Atucha II granted 10-year licence renewal

The renewal process included the submission of technical documentation, and regulatory evaluations and inspections aimed at verifying the meeting of conditions to guarantee safe and reliable operation of the plant during the 10-year period.

The president of Nucleoeléctrica, Juan Martín Campos, said “the renewal of this licence represents a recognition of the technical and operational capabilities developed by Nucleoeléctrica to guarantee a safe, reliable operation aligned with the highest regulatory standards … this new licensing period allows us to further consolidate the strategic role of Atucha II within the Argentine energy system and to project the development of the national nuclear sector in a context of growing global energy demand”.

Background

Atucha II is a 693 MWe pressurised heavy water reactor and was ordered in 1979. It was a Siemens design, a larger version of the first unit at Atucha, and construction started in 1981 by a joint venture of Argentina’s National Atomic Energy Commission and Germany’s Siemens-Kraftwerk Union. However, work proceeded slowly due to lack of funds and was suspended in 1994 with the plant 81% complete.

In 1994, Nucleoeléctrica Argentina was set up to take over the nuclear power plants from CNEA and oversee construction of Atucha II. In 2003, plans for completing Atucha II were presented to the government. The government announced a strategic plan in August 2006 for the country’s nuclear power sector, including completion of Atucha II. The unit was effectively completed in September 2011. First criticality was achieved early in June 2014, and grid connection was later that month, with full power in February 2015.

In December 2015 the Autoridad Regulatoria Nuclear (ARN) granted a conditional operating licence for Atucha II until May 2016, and issued its initial five year licence on 26 May 2016 following the completion of a programme of testing, training and other actions. The first, two year, extension was granted in May 2021 but the unit was shut down from October 2022 for repairs after the discovery that one of the four internal supports of the reactor had detached and moved from its design location.

That led to ARN issuing a second short-term extension to 26 May 2024, so that Nucleoeléctrica Argentina, could “implement corrective improvement actions”. After verifying that Nucleoeléctrica had implemented these actions “in compliance with the established safety requirements” the regulator authorised the unit’s entry back into service in August 2023, following a 10 month shutdown. In March 2024 it issued a renewed licence to Nucleoeléctrica Argentina for the operation of the second unit of the Atucha nuclear power plant until 26 May 2026, marking its first 10 years of commercial operation.

   

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