["This week Finland cancelled its option for a second European
Pressurised Reactor [to be supplied by Areva] as the existing EPR
project sinks into a abyss of cost over-runs, delays and litigation,
writes Jim Green. It now looks like the EPR is a failed technology and
its owner, French nuclear giant Areva, is fast running out of both
money and orders as its 'hot prospects' evaporate.
"Twelve years after the first EPR was ordered there is not a single
working example of the reactor, and the earliest projected date for
completion of the first EPR is 2018 - and no surprises if that slips
to 2020."
(Excerpted from sl. no. I below.)

"The [Indian] Minister of State for the Department of Atomic Energy
and Space said [yesterday] the government is gathering all resources
to make the 9,900-MW Jaitapur nuclear power plant [consisting of 6 EPR
nuclear reactors to be supplied by Areva] in coastal Maharashtra as
one of the most glorious atomic energy establishments."
(Excerpted from sl. no. II below.)

***What a glaring contrast!!!***]

I/II.
http://www.theecologist.org/News/news_analysis/2859924/finland_cancels_olkiluoto_4_nuclear_reactor_is_the_epr_finished.html

Finland cancels Olkiluoto 4 nuclear reactor - is the EPR finished?
Dr Jim Green & Oliver Tickell

15th May 2015

***This week Finland cancelled its option for a second European
Pressurised Reactor as the existing EPR project sinks into a abyss of
cost over-runs, delays and litigation, writes Jim Green. It now looks
like the EPR is a failed technology and its owner, French nuclear
giant Areva, is fast running out of both money and orders as its 'hot
prospects' evaporate.*** [Emphasis added.]

***Twelve years after the first EPR was ordered there is not a single
working example of the reactor, and the earliest projected date for
completion of the first EPR is 2018 - and no surprises if that slips
to 2020.*** [Emphasis added.]

There's been plenty of bad news recently for the European Pressurised
Reactor (EPR) nuclear power station design.

And now there's more. The Finnish electricity company TVO announced
this week that it had cancelled plans to build a second EPR at
Olkiluoto in western Finland because of delays and problems with the
first EPR on the site currently being built by Areva and Siemens.

That plant, Olkiluoto 3, is running severely over time and budget.
Construction began in 2005 and it is not expected to commence
operating until 2018, nine years late.

The estimated cost has risen from EURO 3.2 billion (US$3.6b) to EURO 8.5
billion (US$9.5b). Areva has already made provision for a EURO 2.7 billion
(US$3.0b) writedown on the project, with further losses expected. FTVO
and Areva / Siemens are locked ina EURO 10 billion legal battle over the
cost overruns.

Finland's government had given TVO a deadline of 30th June to request
a building permit for its planned Olkiluoto 4 plant. TVO said it would
not pursue the project due to "the delay of the start-up of Olkiluoto
3 plant unit."

It added: "In this situation it is impossible to make significant
Olkiluoto 4 related decisions necessary for the construction license
application."

How did it come to this?

The French EPR (aka Evolutionary Power Reactor) was the first
Generation III design to win orders, first in 2003 when the order for
Olkiluoto 3 was the first for a nuclear reactor in Western Europe in
15 years.

This was followed by the 2006 order for an EPR at Flamanville in
France, and two EPRs at Taishan in China in 2007. Soon /Areva was
confidently projecting a sales pipeline of 25 or more reactors.

Since then, EPRs have faced one problem after another. All three EPR
construction projects have suffered cost blowouts or delays or both.

The estimated cost of the Flamanville EPR in France has increased from
EURO 3.3 billion (US$3.7b) to at least EURO 9 billion (US$10.1b). The first
concrete was poured in 2007 and commercial operation was expected in
2012, but that timeframe has been pushed back to 2017 (with further
delays likely).

The British Daily Mail newspaper characterised the Flamanville EPR
project as one "beset by financial mismanagement with rocketing costs,
the deaths of workers, an appalling inability to meet construction
deadlines, industrial chaos, and huge environmental concerns", and
noted that "it continues to be plagued by delays, soaring costs, and
litigation in both the criminal and civil courts."

The two EPRs under construction in China are 13-15 months behind schedule.

And while the UK government has been keen to press ahead with a twin
EPR reactor 3.2GW power plant at Hinkley Point in Somerset supported
by the most generous nuclear subsidy package ever assembled, no order
has yet been signed - even though Areva subsidiary Creusot Forge has
already forged its pressure vessels.

A global collapse in confidence

Since the Fukushima disaster, a number of countries that might have
considered EPRs pulled back from earlier interest in new reactors -
the Netherlands, Sweden, and Switzerland, among others. In 2012,
new-build tender processes in Finland and the Czech Republic rejected
the EPR.

In the US, a total of seven EPRs were planned at six sites. Four EPR
construction licence applications were submitted to the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) but all four applications have been
abandoned or suspended. In February 2015, Areva asked the NRC to
suspend work on EPR design certification until further notice.

EPRs were considered at various sites in Canada - including Alberta
and Darlington, Ontario - but those plans were shelved and a generic
licensing process by the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission was
terminated.

In 2009, Italian utility Enel and EDF planned to build four EPRs but
that plan was scrapped after Italy's June 2011 referendum which
rejected nuclear power. In 2012, Enel pulled out of the Flamanville
EPR project.

The United Arab Emirates chose South Korean reactor technology over
EPRs. Reflecting on that decision, former EDF head Francois Roussely
concluded that while the EPR is "one of the best" third-generation
designs, the complexity of the design is a "handicap".

Likewise, Cambridge University nuclear engineer Tony Roulstone said in
an October 2014 lecture that the EPR design is very safe but
extraordinarily difficult to build - he described it as
"unconstructable".

According to the US's Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), EPRs have
four sets of active safety systems, each capable of cooling the
reactor on its own, and other safety features including a
double-walled containment and a 'core catcher' for holding melted
reactor core materials after a severe accident.

But the safety of some EPR design choices has been questioned by the
French government's Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear
Safety, and the EPR licensing process in the UK has been criticised.

Serious faults with pressure vessel metallurgy

On 7th April 2015, the French Nuclear Safety Authority (ASN) announced
that fabrication defects had been found in the reactor pressure vessel
of the Flamanville EPR, forged by Areva's Creusot Forge subsidiary.
Tests revealed areas with high carbon concentration resulting in
"lower than expected mechanical toughness values".

Pierre-Franck Chevet, head of ASN, said: "It is a serious fault, even
a very serious fault, because it involves a crucial part of the
nuclear reactor."

The results of further tests are expected by October 2015. In one
scenario, ASN will not require any remedial action and there will be
minimal consequences for Areva. But if remedial action or replacement
is required, it could be extremely expensive and problematic for
Areva, all the more so because the pressure vessel has already been
installed in the Flamanville EPR.

Asked what would happen if tests were negative, Chevet said: "Either
EDF abandons the project or it takes out the vessel and starts
building a new one ... this would be a very heavy operation in terms
of cost and delay."

In a worst-case scenario for Areva, the pressure vessel problem would
kill the Flamanville reactor project. A former senior nuclear safety
official told Le Parisien: "If the weakness of the steel is proved, I
don't hold out much hope for the survival of the [Flamanville] EPR
project."

French environmental minister Ségolène Royal congratulated ASN on its
speedy reaction to the pressure vessel problem. Others are asking why
the problem was not discovered before the vessel was installed. It is
believed the problem involved an inaccurate material inspection device
used between 2009 and 2014.

ASN's Pierre-Franck Chevet acknowledged that "mistakes had been made",
adding: "It is more than 15 years since the last nuclear power
stations were constructed in France. The expertise in some trades has
not been sufficiently passed on from one generation to the next."

Chevet said the reactor vessels for the UK's two planned EPRs planned
for Hinkley Point C could be affected as they have already been
manufactured by the same company using the same manufacturing
techniques - even though no formal order has been placed by EDF.

The two EPRs under construction in China might also be affected since
the pressure vessels for those reactors were also made by Creusot
Forge. China will not load fuel at the Taishan EPRs until safety
issues have been resolved, China's environment ministry said.

A senior manager of a Chinese nuclear company, speaking anonymously to
the South China Morning Post, said:

"The people responsible for this need to be sacked. It shouldn't have
happened. All materials must be checked thoroughly before use - that's
a basic requirement. The urgent task is to launch a quality inspection
in Taishan as soon as possible. Each batch of materials varies
slightly. We will cross our fingers and pray for the best."

It is unlikely that the EPR under construction in Finland is at risk
of a defective pressure vessel, as the vessel was forged by Japan
Steel Works. Nevertheless, the Finnish Radiation and Nuclear Safety
Authority (STUK) has instructed energy utility TVO to carry out new
tests of the durability of the pressure vessel.

A future for EPRs?

An immediate priority for Areva is to keep the UK Hinkley Point EPR
project moving ahead. That project faces a legal challenge from
Austria and Luxembourg under EU regulations against the massive
subsidies being offered by the UK government. The Treasury may also be
getting cold feet over the massive cost and the growing catalogue of
problems with the EPR.

Bloomberg noted in an April 16 article that Areva's EPR export
ambitions are now in "tatters". Bloomberg quoted former World Nuclear
Association executive Steve Kidd, who said "everyone was laughing" at
Areva's projections for EPR sales. Kidd blames the EPR saga in part on
the French government's 80% ownership of Areva:

"Everyone in the know could tell the chickens were going to come home
to roost. I don't think that would have happened in a private
business."

According to trade union sources, Philippe Knoche said in February
that the utility was likely to sell only about a dozen EPRs in the
years up to 2030, down from the 25 predicted previously.

If Areva is to secure even a dozen orders by 2030, it will need
further orders from China - which seems increasingly unlikely. Steve
Thomas from Greenwich University says reactors built by Areva and
Westinghouse "are just too expensive for the Chinese."

Knoche says Areva will emphasise growth in China, which he described
as the "new frontier" of global nuclear power. The two EPRs under
construction at Taishan will likely be completed (unless the pressure
vessel problem becomes a major obstacle). It is doubtful whether two
additional EPRs planned for the same site will proceed, and still more
doubtful that EPRs will be built at other sites.

Areva also has to sort out unresolved issues with its Chinese project
partners. And it needs to find additional partners to cover capital
costs.


An agreement (but not a binding contract) to build two EPRs at India's
Jaitapur site was signed in 2010. The project has moved at snail's
pace. Construction was to start in 2013 but unresolved issues
(including financial arrangements) continue to delay the project.

Perhaps Areva will secure further orders in France. That will depend
in part on debates over future reliance on nuclear power and other
electricity sources, and a debate over permitted lifetimes for the
current fleet of reactors.

So that's four EPRs under construction that will probably proceed to
operation, four EPRs planned but uncertain, and diminishing prospects
for further orders. If the pressure vessel problem is not resolved,
the under-construction EPRs become uncertain and likelihood of further
orders becomes vanishingly small.

A negative learning curve on steroids

What to make of the EPR saga? First, Areva is backing the wrong horse
- the outcome of current political debates will result in a declining
role for nuclear power in France, coupled to the growth of renewables.

A new report by ADEME, a French government agency under the Ministries
of Ecology and Research, concludes that a 100% renewable electricity
supply scenario is feasible in France. The report estimates that the
electricity production cost would be EURO 119 per megawatt-hour in 2050 in
the all-renewables scenario, compared with a near-identical figure of
EURO 117 / MWh with a mix of 50% nuclear, 40% renewables, and 10% fossil
fuels.

Areva has also backed the wrong-sized wrong horse: a giant reactor
with a giant price-tag. That said, the backers of 'small modular
reactors' are having no more success than Areva.

Areva has backed the wrong-sized wrong horse at the wrong time - the
Global Financial Crisis and its aftermath, stagnant energy demand, the
liberalization of energy markets, the political fallout from the
Fukushima disaster and other factors have dampened demand for new
reactors and made it more difficult to secure finance (or government
subsidies) for huge projects.

The EPR saga undermines the rhetoric of standardised, simplified
reactors designs ushering in a new era of nuclear growth. It also
shows that developing modified versions of conventional reactors (in
this case pressurised water reactors) can be complicated and
protracted and can end in failure.

How much more difficult will it be to develop radically new types of
reactors? The French government's Institute for Radiological
Protection and Nuclear Safety has recently produced an important
critique of Generation IV nuclear power concepts.

It states that there "is still much R&D to be done to develop the
Generation IV nuclear reactors" and it is sceptical about the safety
claims made for Generation IV concepts.

The EPR saga shows that even countries with extensive nuclear
expertise and experience can mess things up. The EPR might have
demonstrated the potential for mass production to drive down costs -
but in reality it is demonstrating the opposite.

Even before the EPR fiasco, the large-scale, standardised French
nuclear power program was subject to a negative economic learning
curve - costs were increasing over time. The EPR represents a negative
learning curve on steroids.

That point is emphasised by construction cost estimates of £16-24.5
billion (US$24.3-37.2b; EURO 21.7-33.2b) for two planned EPRs (with
combined capacity of 3.2 gigawatts) at Hinkley Point in the UK. In the
mid- to late-2000s, the estimated construction cost for an EPR was £2
billion; current estimates are 4-6 times higher.

Private companies have pulled out of EPR projects in several countries
(Italy, the US, the UK, etc.). Thus the EPR fiasco reinforces points
made in the International Energy Agency's World Economic Outlook 2014
report:

that nuclear growth will be "concentrated in markets where electricity
is supplied at regulated prices, utilities have state backing or
governments act to facilitate private investment";
and that "nuclear power faces major challenges in competitive markets
where there are significant market and regulatory risks."

Where can Areva go from here?

Despite the probably fatal problems with the EPR design, the company
is not giving up on the technology - for the simple reason that it has
nowhere else to go. First, it's working on design modifications based
on its experience of what has gone wrong in EPR construction projects
to date.

It is also involved in developing a smaller, 1.1 GW pressurised water
reactor called ATMEA. But in March 2015 Areva recognized an EURO 80
million (US$89m) impairment for its share of ATMEA development costs

"following the downward revision in the number and schedule of
potential sales of this reactor outside Turkey, in the absence of
tangible progress in the selection processes of the countries involved
at the end of 2014."

The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2014 was sceptical about the
prospects for ATMEA:

"The smaller PWR design, ATMEA, developed in collaboration with
Mitsubishi, has been mentioned as an option for Jordan, Hungary,
Argentina, and Turkey for the Sinop project. However, these are all,
at best, long shots and unless ATMEA attracts interest in more
prestigious markets and get comprehensive safety approval from a
highly experienced regulator, it appears to have little future."

The EPR fiasco could tip Areva into bankruptcy. Areva posted a EURO 4.83
billion (US$5.4b) loss for 2014 and is negotiating a rescue package
with the French government. Energy specialist Thomas Olivier Leautier
from the Toulouse School of Economics said:

"Areva's financial situation is critical, the EPR is as crucial to
them as the iPhone was to Apple. Their failure in Finland and now the
problem in Flamanville could prove fatal."

Ironically, Areva itself may not even have the resources for its
expected 10% stake in Hinkley Point. Chief executive Philippe Knoche
recently declined to commit to the 10% figure, and the head of Areva's
reactors and services division said: "Our current financial situation
obviously will make things more difficult."

Areva's reprocessing operations are also in trouble. A May 6 Reuters
article outlines the problems. Since the 2011 Fukushima disaster,
Areva's reprocessing unit has lost nearly all of its international
customers. The company's 'back-end' sales - reprocessing and
decommissioning - have fallen from EURO 2 billion in 2004 to EURO 1.53 billion
in 2014.

Areva needs to invest something of the order of EURO 200 million per year
for nearly 10 years to renew ageing equipment and boost capacity of
its nuclear waste storage pools.

Money, money, money (or lack of it)

Last week Areva responded to its financial woes last week by
announcing a cut of 4,000 employees, almost 10% of its 45,000
workforce, as reported in the New York Times. The company is also
courting investment from the China National Nuclear Corporation, which
told reporters in Beijing that it would be interested in investing in
Areva.

However CNNC would be certain to demand a large share of Areva given
its dire financial straits, and would also obtain access to its
nuclear technology and know-how - something that the French government
might well find incompatible with its national security and long term
interests.

Another alternative is that EDF, another French nuclear parastatal
that has the benefit of being in profit (for now), might buy Areva -
the most likely option, according to a Bloomberg report.

But the danger there is that Areva would represent a significant
liability in both the short and the long term, draining EDF cash just
as it has to budget for a large programme of expensive nuclear plant
closures in France, which will also slice away a large part of its
income, and leave it unable to invest in the new generation capacity
needed to make up the shortfall.

Or Areva could seek funding directly from the French government to
stay afloat. But that could well run foul of the EU's ban on state
aid, aimed at maintaining competitive markets undistorted by
government subsidies. As Greenpeace's Jan Haverkamp commented last
October on the broader ramifications of the Hinkley Point subsidy
debate:

"The chance to funnel large sums from state coffers and consumers'
pockets to these megalomaniac pet projects will cause frantic activity
in those countries where old, centralised energy systems are still
popular with politicians."

The final option for Areva is to declare itself bankrupt, with major
implications for the French economy and the credibility of France's
entire nuclear enterprise. The only certainty is that French taxpayers
will pay dearly for Areva's follies and fiascos.

Meanwhile potential purchasers of EPRs and investors in Areva would do
well to bear the following in mind. Twelve years after the first EPR
was ordered there is not a single working example of the reactor, and
the earliest projected date for completion of the first EPR is 2018 -
and no surprises if that slips to 2020.

Would you bet your pension fund on Areva and its EPR technology?

Dr Jim Green is the national nuclear campaigner with Friends of the
Earth Australia and editor of the Nuclear Monitor newsletter, where an
edited version of this article was originally published (No. 803, May
2015).

Nuclear Monitor is published 20 times a year. It has been publishing
deeply researched, often strongly critical articles on all aspects of
the nuclear cycle since 1978. A must-read for all those who work on
this issue!

Additional reporting by Oliver Tickell, who edits The Ecologist.

II.
http://www.firstpost.com/india/fault-lies-govt-delay-jaitapur-nuclear-plant-union-minister-jitendra-singh-2246640.html

Fault lies with govt for delay in Jaitapur nuclear plant: Union
Minister Jitendra Singh
May 15, 2015 17:29 IST

New Delhi: With stiff resistance from locals delaying the
commissioning of Jaitapur Nuclear Power Plant, Union Minister Jitendra
Singh on Friday said "the fault lies with" the government for not
being able to convince the people of the "advantages of atomic
energy".

***The Minister of State for the Department of Atomic Energy and Space
said the government is gathering all resources to make the 9,900-MW
Jaitapur nuclear power plant in coastal Maharashtra as one of the most
glorious atomic energy establishments.*** [Emphasis added.]

The Jaitapur Power Plant stands delayed. ReutersThe Jaitapur Power
Plant stands delayed. Reuters

"There is a lot of misgivings and we are looking at that plant very
ambitiously, the entire atomic energy department is focussed on that,
we are trying to gather all the resources to make it one of the most
glorious atomic energy establishments, but again these misgivings have
come up. We have failed or we have not been able to propagate the
facts as vigorously and aggressively as we ought to have done."

"There is a lot of non-malignant advantages of atomic energy - it is
environment friendly, climate friendly and these things are evidently
very clear and if we are not able to convince our people and a plant
like that in Jaitapur is still suffering from certain hiccups perhaps
again the fault lies with us," Singh said.

He was speaking at the Nuclear Energy Conference organised by The
Associated Chambers of Commerce of India (ASSOCHAM) in New Delhi.

Emphasising more awareness, Singh said hazards of nuclear energy are
not actually of the magnitude to which they are being projected and
for that there is a need to have more awareness programmes with facts
and figures because "we have stuck up with something like Jaitapur
plant".

"We need to tell the world and the people here that we have conducted
a number of studies which have proved abundantly that there is no
extra risk or hazard with having an atomic energy establishment in
your vicinity," the Union Minister said.

Echoing the minister's sentiments, Department of Atomic Energy (DAE)
Secretary Ratan Kumar Sinha, who is also the Chairman of Atomic Energy
Commission, said convincing people about nuclear energy and getting
good financial experts are the two major challenges facing the Indian
nuclear industry.

"The negative information flowing to the people from the rural areas,
less educated ones was hampering the nuclear projects in the country
and it was important to convince the population about it at large,"
Sinha said.

"After completion of the project, almost 75 percent of the total cost
of per unit is of the high capital cost that is involved. So the
sector requires financial experts, in managing the cost," Sinha said."

He said over the past 7-8 months, India has had a "productive" and
"revolutionary" dialogue with its foreign collaborators which includes
Canada and Australia in terms of procuring uranium, the pre-work
engineering agreement (PEA) with French company Areva and the US
company WestingHouse Co.

Francois Richer, French envoy to India, said that with the visit of
Prime Minister Narendra Modi to France, the nuclear cooperation
between the two nations has developed and his country supports India's
entry to the elite Nuclear Suppliers Group.

Speaking on the occasion, Irwan Hinault, CEO Areva -- the company
which is to be built six EPR reactors at Jaitapur -- said the PEA
between his company and Larsen and Toubro will help improve the
competitiveness of the project as many equipment could be manufactured
in India itself, thereby reducing the cost.

PTI

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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