Framatome receives US NRC approval to transport higher enriched fuel by Staff Writers Washington DC (SPX) Mar 17, 2022
Framatome reached a significant milestone for the delivery of nuclear fuel at higher enrichment and burnup levels. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) recently approved a license amendment allowing Framatome's shipping containers to transport fresh nuclear fuel assemblies in the U.S. having U-235 enrichments up to 8 weight%. This approval is a critical step toward delivering advanced products that improve electricity generation and fuel utilization to nuclear plant operators. This license amendment enables Framatome to use its NRC-licensed shipping containers to transport nuclear fuel with enrichments above the industry standard 5 weight% to U.S. customers. "This regulatory milestone exemplifies our industry leadership and readiness to deliver higher enriched fuels for our customers," said Lionel Gaiffe, senior executive vice president, Fuel Business Unit at Framatome. "The NRC approval is essential as we develop fuel products that will systematically enhance safety, reliability and plant economics for the nuclear industry." Nuclear fuel with higher enrichment and burnup capabilities provide significant operational margin gains and provide greater flexibility for reactor performance. The added flexibility allows nuclear operators to extend cycle times and design more efficient core configurations while increasing plant economics. This approval builds on another recent regulatory milestone for Framatome in its pursuit to bring higher enriched fuel to the industry. In June 2021, the NRC accepted for review a topical report to apply Framatome's suite of Advanced Codes and Methods to operating conditions with uranium-235 enrichments above the industry standard of 5 weight%. These milestones with the NRC position Framatome as a leader in providing innovative fuel technology with significant margin gains for nuclear plant operators.
Russia engineers inspect seized Ukraine nuclear plant Kyiv (AFP) March 12, 2022 Russian engineers have arrived to measure radiation at a Ukrainian nuclear plant, the seizure of which during Moscow's invasion of the country sparked international alarm, officials said. Russia occupied Zaporizhzhia, Europe's biggest atomic power plant, after its forces attacked it on March 4. Its reactors appeared undamaged after the assault despite a fire that broke out there after tanks bombarded it. Officials from Russia's nuclear firm Rosatom arrived at the site on Friday, the Ukrainia ... read more
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