View Full Version : Nuclear Engineering in Canada
Dagenais
Feb16-04, 06:05 PM
I was searching around Canadian Universities for Nuclear Engineering departments (just out of curiosity).
I only found one.
University of Toronto.
That's pretty sad if Canada only has one University that offers Nuclear Engineering classes...
Check out the Canadian Nuclear Society:
Click on the Education link and scroll to the bottom of the page.
http://www.cns-snc.ca/home_eng.html
Just curious: what percentage of Canada's power comes from nuclear plants?
russ_watters
Feb17-04, 01:28 AM
Originally posted by enigma
Just curious: what percentage of Canada's power comes from nuclear plants? Roughly 15%. Canada's nuclear industry is a real mess though and that number is dropping fast.
Dagenais
Feb18-04, 06:33 PM
After a web search, I found NuclearFAQ of Canada. Old numbers though.
This are more detailed numbers if you're interested in them:
In Canada nuclear power contributes about 14% of the total electricity supply. In the province of Ontario in 1997 about 48% of the electricity supply was nuclear (along with 27% hydro, 24% fossil, 1% "other"). The other two provinces with nuclear power, New Brunswick and Québec, receive about 21% and 3%, respectively, of their supply from nuclear. (source: Electric Power in Canada 1997, Natural Resources Canada)
McMaster (in Hamilton, Ontario) also does nuclear engineering, its part of a program called Engineering Physics. They have their own nuclear reactor (for research purposes) on campus as well.
As for nuclear power in Canada, it's somewhere around 15% on average. However, in Ontario specifically, its over 50% and may increase in future years, since there are plans to completely phase out coal power by 2014. You can check out: www.ieso.ca for more information.
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