The first turbine generator of Russia's Kursk Nuclear Power Plant, about 500 km south of Moscow, has been brought to a halt due to an emergency protection system alarm. The system reacted to a short-circuit in the stator, preliminary reports said.
With the turbine generator switched off, the first
power-generating unit of the plant is running at half throttle.
Following the protection system malfunction, the radiation
environment around the facility – which feeds the grid for central
Kursk and 19 other regions – is reportedly normal.
“The unit is operating. One of the electric sensors went off, so
did the protection system. The turbine generator has been currently
working at 50 percent of its capacity. There have been no
radioactive risks whatsoever safety-wise. Normal functioning of the
automatic system,” Kursk NPP representative Aleksey Suzdalev
told RIA Novosti.
Kursk NPP is one of Russia's three biggest nuclear power plants and
four biggest electricity producers. It is situated 40 km west of
Kursk, a city with a population of 415,000, on the bank of the Seim
River near the satellite city Kurchatov, located 3 km from the
facility with a population of 42,000.
The NPP is a one-circuit plant: The steam supplied to the turbines
is produced inside the reactor by the boiling coolant, and for
condensing the steam the plant uses water from a 21.5-square-meter
cooling pond.
The plant operates four RBMK-1000 reactors launched between 1976
and 1985. In total, since going online in 1976, Kursk NPP has
produced over 745 billion kWh of energy, according to Russian
nuclear monopoly Rosatom.