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Power Earth Science

Russia Launches Floating Nuclear Power Plant That's Headed To the Arctic (npr.org) 163

Russia's state nuclear corporation Rosatom launched a massive floating nuclear power plant over the weekend. It's the first nuclear power plant of its kind and it's headed to an Arctic port, reports NPR. From the report: Called the Akademik Lomonosov, the floating power plant is being towed at a creeping pace out of St. Petersburg, where it was built over the last nine years. It will eventually be brought northward, to Murmansk -- where its two nuclear reactors will be loaded with nuclear fuel and started up this fall. From there, the power plant will be pulled to a mooring berth in the Arctic port of Pevek, in far northeast Russia. There, it will be wired into the infrastructure so it can replace an existing nuclear power installment on land. Russian officials say the mandate of the Akademik Lomonoso is to supply energy to remote industrial plants and port cities, and to offshore gas and oil platforms.

It will take more than a year for the power plant to reach its new home port. The original plan had called for fueling the floating plant before it began that journey, at the shipyard in central St. Petersburg -- but that was scuttled last summer, after concerns were raised both in Russia and in countries along the power plant's route through the Baltic Sea and north to the Arctic. "The nuclear power plant has two KLT-40S reactor units that can generate up to 70 MW of electric energy and 50 Gcal/hr of heat energy during its normal operation," Rosatom said. "This is enough to keep the activity of the town populated with 100,000 people."

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Russia Launches Floating Nuclear Power Plant That's Headed To the Arctic

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  • It's head to the Arctic

    • The headline was written by AI.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The "replace an existing nuclear power installment on land" is deeper in so the Arctic part can really stand out.
      Russians are doing nuclear things to the floating parts of the Arctic.
      Russia replaces an existing nuclear power installment would just not read as well.
      Arctic, that gets attention.
      • by nojayuk ( 567177 ) on Monday April 30, 2018 @11:54PM (#56534627)

        Russian nuclear icebreakers such as "Fifty Years of Victory" have been taking tourists to the North Pole during the Northern summer for over a decade now. They're only really needed for serious icebreaking during the winter around the northern coasts. They use the same KLT-35 reactors as the floating power barge mentioned in the article.

        A major reason for this project is to supply electricity and heat to communities on the northern coasts supporting oil and gas exploration efforts in the Arctic. The Chinese are looking at similar floating nuclear power plants to provide electricity for the artificial islands they're constructing in the South China Sea as well as developing their own nuclear naval capabilities. They're not actually building anything yet though.

    • It'll then foot to the Atlantic.

    • "this fall"

      This autumn. Furthermore, it's already autumn here in the southern hemisphere.

    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      Why wouldn't the arctic want some good head?
    • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Tuesday May 01, 2018 @02:55AM (#56534887)

      Yeah, it is amazing how poor some of the Slashdot headlines are now. They are full of grammatical mistakes, unnecessary contractions, inconsistent uppercasing, and often just misleading. This is probably what was meant:

      "Russia Launches a Floating Nuclear Power Plant Headed for the Arctic"

      This one from several hours ago:

      "Comcast Won't Give New Speed Boost To Internet Users Who Don't Buy TV Service"

      Uses two negative constructs. Would be far better as:

      "Comcast gives new speed boost only to Internet users who also buy TV service"

      • "Comcast gives new speed boost only to Internet users who also buy TV service"

        Or "Comcast boosts Internet speed for TV service customers"

        The thing about these versions, though is that they sound more reasonable. The double-negative version focuses on how Comcast is screwing Internet-only subscribers, while the positive versions focus on how Comcast is giving a benefit to TV subscribers. Gotta rouse the rabble, y'know.

        • "Comcast gives new speed boost only to Internet users who also buy TV service"

          Or "Comcast boosts Internet speed for TV service customers"

          The thing about these versions, though is that they sound more reasonable. The double-negative version focuses on how Comcast is screwing Internet-only subscribers, while the positive versions focus on how Comcast is giving a benefit to TV subscribers. Gotta rouse the rabble, y'know.

          Comcast Denies Internet Speed Boost for Internet Only Customers

          See, you can still make the headline easily readable but also express the problem/outrage.....

        • If it would be a new benefit and boost, that version would be ok.
          But changing existing offers for internet service only and removing the speed boosts that one might have if he also purchases TV, is a different kind of thing.

      • by tsa ( 15680 )

        That last example you show is straight from Ars. Copying is faster than thinking so we see a sort of shadow of Arstechnica here.

    • What BeauHD is trying to convey is that this power plant will popularize the arctic, in effect being a nice blowjob for the region's economy.
      • It is replacing an existing plant.
        And ... it is 2 times 70MW. That is enough for a 50,000 people village, if at all. Probably less.
        So much to "boosting economy" ... in the arctics.

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Per capita power consumption is considerably less in most of the world than it is in the US.

          The Russian average is about 850 W / person, and a remote northern village is probably going to have lower electricity consumption and higher heating demand than the Russian average. 140 MW of electricity + extra heat for 100,000 people isn't unreasonable.

        • :) I was just trying to rationalize the "That's head to the arctic" headline. I made up what I wrote.
    • "That's" as in "that has" not "that is". The headline actually isn't wrong... they could just as well have said "Russian Floating Powerplant Has Head to the Arctic"
    • And I'll form the head to the Arctic!
    • Many are the times that I have been north of the Arctic Circle and was frustrated by not being able to find and plug in my charge cable to an electrical outlet.
  • US has them beat... (Score:5, Informative)

    by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Monday April 30, 2018 @09:21PM (#56534195)

    The US had a nuclear power plant on a barge in the Panama Canal Zone in the 60s and 70s.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    US also had a few "portable" land-based reactors powering military bases and a station in Antarctica.

    • any nuclear powered navy ship is by definition a floating nuclear power plant. The Orion project was a flying nuclear power plant.

      • Orion was a rocket that used nuclear explosions to launch itself. Not all nuclear Navy ships are capable of supplying an entire city with electricity.
      • I would assume that 'plant' is short for 'planted', ie not mobile.
    • by rilister ( 316428 ) on Tuesday May 01, 2018 @12:01AM (#56534631)

      Yeah, I can go one further than that: the Convair X-6 (1955-57) was a fully-functioning nuclear-powered bomber *airplane* that was flight-tested but never operationalized:

      "The NTA completed 47 test flights and 215 hours of flight time (during 89 of which the reactor was operated) between September 17, 1955, and March 1957[2] over New Mexico and Texas. This was the only known airborne reactor experiment by the U.S. with an operational nuclear reactor on board."

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      What could possibly go wrong?

      • I would guess that permanent nuclear flight leave you with issues related to internal part heat. And a large enough airplane to have a large enough crew to support a 24 hours of operation, in at the least 3-6 shifts a day. On top of maintenance in the air, for what is possible.

        On top of either building megaplane to make the reactor crash proven, or risking a spill each time you land.
        I assume canceled for pragmatic reasons: Simply no need for megairplane, yet

        • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Tuesday May 01, 2018 @08:58AM (#56535601)

          I would guess that permanent nuclear flight leave you with issues related to internal part heat.

          The Atomic airplane is a fascinating bit of early cold war history. They came fairly close to making it work. It was eventually scuttled because the open cycle design irradiated everything in it's path, the radiation inside the plane, while being attenuated by shadow shielding, caused them to consider using older crew who would be expected to die of other causes before radiation caused leukemia took them out, and of course what would happen in the event of a crash. Even landing presented problems, as landing weight would be the same as takeoff weight.

          Fortunately saner minds and ICBM's made the A-Plane unnecessary.

          Then if you really want to freak out, research SLAM. A reactor powered cruise missile running open cycle at treetop level. You can guess the side effects of that.

          The technogeek in me finds this stuff fascinating. The practical me asks "What the fuck were they thinking?"

          • The technogeek in me finds this stuff fascinating. The practical me asks "What the fuck were they thinking?"

            Before Silicon Valley existed, the one place where you could try out all the wild-hair ideas was the military. Apollo itself, despite its civilian window dressing, was an example of this.

    • The US had a nuclear power plant on a barge in the Panama Canal Zone in the 60s and 70s.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      US also had a few "portable" land-based reactors powering military bases and a station in Antarctica.

      Every nuclear powered submarine is a floating nuke plant, for that matter.

    • by Toad-san ( 64810 )

      Yes, I remember the Sturgis well. I was assigned to the 8th SFG in Panama then, and remember it parked up by the Chagres River Spillway where it was plugged into the power grid. Our SCUBA team also pulled a training "raid" on the ship, easily swimming past the almost nonexistent "defenses" and planting fake explosive charges on her hull.

      Great site here with lots of pictures of her disassembly. Pity she's gone: the Army Engineers did a good job with her, no question.

      https://arstechnica.com/scienc... [arstechnica.com]

  • Not the first (the USS Sturgis [wikipedia.org], back in the mid 60s, was the first floating nuclear power plant), and it's actually pretty small at 70 MW (a Nimitz-class aircraft carrier is about 3 times that power [wikipedia.org]). But I guess "Russia Russia Russia!" demands media so we can keep the public thinking about Trump and Russia?
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )
      Article said "first of its kind." The Sturgis only provided electricity, this one produces electricity and steam heat.
      • Is that a meaningful distinction?
        • by Shinobi ( 19308 ) on Monday April 30, 2018 @10:44PM (#56534479)

          Yes, it's meaningful, because it means it'll be hooked up to the remote heating system for the small community, so serving a double utility role, and saves them from building a separate gas, coal or oil fired plant for that role.

  • Yes Comrade (Score:5, Funny)

    by zamboni1138 ( 308944 ) on Monday April 30, 2018 @09:23PM (#56534205)
    We are head to the Arctic.
  • ... I'll say it again [slashdot.org]:

    I just saw this [google.com] on the Google news feed: Russia just launched a floating nuclear power plant, headed to the Arctic.

    I can't help but comment on this headline: Russia's 'Nuclear Titanic' Heads West, Raising Fears of 'Chernobyl on Ice' [newsweek.com] to say the "Chernobyl on Ice" sounds like the worst Ice Capades [wikipedia.org] theme ever.

    (Apologies to those that take the potential destruction of the environment and Earth seriously.)

    I'll add that "Nuclear Titanic" sounds like a good name for a James Cameron movie or documentary.

  • I guess those don't count as floating nuke power plants. Because they're not powering cities or some such. Nimitz class aircraft carriers have 6000+ crew, more than many small towns.
    • Did any of them that's head to the Arctic?
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The Russian version is wired into the infrastructure to support a real town.
      Heat and power for 100,000 people.
    • A Russian barge with two nukes can generate 70MW. A Nimitz class aircraft carrier generates 194MW. Why exactly is this Russian barge interesting?
      • Because the Russian bark has two reactors and yield in total 140MW, and it will be connected to the heating grid and provide steam/hot water to heat the town.

        It is actually all in the summary.

        Then again it is traveling 5000km from St. Petersburg to its final deployment
        Then again they first wanted to fuel it in St. Petersburg, but decided to fuel it on the way, and now have to tow it as it can't move under its own power.

        Towing a megastructure like this ... is nerdy. You obviously are not a nerd and neither a

    • Wait, Russia has nuclear aircraft carriers?
      Russia has air craft carriers? (plural?)
  • Other than "kinda cool" blerb.

      - They've already got nuke power up there.
      - They have TONS of nuke subs
      - They've got tons of military ships / weaponry up there so there's no chance this is some smuggling run.

    Is it solely a story because "muh russia controls everything"?

    With quality articles like this, how will we have time to discuss incredibly important topics like whetehr Hollywood and tech are "too pale"?

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      They might also be too stale.
    • Other than "kinda cool" blerb.

        - They've already got nuke power up there.

      Some of it quite old and not exactly working. Let's hope when this nuclear plant reaches it's EOL, they're a bit more responsible about decommissioning it.
      http://englishrussia.com/2009/... [englishrussia.com]

    • by fazig ( 2909523 )
      Sometimes I think people have become a bit too sensitive and quickly to assume everything is meant as an attack.
      In my country people make a big deal out of something like nuclear waste transports with protests, roads and rail blockages and nonsense like that. Besides of the clickbaity headline, I think it's an interesting story when someone moves stuff around that's as massive as this and apparently does it well.
  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Monday April 30, 2018 @09:45PM (#56534285) Homepage Journal

    In 1961 US Army converted an old Liberty ship called the SS Charles H Cugle into a floating power plant back in 1961, pretty much with exactly the purpose: to provide a mobile electricity generation station for remote areas. The newly renamed MH-1A Sturgis [wikipedia.org] was towed to the Panama Canal Zone from 1968 to 1975, then mothballed.

    The Russian project is much more powerful, employing a pair of nuclear icebreaker reactors to generate a total of 140 MW, 14x the power of the old Sturgis. to obtain this kind of power in a compact ship-borne package, the KLT-40 [wikipedia.org] reactors use nearly more highly enriched uranium than is typical in land based reactors: 40% to 90% rather than 3%-5%.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Quote from above link however says:

      The KLT-40S variant is used in the Russian floating nuclear power station Akademik Lomonosov. It was developed by OKBM Afrikantov and produced by NMZ. The KLT-40S produces 150 MW thermal (about 52 MWe at 35% efficiency). The KLT-40S also uses low-enriched uranium at 14.1% enrichment to meet international proliferation standards.

    • The Russian project is much more powerful, employing a pair of nuclear icebreaker reactors to generate a total of 140 MW,

      Can you link me to any source about this data?

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Tuesday May 01, 2018 @03:25AM (#56534923)

      The other key difference here is the use of waste heat for remote central heating. I'm not sure how they do it in North America but in Europe and Russia many places have dedicated district area central heating plants, either fueled by waste reprocessing, cogeneration on the back of power plants, or in some horrid cases, standalone. By combining it with the power plant you get massive increases in efficiency from the fuel source as you can repurpose waste heat that is too cool to generate power, and put it to use for heating systems.

      Also information is all over the place. That Wikipedia article says the KLT-40S used in this installation needs 14% enriched uranium.
      An article from Power Technology says it uses KLT-40C which combined generate 300MW of heat. https://www.power-technology.c... [power-technology.com]

    • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Tuesday May 01, 2018 @09:06AM (#56535651) Journal

      In 1961 US Army converted an old Liberty ship called the SS Charles H Cugle into a floating power plant back in 1961, pretty much with exactly the purpose: to provide a mobile electricity generation station for remote areas.

      Too bad we don't have a few of these in operation. It would be really helpful to have them to park off of Puerto Rico.

    • I suppose that's one way to burn down that stockpile of highly enriched uranium.
  • I want a smaller one on wheels please!

    1 MW or even 0.5 MW will be plenty for my use case. Since I live in Alaska, the steam output will come handy too.

    Any ideas for this kind of market? What is the smallest nuclear electricity generator even built?

    It would be cool to have one for camping trips.

  • Eh? What are these people smoking, just use the damn watt for power output.
  • by rew ( 6140 ) <r.e.wolff@BitWizard.nl> on Tuesday May 01, 2018 @03:36AM (#56534941) Homepage

    So when something unexpected happend, like a few years back in Japan, you don't have the waste slowly seeping through the ground possibliy a little bit leaking into the ocean, but when something bad happens, the all the radioactive stuff is immediately in the water and you have a global problem. Nothing to worry about. We've thought about everything.... Right!

    • Sorry...I guess I should have scrolled allll the way down.
    • Actually the problem in Japan was the rods melted. If they had been just dumped in the ocean it would have been fine. The radiation around those rods is only dangerous if you are within a few centimeters of them. You eventually have to retrieve the rods but you could safely wait a hundred years till they aren't as radio active.
  • Spent fuel can simple be dropped straight into the ocean....like on an old train toilet. Once done the entire reactor is sunk without any need of expensive cleanup.
    • by ixuzus ( 2418046 )
      Wait, they're dumping spent nuclear fuel rods in train toilets? I had already pretty much sworn off train toilets for entirely different reasons - I feel like I've dodged a bullet here. That being said it's probably the only thing that would sterilise an old train toilet.
  • by fish_in_the_c ( 577259 ) on Tuesday May 01, 2018 @09:40AM (#56535803)

    Time to poison an unknown distance of ocean capable of spreading radiated water through the out a large area.
    Oh well, the survival of the species is overrated anyhow.

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