ºÝºÝߣshows by User: nuclearreport / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif ºÝºÝߣshows by User: nuclearreport / Wed, 20 Jul 2016 08:36:53 GMT ºÝºÝߣShare feed for ºÝºÝߣshows by User: nuclearreport The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2016 /slideshow/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2016/64195176 20160713msc-wnisr2016v2-hr-160720083653
? Nuclear power generation in the world increased by 1.3%, entirely due to a 31% increase in China. ? Ten reactors started up in 2015¡ªmore than in any other year since 1990¡ªof which eight were in China. Construction on all of them started prior to the Fukushima disaster. The China Effect ? Eight construction starts in the world in 2015¡ªto which China contributed six¡ªdown from 15 in 2010 of which 10 were in China. No construction starts in the world in the first half of 2016. ? The number of units under construction is declining for the third year in a row, from 67 reactors at the end of 2013 to 58 by mid-2016, of which 21 are in China. ? China spent over US$100 billion on renewables in 2015, while investment decisions for six nuclear reactors amounted to US$18 billion. ? Eight early closure decisions taken in Japan, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan and the U.S. ? Nuclear phase-out announcements in the U.S. (California) and Taiwan. ? In nine of the 14 building countries all projects are delayed, mostly by several years. Six projects have been listed for over a decade, of which three for over 30 years. China is no exception here, at least 10 of 21 units under construction are delayed. ? With the exception of United Arab Emirates and Belarus, all potential newcomer countries delayed construction decisions. Chile suspended and Indonesia abandoned nuclear plans. Early Closures, Phase-outs and Construction Delays ? AREVAhasaccumulatedUS$11billioninlossesoverthepastfiveyears.Frenchgovernment decides €5.6 billion bailout and breaks up the company. Share value 95 percent below 2007 peak value. State utility EDF struggles with US41.5 billion debt, downgraded by S&P. Chinese utility CGN, EDF partner for Hinkley Point C, loses 60% of its share value since June 2015. Nuclear Giants in Crisis ¨C Renewables Take Over ? Globally, wind power output grew by 17%, solar by 33%, nuclear by 1.3%. ? Brazil, China, India, Japan and the Netherlands now all generate more electricity from wind turbines alone than from nuclear power plants. ? Three decades after the Chernobyl accident shocked the European continent, 6 million people continue to live in severely contaminated areas. Radioactive fallout from Chernobyl contaminated 40% of Europe¡¯s landmass. A total of 40,000 additional fatal cancer cases are expected over the coming 50 years. Chernobyl+30/Fukushima+5 ? Five years after the Fukushima disaster began on the east coast of Japan, over 100,000 people remain dislocated. Only two reactors are generating power in Japan, but final closure decisions were taken on an additional six reactors that had been offline since 2010-11.]]>

? Nuclear power generation in the world increased by 1.3%, entirely due to a 31% increase in China. ? Ten reactors started up in 2015¡ªmore than in any other year since 1990¡ªof which eight were in China. Construction on all of them started prior to the Fukushima disaster. The China Effect ? Eight construction starts in the world in 2015¡ªto which China contributed six¡ªdown from 15 in 2010 of which 10 were in China. No construction starts in the world in the first half of 2016. ? The number of units under construction is declining for the third year in a row, from 67 reactors at the end of 2013 to 58 by mid-2016, of which 21 are in China. ? China spent over US$100 billion on renewables in 2015, while investment decisions for six nuclear reactors amounted to US$18 billion. ? Eight early closure decisions taken in Japan, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan and the U.S. ? Nuclear phase-out announcements in the U.S. (California) and Taiwan. ? In nine of the 14 building countries all projects are delayed, mostly by several years. Six projects have been listed for over a decade, of which three for over 30 years. China is no exception here, at least 10 of 21 units under construction are delayed. ? With the exception of United Arab Emirates and Belarus, all potential newcomer countries delayed construction decisions. Chile suspended and Indonesia abandoned nuclear plans. Early Closures, Phase-outs and Construction Delays ? AREVAhasaccumulatedUS$11billioninlossesoverthepastfiveyears.Frenchgovernment decides €5.6 billion bailout and breaks up the company. Share value 95 percent below 2007 peak value. State utility EDF struggles with US41.5 billion debt, downgraded by S&P. Chinese utility CGN, EDF partner for Hinkley Point C, loses 60% of its share value since June 2015. Nuclear Giants in Crisis ¨C Renewables Take Over ? Globally, wind power output grew by 17%, solar by 33%, nuclear by 1.3%. ? Brazil, China, India, Japan and the Netherlands now all generate more electricity from wind turbines alone than from nuclear power plants. ? Three decades after the Chernobyl accident shocked the European continent, 6 million people continue to live in severely contaminated areas. Radioactive fallout from Chernobyl contaminated 40% of Europe¡¯s landmass. A total of 40,000 additional fatal cancer cases are expected over the coming 50 years. Chernobyl+30/Fukushima+5 ? Five years after the Fukushima disaster began on the east coast of Japan, over 100,000 people remain dislocated. Only two reactors are generating power in Japan, but final closure decisions were taken on an additional six reactors that had been offline since 2010-11.]]>
Wed, 20 Jul 2016 08:36:53 GMT /slideshow/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2016/64195176 nuclearreport@slideshare.net(nuclearreport) The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2016 nuclearreport ? Nuclear power generation in the world increased by 1.3%, entirely due to a 31% increase in China. ? Ten reactors started up in 2015¡ªmore than in any other year since 1990¡ªof which eight were in China. Construction on all of them started prior to the Fukushima disaster. The China Effect ? Eight construction starts in the world in 2015¡ªto which China contributed six¡ªdown from 15 in 2010 of which 10 were in China. No construction starts in the world in the first half of 2016. ? The number of units under construction is declining for the third year in a row, from 67 reactors at the end of 2013 to 58 by mid-2016, of which 21 are in China. ? China spent over US$100 billion on renewables in 2015, while investment decisions for six nuclear reactors amounted to US$18 billion. ? Eight early closure decisions taken in Japan, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan and the U.S. ? Nuclear phase-out announcements in the U.S. (California) and Taiwan. ? In nine of the 14 building countries all projects are delayed, mostly by several years. Six projects have been listed for over a decade, of which three for over 30 years. China is no exception here, at least 10 of 21 units under construction are delayed. ? With the exception of United Arab Emirates and Belarus, all potential newcomer countries delayed construction decisions. Chile suspended and Indonesia abandoned nuclear plans. Early Closures, Phase-outs and Construction Delays ? AREVAhasaccumulatedUS$11billioninlossesoverthepastfiveyears.Frenchgovernment decides €5.6 billion bailout and breaks up the company. Share value 95 percent below 2007 peak value. State utility EDF struggles with US41.5 billion debt, downgraded by S&P. Chinese utility CGN, EDF partner for Hinkley Point C, loses 60% of its share value since June 2015. Nuclear Giants in Crisis ¨C Renewables Take Over ? Globally, wind power output grew by 17%, solar by 33%, nuclear by 1.3%. ? Brazil, China, India, Japan and the Netherlands now all generate more electricity from wind turbines alone than from nuclear power plants. ? Three decades after the Chernobyl accident shocked the European continent, 6 million people continue to live in severely contaminated areas. Radioactive fallout from Chernobyl contaminated 40% of Europe¡¯s landmass. A total of 40,000 additional fatal cancer cases are expected over the coming 50 years. Chernobyl+30/Fukushima+5 ? Five years after the Fukushima disaster began on the east coast of Japan, over 100,000 people remain dislocated. Only two reactors are generating power in Japan, but final closure decisions were taken on an additional six reactors that had been offline since 2010-11. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/20160713msc-wnisr2016v2-hr-160720083653-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> ? Nuclear power generation in the world increased by 1.3%, entirely due to a 31% increase in China. ? Ten reactors started up in 2015¡ªmore than in any other year since 1990¡ªof which eight were in China. Construction on all of them started prior to the Fukushima disaster. The China Effect ? Eight construction starts in the world in 2015¡ªto which China contributed six¡ªdown from 15 in 2010 of which 10 were in China. No construction starts in the world in the first half of 2016. ? The number of units under construction is declining for the third year in a row, from 67 reactors at the end of 2013 to 58 by mid-2016, of which 21 are in China. ? China spent over US$100 billion on renewables in 2015, while investment decisions for six nuclear reactors amounted to US$18 billion. ? Eight early closure decisions taken in Japan, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan and the U.S. ? Nuclear phase-out announcements in the U.S. (California) and Taiwan. ? In nine of the 14 building countries all projects are delayed, mostly by several years. Six projects have been listed for over a decade, of which three for over 30 years. China is no exception here, at least 10 of 21 units under construction are delayed. ? With the exception of United Arab Emirates and Belarus, all potential newcomer countries delayed construction decisions. Chile suspended and Indonesia abandoned nuclear plans. Early Closures, Phase-outs and Construction Delays ? AREVAhasaccumulatedUS$11billioninlossesoverthepastfiveyears.Frenchgovernment decides €5.6 billion bailout and breaks up the company. Share value 95 percent below 2007 peak value. State utility EDF struggles with US41.5 billion debt, downgraded by S&amp;P. Chinese utility CGN, EDF partner for Hinkley Point C, loses 60% of its share value since June 2015. Nuclear Giants in Crisis ¨C Renewables Take Over ? Globally, wind power output grew by 17%, solar by 33%, nuclear by 1.3%. ? Brazil, China, India, Japan and the Netherlands now all generate more electricity from wind turbines alone than from nuclear power plants. ? Three decades after the Chernobyl accident shocked the European continent, 6 million people continue to live in severely contaminated areas. Radioactive fallout from Chernobyl contaminated 40% of Europe¡¯s landmass. A total of 40,000 additional fatal cancer cases are expected over the coming 50 years. Chernobyl+30/Fukushima+5 ? Five years after the Fukushima disaster began on the east coast of Japan, over 100,000 people remain dislocated. Only two reactors are generating power in Japan, but final closure decisions were taken on an additional six reactors that had been offline since 2010-11.
The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2016 from nuclearreport
]]>
832 6 https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/20160713msc-wnisr2016v2-hr-160720083653-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&height=120&fit=bounds document Black http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/post http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/posted 0
The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2015 /slideshow/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2015/50543302 20150715wnisr2015-v1-hr-150715080846-lva1-app6892
The challenge to select and assess the outstanding events of the year for the release of the July 2015 edition of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report turned out to be particularly tough: For the first time in 45 years, Japan was without nuclear electricity (and no lights went out) and, indeed, without any operating industrial nuclear facility or even research reactor; AREVA, the self-proclaimed ¡°global leader in nuclear energy¡±, went technically bankrupt; China, the global leader in new-build, launched a construction site after a 15-month break; in the U.K., concerning the French sponsored new-build project, there are ¡°growing suspicions¡± that the Treasury ¡°would not be disappointed if Hinkley [Point C] never happened¡±; the French draft Energy Bill passed the second reading at the French National Assembly stipulating the reduction of the nuclear share from three quarters to about half by 2025; and so on. While this report attempts to provide an overview of essential events of the past year its main aim is to identify and highlight the trends.]]>

The challenge to select and assess the outstanding events of the year for the release of the July 2015 edition of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report turned out to be particularly tough: For the first time in 45 years, Japan was without nuclear electricity (and no lights went out) and, indeed, without any operating industrial nuclear facility or even research reactor; AREVA, the self-proclaimed ¡°global leader in nuclear energy¡±, went technically bankrupt; China, the global leader in new-build, launched a construction site after a 15-month break; in the U.K., concerning the French sponsored new-build project, there are ¡°growing suspicions¡± that the Treasury ¡°would not be disappointed if Hinkley [Point C] never happened¡±; the French draft Energy Bill passed the second reading at the French National Assembly stipulating the reduction of the nuclear share from three quarters to about half by 2025; and so on. While this report attempts to provide an overview of essential events of the past year its main aim is to identify and highlight the trends.]]>
Wed, 15 Jul 2015 08:08:46 GMT /slideshow/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2015/50543302 nuclearreport@slideshare.net(nuclearreport) The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2015 nuclearreport The challenge to select and assess the outstanding events of the year for the release of the July 2015 edition of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report turned out to be particularly tough: For the first time in 45 years, Japan was without nuclear electricity (and no lights went out) and, indeed, without any operating industrial nuclear facility or even research reactor; AREVA, the self-proclaimed ¡°global leader in nuclear energy¡±, went technically bankrupt; China, the global leader in new-build, launched a construction site after a 15-month break; in the U.K., concerning the French sponsored new-build project, there are ¡°growing suspicions¡± that the Treasury ¡°would not be disappointed if Hinkley [Point C] never happened¡±; the French draft Energy Bill passed the second reading at the French National Assembly stipulating the reduction of the nuclear share from three quarters to about half by 2025; and so on. While this report attempts to provide an overview of essential events of the past year its main aim is to identify and highlight the trends. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/20150715wnisr2015-v1-hr-150715080846-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The challenge to select and assess the outstanding events of the year for the release of the July 2015 edition of the World Nuclear Industry Status Report turned out to be particularly tough: For the first time in 45 years, Japan was without nuclear electricity (and no lights went out) and, indeed, without any operating industrial nuclear facility or even research reactor; AREVA, the self-proclaimed ¡°global leader in nuclear energy¡±, went technically bankrupt; China, the global leader in new-build, launched a construction site after a 15-month break; in the U.K., concerning the French sponsored new-build project, there are ¡°growing suspicions¡± that the Treasury ¡°would not be disappointed if Hinkley [Point C] never happened¡±; the French draft Energy Bill passed the second reading at the French National Assembly stipulating the reduction of the nuclear share from three quarters to about half by 2025; and so on. While this report attempts to provide an overview of essential events of the past year its main aim is to identify and highlight the trends.
The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2015 from nuclearreport
]]>
2097 8 https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/20150715wnisr2015-v1-hr-150715080846-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&height=120&fit=bounds document Black http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/post http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/posted 0
??The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2014 /slideshow/the-world-nuclear/37489410 bjbajocftaih9cgdlems-signature-a3bfd8e533d8f07cc158fa21c7e2be93a229e1cbac5ea2c10ba9a9774dbb364d-poli-140730034002-phpapp02
Please see http://fr.slideshare.net/nuclearreport/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2016 The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2014 (WNISR) provides a comprehensive overview of nuclear power plant data, including information on operation, production and construction. The WNISR assesses the status of new-build programs in existing as well as in potential newcomer nuclear countries and looks in detail at how the changing market conditions are affecting the economics of nuclear power. WNISR2014 also updates a Fukushima Status Report featured for the first time in 2013 that triggered widespread media and analyst attention. While the Nuclear Power vs. Renewable Energy chapter provides comparative data on investment, capacity, and generation and assesses how nuclear power performs in systems with high renewable energy share. http://www.worldnuclearreport.org/-2014-]]>

Please see http://fr.slideshare.net/nuclearreport/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2016 The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2014 (WNISR) provides a comprehensive overview of nuclear power plant data, including information on operation, production and construction. The WNISR assesses the status of new-build programs in existing as well as in potential newcomer nuclear countries and looks in detail at how the changing market conditions are affecting the economics of nuclear power. WNISR2014 also updates a Fukushima Status Report featured for the first time in 2013 that triggered widespread media and analyst attention. While the Nuclear Power vs. Renewable Energy chapter provides comparative data on investment, capacity, and generation and assesses how nuclear power performs in systems with high renewable energy share. http://www.worldnuclearreport.org/-2014-]]>
Wed, 30 Jul 2014 03:40:02 GMT /slideshow/the-world-nuclear/37489410 nuclearreport@slideshare.net(nuclearreport) ??The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2014 nuclearreport Please see http://fr.slideshare.net/nuclearreport/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2016 The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2014 (WNISR) provides a comprehensive overview of nuclear power plant data, including information on operation, production and construction. The WNISR assesses the status of new-build programs in existing as well as in potential newcomer nuclear countries and looks in detail at how the changing market conditions are affecting the economics of nuclear power. WNISR2014 also updates a Fukushima Status Report featured for the first time in 2013 that triggered widespread media and analyst attention. While the Nuclear Power vs. Renewable Energy chapter provides comparative data on investment, capacity, and generation and assesses how nuclear power performs in systems with high renewable energy share. http://www.worldnuclearreport.org/-2014- <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/bjbajocftaih9cgdlems-signature-a3bfd8e533d8f07cc158fa21c7e2be93a229e1cbac5ea2c10ba9a9774dbb364d-poli-140730034002-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Please see http://fr.slideshare.net/nuclearreport/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2016 The World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2014 (WNISR) provides a comprehensive overview of nuclear power plant data, including information on operation, production and construction. The WNISR assesses the status of new-build programs in existing as well as in potential newcomer nuclear countries and looks in detail at how the changing market conditions are affecting the economics of nuclear power. WNISR2014 also updates a Fukushima Status Report featured for the first time in 2013 that triggered widespread media and analyst attention. While the Nuclear Power vs. Renewable Energy chapter provides comparative data on investment, capacity, and generation and assesses how nuclear power performs in systems with high renewable energy share. http://www.worldnuclearreport.org/-2014-
çt·NÉîThe World Nuclear Industry Status Report 2014 from nuclearreport
]]>
10879 17 https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/bjbajocftaih9cgdlems-signature-a3bfd8e533d8f07cc158fa21c7e2be93a229e1cbac5ea2c10ba9a9774dbb364d-poli-140730034002-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&height=120&fit=bounds document Black http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/post http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/posted 0
https://public.slidesharecdn.com/v2/images/profile-picture.png https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/20160713msc-wnisr2016v2-hr-160720083653-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2016/64195176 The World Nuclear Indu... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/20150715wnisr2015-v1-hr-150715080846-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/the-world-nuclear-industry-status-report-2015/50543302 The World Nuclear Indu... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/bjbajocftaih9cgdlems-signature-a3bfd8e533d8f07cc158fa21c7e2be93a229e1cbac5ea2c10ba9a9774dbb364d-poli-140730034002-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/the-world-nuclear/37489410 ??The World Nuclear In...