US Nuclear Plants Catastrophic 51% Increase Of Outages From Last Year?
September 1,
2016
U.S. nuclear power plant outages have been higher this summer
(June through August), averaging 4.3 gigawatts (GW), or 51% more than in 2015.
Summer outages were at their highest in June, reaching 9.9 GW, or about 10% of
total U.S. nuclear capacity, on June 17 and averaging 6.2 GW for the month.
Outages dropped to an average of 4.4 GW in July and 2.4 GW in August.
Nuclear power plants, which
provide baseload generation, account for nearly 20% of total U.S. electricity
generation on an annual basis. Nuclear power plants provide power at a steady
rate rather than in response to daily or hourly fluctuations in electricity
demand. Nuclear outages typically arise from refueling and maintenance, power
uprates, and unplanned shutdowns. EIA's Status of Nuclear Outages
maps the generating capacity and outage status of each nuclear plant in the
United States each day. Nuclear outages reached the lowest level since 2007
last year, when outages totaled just 0.1 GW
during four days in August 2015.
Nuclear power plants typically
refuel every 18 to 24 months during fall or spring. Other noncritical
maintenance work is often scheduled at the same time as refueling to minimize
downtime. In the early 1990s, refueling-related outages lasted about 12 weeks.
More recently, refueling outage durations have been reduced to fewer than six
weeks…
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