strength of Southern Co and the Vogtle project 49 50 51 Further delays and cost increases were incorporated in a revised schedule in early 2015 As a result of the increased delays and cost overruns contractor CB amp I exited the project and Westinghouse took direct control of the project as contractor and hired construction firm Fluor to replace CB amp I Shaw on site managing the day to day work Westinghouse purchased certain assets of the former Shaw Group from CB amp I to allow the project to go forward In 2016 Southern Company and Westinghouse added construction firm Bechtel to the project to share construction management responsibilities 52 Recent construction milestones include setting the final of the big six structural modules for Unit 3 CA 02 and CA 03 which form the walls of a storage tank that is part of the reactor s passive cooling system The big six modules also include the previously installed CA 01 CA 04 and CA 05 in containment structural modules as well as the previously installed CA 20 structural module which forms part of the internal structure of the auxiliary building containing many of the reactor s support systems CA 02 and CA 03 were placed within the containment vessel in May 2016 The setting of these modules is a fairly significant milestone and allows other construction activities to commence In June 2016 the final reactor coolant pump for Unit 3 was received on site In November 2016 the reactor vessel for Unit 3 was set within the nuclear island 2017 progress includes the installation of the reactor coolant loop piping and both steam generators at Unit 3 Progress has also been made in the turbine auxiliary and annex building Unit 4 has also seen progress with the installation of the final two big six structural modules Construction of both cooling towers is complete with each nearly 600 ft 180 m tall citation needed Westinghouse bankruptcy 2017 Edit In March 2017 Westinghouse Electric Company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy due to losses from its two U S nuclear construction projects 53 The U S government has given 8 3 billion of loan guarantees to help finance construction of the Vogtle reactors 54 and a way forward to completing the plant has been agreed upon 55 On July 31 2017 Southern Company division Southern Nuclear officially took over construction from Westinghouse and opened a bid for a new construction management contract to manage the day to day work on the site Southern received bids from Fluor and Bechtel On August 31 2017 Southern announced its decision to move forward with Bechtel to be the day to day construction manager for the remainder of the project Bechtel replaced Fluor who would no longer be involved in the project 56 Continuation of construction approved 2017 Edit In November 2017 the Georgia Public Service Commission GPSC requested additional documentation following concerns that design blueprints had not been approved by appropriately licensed engineers which has legal implications On December 21 2017 the PSC approved the continuation of construction on Units 3 and 4 with conditions that reduced the costs that can be recovered from ratepayers over the life of the project 57 causing a scheduled monthly consumer rate increase of 3 78 after first power 20 In the February 2018 Vogtle Construction Monitoring Report VCM GPSC approved November 2021 and November 2022 as the target in service dates for Units 3 amp 4 respectively The report notes that the project is being completed on an accelerated schedule and is tracking ahead of the 2021 amp 2022 in service target dates 58 In August 2018 a 2 3 billion increase in costs was recognized 59 The total cost including financing costs is estimated at about 25 billion 13 In September 2018 in order to sustain the project Georgia Power agreed to pay an additional proportion of the costs of the smaller project partners if the cost of completion went beyond 9 2 billion 60 In March 2019 further federal loan guarantees of 3 7 billion were given to the various build partners taking total federal loan guarantees up to 12 billion The Georgia Power CEO said the loan guarantees played a key role in reducing financing costs for the build 61 Also in March 2019 Georgia Power confirmed that the Unit 3 containment cap had been lowered into place and the reactor would be ready to load nuclear fuel in 2020 62 This was preceded by the containment vessel third ring as well as reactor coolant pump and polar crane installation in unit 3 during 2018 and 2019 The containment vessel s top head was set during a site visit by Secretary of Energy Rick Perry and executives of the plant s owners Recent progress on unit 4 includes the installation of the final steam generator and pressurizer Unit 4 is being constructed utilizing lessons learned from Unit 3 and from the failed Virgil C Summer Nuclear Generating Station V C Summer project and as a result the order in which some components are being installed has been modified citation needed On November 22 2019 the third ring of the containment vessel was set for unit 4 and on December 8 2019 the unit 3 shield building roof was set above the unit 3 containment vessel On December 16 2019 the control room of unit 3 became operational and available for testing systems On February 11 2020 Southern Nuclear announced that the final concrete placement inside the Unit 3 containment vessel was completed allowing installation of the reactor s fueling machine As of February 2020 assembly continued on the final topmost vertical feature of the overall Unit 3 reactor building the passive containment cooling system storage tank which will be set on top of the Shield Building Roof A three month delay to completion of both units was announced in October 2021 with unit 3 expected operational in the third quarter of 2022 and unit 4 in the second quarter of 2023 63 In August 2022 a further delay was announced first quarter of 2023 for unit 3 and the fourth quarter of 2023 for unit 4 Costs were expected to rise to over 30 billion due to the delays 64 Commissioning process Edit On October 14 2022 It was announced that Vogtle Unit 3 had begun loading nuclear fuel 65 In this process technicians from Southern Nuclear and Westinghouse work together on the transferring of 157 fuel assemblies from the fuel pool to the reactor one at a time Once this process is completed the startup testing phase begins where the integrity of the primary coolant system and steam systems is verified and their functioning at design temperatures and pressures is ensured Operators will also bring the units from a cold start to first criticality where a sustained chain reaction is achieved The unit will then be synchronized to the electric grid as power is systematically raised to 100 Vogtle Unit 3 was projected to enter service in the first quarter of 2023 66 During start up and pre operational testing in February 2023 the plant s cooling system suffered from unexpected vibrations Measures were taken to remedy the problem The time plan was set back so that the beginning of regular service was expected for May or June 2023 67 On March 6 2023 Vogtle Unit 3 reached criticality for the first time The unit was connected to the grid on April 1 and entered commercial operation on July 31 68 69 20 21 On May 2 2023 Georgia Power announced that Vogtle Unit 4 had completed hot functional testing which confirmed that the reactor was ready for its first fuel load 70 On August 18 2023 fuel loading begins with 264 fuel elements at Unit 4 71 In October 2023 a reactor coolant pump in unit 4 developed a motor fault which will delay unit 4 s in service date to the first quarter of 2024 72 Surrounding population EditThe Nuclear Regulatory Commission defines two emergency planning zones around nuclear power plants a plume exposure pathway zone with a radius of 10 miles 16 km concerned primarily with exposure to and inhalation of airborne radioactive contamination and an ingestion pathway zone of about 50 miles 80 km concerned primarily with ingestion of food and liquid contaminated by radioactivity 73 In 2010 the population within 10 miles 16 km of Vogtle was 5 845 a decrease of 16 3 percent over the previous decade The population within 50 miles 80 km was 726 640 an increase of 8 8 percent since 2000 Cities within 50 miles 80 km include Augusta 26 miles 42 km to city center 74 Seismic risk EditThe Nuclear Regulatory Commission s estimate of the risk each year of an earthquake intense enough to cause core damage to either reactor at Vogtle was 1 in 140 845 according to an NRC study published in August 2010 75 76 See also EditList of largest power stations in the United StatesOlkiluoto Nuclear Power PlantVirgil C Summer Nuclear Generating StationReferences Edit Inside the Nuclear Energy Renaissance Plant Vogtle Southern Company January 7 2014 Archived from the original on December 13 2021 Retrieved May 26 2017 Plant Vogtle Southern Company Southern Company Archived from the original on February 5 2007 Retrieved March 2 2007 Pavey Rob June 4 2009 Licenses for Vogtle current reactors renewed Augusta Chronicle Retrieved June 5 2009 Vogtle Electric Generating Plant Unit 1 NRC Nuclear Regulatory Commission February 10 2017 Retrieved March 18 2018 Vogtle Electric Generating Plant Unit 1 NRC Nuclear Regulatory Commission February 10 2017 Retrieved March 18 2018 Gertner Jon July 16 2006 Atomic Balm The New York Times a b Moens John March 18 2005 U S Nuclear Plants Vogtle Energy Information Administration U S Department of Energy Archived from the original on July 26 2018 Retrieved March 2 2007 a b Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved January 1 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series a b Clifford Catherine July 31 2023 America s first new nuclear reactor in nearly seven years starts operations CNBC Retrieved August 4 2023 Pavey Rob November 22 2009 Vogtle lays groundwork for first U S reactors in decades Augusta Chronicle Retrieved October 22 2009 Seventeenth Semi Annual Construction Monitoring Report for Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4 Georgia Power August 2017 Yamazaki Makiko Kelly Tim March 29 2017 Toshiba s Westinghouse files for bankruptcy as charges jump reuters com Retrieved March 29 2017 a b Walton Rod August 9 2018 Vogtle Cost Upgrade Causes Rethinking of 25B Nuclear Plant s Future Power Engineering Retrieved August 16 2018 Outrageous price tag Plant Vogtle cost doubles to 28 5 billion as other owners balk The Augusta Chronicle Retrieved July 28 2023 https georgiarecorder com 2023 08 31 georgia power state regulators agree to division of vogtle nuclear plant costs text Construction 20and 20financing 20costs 20for other 20one 20in 20early 202024 Vogtle 1 PRIS IAEA March 18 2018 Retrieved March 18 2018 Vogtle 2 PRIS IAEA March 18 2018 Retrieved March 18 2018 Vogtle 3 PRIS IAEA November 21 2013 Retrieved November 22 2013 New Milestone In US As First Concrete Is Poured At Vogtle 3 nucnet org March 15 2013 Retrieved August 3 2023 a b c d Vogtle 3 amp 4 nuclear units take significant steps toward operations Georgia Power April 1 2023 Retrieved April 4 2023 a b First U S nuclear reactor built from scratch in decades enters commercial operation in Georgia NBC News July 31 2023 Retrieved July 31 2023 Vogtle 4 PRIS IAEA August 2 2023 Retrieved August 3 2023 https www nrc gov docs ML1633 ML16330A389 pdf NRC 10 CFR Appendix K to Part 50 ECCS Evaluation Models www nrc gov NRC Power Uprates www nrc gov NRC News Release 2008 043 NRC Approves Power Uprate for Vogtle Nuclear Power Plant May 12 2009 Archived from the original on May 12 2009 Electricity Data Browser www eia gov Retrieved January 8 2023 NRC Information Notice No 90 25 Loss of Vital AC Power With Subsequent Reactor Coolant System Heat Up www nrc gov https georgiarecorder com 2023 08 31 georgia power state regulators agree to division of vogtle nuclear plant costs text Construction 20and 20financing 20costs 20for other 20one 20in 20early 202024 NRC Early Site Permits Licensing Reviews United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission Retrieved May 31 2007 O Grady Eileen March 31 2008 Southern utilities apply for new nuclear licenses Reuters Retrieved April 2 2008 a b MacAlister Terry April 9 2008 Westinghouse wins first US nuclear deal in 30 years London Guardian News and Media Limited Retrieved April 9 2008 Two Nuclear Reactors Get Green Light The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on July 26 2018 Retrieved April 18 2009 Southern Company Plant Vogtle Media Guide PDF Press release Southern Company June 2011 Archived from the original PDF on December 27 2011 Retrieved November 1 2011 Vogtle Units Receive NRC Staff Approval for Final Safety Report Press release Southern Company August 9 2011 Archived from the original on July 26 2018 Retrieved November 20 2011 Root cause of Vogtle and VC Summer delays www ans org Retrieved April 7 2022 Obama Administration Announces Loan Guarantees to Construct New Nuclear Power Reactors in Georgia The White House Office of the Press Secretary Archived from the original on January 21 2017 Retrieved April 30 2010 Rob Pavey May 11 2012 Price of Vogtle expansion could increase 900 million The Augusta Chronicle Retrieved July 25 2012 Henry J Pulizzi Christine Buurma February 16 2010 Obama Unveils Loan Guarantees for Nuclear Plant wsj Retrieved April 27 2014 Abernethy C February 9 2012 NRC Approves Vogtle Reactor Construction Nuclear Street Retrieved February 9 2012 Ayesha Rascoe February 9 2012 U S approves first new nuclear plant in a generation Reuters Kristi E Swartz February 16 2012 Groups sue to stop Vogtle expansion project The Atlanta Journal Constitution Rob Pavey July 12 2012 Court rejects legal challenge to Plant Vogtle construction license The Augusta Chronicle The Augusta Chronicle March 13 2013 Concrete poured for new Vogtle reactor foundation The Augusta Chronicle Retrieved March 14 2013 Mark Williams March 14 2013 First nuclear concrete placed at Plant Vogtle expansion Georgia Power Archived from the original on July 26 2018 Retrieved March 14 2013 Pavey R June 3 2013 Vogtle s heaviest component to date moved into place The Augusta Chronicle Retrieved June 3 2013 Matthew L Wald June 11 2013 Atomic Power s Green Light or Red Flag The New York Times Retrieved July 12 2013 Construction underway of second Vogtle AP1000 World Nuclear News World Nuclear Association November 22 2013 Retrieved November 22 2013 Southern Company subsidiary DOE finalize Vogtle nuclear project loan guarantees Retrieved July 28 2023 DOE finalizes 6 5bn loan guarantee for new Plant Vogtle nuclear reactors www power eng com Wald Matthew L February 18 2014 Loan Program for Reactors Is Fizzling The New York Times via NYTimes com Plant Vogtle on track after schedule revised DiNapoli Jessica Yamazaki Makiko March 9 2017 Toshiba s Westinghouse brings in bankruptcy lawyers disclosure deadlines loom www reuters com Reuters Archived from the original on December 13 2018 Retrieved February 21 2019 Loan Programs Project Under Construction Vogtle Retrieved September 7 2017 Tom Hals Makiko Yamazaki Tim Kelly March 30 2017 Huge nuclear cost overruns push Toshiba s Westinghouse into bankruptcy Reuters Retrieved March 31 2017 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bechtel Selected to Complete Construction of U S Nuclear Plant Expansion markets businessinsider com Retrieved July 28 2023 Corwin Tom December 21 2017 Plant Vogtle growth wins approval penalties from Public Service Commission Savannah Morning News Retrieved December 21 2017 Eighteenth Semi annual Vogtle Construction Monitoring Report PDF www georgiapower com February 2018 Retrieved April 3 2018 Progress at Vogtle but cost forecast rises World Nuclear News August 9 2018 Retrieved August 16 2018 Vogtle owners vote to continue construction World Nuclear News September 27 2018 Retrieved September 28 2018 Perry Vogtle project is critically important World Nuclear News March 22 2019 Retrieved March 22 2019 Bynum Russ March 22 2019 Trump adds 3 7B in support to finish 2 new nuclear reactors AP NEWS Retrieved March 25 2019 More delays for Vogtle 3 amp 4 Nuclear Engineering International October 26 2021 Retrieved October 26 2021 Vogtle NPP faces more possible delays Nuclear Engineering International August 3 2022 Retrieved August 3 2022 Vogtle Unit 3 starts nuclear fuel load www georgiapower com Archived from the original on October 15 2022 Retrieved October 17 2022 Fuel loading under way at Vogtle 3 New Nuclear World Nuclear News Revised in service dates for Vogtle units World Nuclear News Retrieved February 20 2023 The first US nuclear reactor built from scratch in decades enters commercial operation in Georgia AP News July 31 2023 Retrieved August 1 2023 Vogtle Unit 3 reaches initial criticality Yahoo March 6 2023 Retrieved March 6 2023 Hot functional testing complete at Vogtle 4 New Nuclear World Nuclear News https world nuclear news org Articles Fuel loading begins at Vogtle 4 Vogtle 4 start up moved to 2024 World Nuclear News October 9 2023 Retrieved October 11 2023 NRC Backgrounder on Emergency Preparedness at Nuclear Power Plants www nrc gov Nuclear neighbors Population rises near US reactors NBC News April 14 2011 Retrieved August 1 2023 Bill Dedman What are the odds US nuke plants ranked by quake risk NBC News March 17 2011 http www nbcnews com id 42103936 Retrieved April 19 2011 Risk estimates MSNBBC dead link External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vogtle Electric Generating Plant Southern Company Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4 U S Department of Energy Vogtle NRC Vogtle Electric Generating Plant Unit 1 NRC Vogtle Electric Generating Plant Unit 2 NRC Vogtle Units 3 amp 4 Application Portals nbsp Georgia U S state nbsp Energy nbsp Nuclear technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vogtle Electric Generating Plant amp oldid 1179718053, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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