How Long Does It Take to Build a Nuclear Power Plant?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the timeline for constructing a nuclear power plant and bringing its first reactor online, starting from the permit request to the reactor's operational status. Participants explore various timeframes, regulatory processes, and factors influencing construction duration.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants mention claims of 36 months for the new Westinghouse AP600/AP1000 reactors, while others note that the last reactor in the U.S. took 25 years to complete.
  • One participant argues that not all nuclear plants take 25 years, suggesting that such claims may not accurately reflect average construction times.
  • Another participant believes that 36 months is optimistic and proposes that a more realistic timeframe might be 4-6 years, citing challenges in obtaining necessary components fabricated outside the U.S.
  • Concerns are raised about the licensing process, which has historically caused delays due to legal challenges and public debates, impacting overall construction time and costs.
  • Participants discuss new regulatory procedures intended to streamline the licensing process, including separate licensing for reactor designs before construction begins.
  • One participant elaborates on the two-step licensing process in the U.S., highlighting potential legal challenges that can arise after construction is completed, which may further delay the operational licensing of the plant.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the expected timeline for nuclear power plant construction, with no consensus reached on a definitive timeframe. Multiple competing perspectives on the impact of regulatory processes and historical context are presented.

Contextual Notes

The discussion reflects uncertainties regarding the average construction time for nuclear power plants, the influence of regulatory changes, and the challenges posed by the licensing process. Specific assumptions about the timelines and processes are not universally agreed upon.

Pengwuino
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How long does it take for a nuclear power plant to be built and to have its first reactor come on line? Let's start the time line at basically when the permit is requested and end it when the first reactor goes fully online. What kind of time period are we looking at there in the best case scenarios with no massive interuptions or complications occurring?
 
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Pengwuino said:
How long does it take for a nuclear power plant to be built and to have its first reactor come on line?
There are claims of 36 months for the new Westinghouse AP600/AP1000. The last reactor unit to come online in the United States took 25 years to build.
 
Well I wouldn't suppose that all nuclear power plants take 25 years to make just as I wouldn't suppose a claim would be very accurate as to the average time it would normally take.
 
http://www.tvo.fi/486.htm

We should've our latest up 2009, the final ok for building came around mid 2002. It's a third unit for this plant, but basically they're building it as a separate one.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
36 months may be optimistic, but it is believable from the point of starting construction to going critical. The reason a lot of plants took a long time was due to weaknesses in the licensing process allowing for interruptions and delays at many junctures. This increases construction time and drives up costs substantially.

New regulatory procedures are in place to hopefully reduce this occurrence. For instance, the reactor design is licensed separately and before the plant is built, and there are set time periods for public debate.
 
hitssquad said:
There are claims of 36 months for the new Westinghouse AP600/AP1000. The last reactor unit to come online in the United States took 25 years to build.
A period of 36 months is quite optimistic. Probably 4-5 years is more realistic, and perhaps 6 years is even more so.

One problem will be getting the piping and pressure vessels/steam generators. At the present time, these components are fabricated outside the US.

Any plant will be new, and even though the NRC has adopted a simplified licensing process, the utility will probably be cautious.

As for 25 years, I suspect that is a reference to Watts Bar, and this is due to extraordinary circumstances at TVA. They were overextended with multiple plants (including the unfinished Bellefonte units - first B&W plants along RWE's Mulheim-Kaerlich designed to use 17x17 fuel). The management put all the resources into upgrading and restarting Browns Ferry 2 & 3, with BF1 still mothballed. Bellefonte units are history. :frown:
 
BCRion said:
36 months may be optimistic, but it is believable from the point of starting construction to going critical. The reason a lot of plants took a long time was due to weaknesses in the licensing process allowing for interruptions and delays at many junctures. This increases construction time and drives up costs substantially.

New regulatory procedures are in place to hopefully reduce this occurrence. For instance, the reactor design is licensed separately and before the plant is built, and there are set time periods for public debate.

Let me just elaborate some on what BCRion has said.

The licensing process in the USA is a two step process. First the utility applies to build
the plant; an action that can be, and frequently is; challenged in court. After a protracted
period of lawsuits and public comment - the construction permit is granted and the utility
can build the plant. After the plant is constructed, the utility has to apply for an
operating license; and the whole process - lawsuits and all, questioning whether the plant
should even exist; starts all over again.

Can you imagine building your home in such circumstances? You convince all the zoning
boards and planning boards that your house will be acceptable to the community and
obtain your building permit. Then after properly construnction the house as per the permit,
and as verified by the building inspector; you would then have to apply for a permit to
actually inhabit the house. During this second permitting process; anybody can challenge
any of the features and siting of the now completed house.

That's the way nuclear power used to be licensed in the USA. The Congress has done
some reform of the laws. Hopefully they have instituted a sensible process for licensing
new reactors.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 

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