konto usunięte
Temat: Elektrownia Atomowa w Polsce.
Jak to widzą w Ameryce:A Guide to New Nuclear
[...]The 104 commercial nuclear reactors in the U.S. supply around 21 percent of the electrical power in the country.
[...]
Small Fission Reactors
Instead of building reactors capable of producing over 1 gigawatt of electric power (or more with thermal power), these reactors individually can generate 25 to 300 megawatts of heat and/or electricity. They work in the same manner as conventional reactors and coal plants: Nuclear fuel creates steam, which turns a turbine.
The individual reactors can be deployed to provide power to isolated communities or off-grid industrial sites like mines that are currently served by diesel generators. Alternatively, they can be chain-ganged together to provide the close to the same amount of power of a large facility.
The electricity from these small plants will cost about 6 to 9 cents a kilowatt hour over a lifetime to generate, or about the same as a conventional plant. (Nuclear plants in the U.S. can provide power for 7 to 8 cents a kilowatt hour; the price in the U.S. is around 6 to 8 cents with loan guarantees and 8 to 10 cents a kilowatt hour without.) The advantage comes in safety and more rapid construction.
http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/a-guide-to...