Montalto di Castro Nuclear Power Station

Summary

The Montalto di Castro nuclear power station was a nuclear power plant at Montalto di Castro in Italy. Consisting of two BWR units each of 982 MWe, it was approaching completion in 1988 when the Italian government decided to close all nuclear plants as a result of the 1987 referendum. In February 1988 the two units were eighty percent complete, representing about a five billion dollars investment.[1] It never operated.

Montalto di Castro Nuclear Power Plant
The NPP to the left, to the right the Steam Power Plant Alessandro Volta
Map
Official nameCentrale elettronucleare Alto Lazio
CountryItaly
Coordinates42°21′31.68″N 11°31′53.04″E / 42.3588000°N 11.5314000°E / 42.3588000; 11.5314000
StatusCancelled
Construction began1 July 1982
Decommission date
  • 1 January 1988
Owner(s)Enel
Operator(s)Enel
Nuclear power station
Reactor typeBWR
Power generation
Units cancelled2 x 982 MW
Nameplate capacity2,018 MW
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Its area and some of the already built structures are now used by the fossil-fuel power station "Alessandro Volta", the biggest power station in Italy.

Reactor data edit

The nuclear power plant has two units:

Unit Reactor type Net capacity Gross capacity Start of construction Mothballed
Montalto di Castro-1 [2] BWR/6
(Mark III)[3][4]
982 MW 1009 MW 1 July 1982 1 January 1988
Montalto di Castro-2 [5] BWR/6
(Mark III)
982 MW 1009 MW 1 July 1982 1 July 1988

References edit

  1. ^ "Symposium: Nuclear Technology in Southern Africa" (PDF). CSIR. 21 June 1990. p. 262. Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 April 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  2. ^ "Nuclear Power Reactor Details - Montalto di Castro-1". International Atomic Energy Agency. 1982. Archived from the original on 11 September 2010. Retrieved 18 July 2022.
  3. ^ Reliability Data Collection and Use in Risk and Availability Assessment Proceedings of the 5th EuReDatA Conference, Heidelberg, Germany, April 9–11, 1986, page 663, "An extensive probabilistic safety study was performed for the Alto Lazio Nuclear Plant, a two-unit BWR/6 plant presently being constructed ..."
  4. ^ The Non-Nuclear Conversion of the Montalto BWR/6-Mark III Plant: A Technical and Economical Assessment of the Proposed Options
  5. ^ "Nuclear Power Reactor Details - Montalto di Castro-2". International Atomic Energy Agency. 1982. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 18 July 2022.

External links edit