Surprise boost for Romanian nuclear plant

Premium Content

29 July 2020

Cernavoda-units-3-and-4-(Nuclearelectrica)

Construction work at Cernavoda nuclear plant in Romania
Image courtesy Nuclearelectrica

Romanian Prime Minister Ludovic Orban says his government is close to striking a deal with undisclosed “Euro-Atlantic partners” to complete the long-awaited expansion of the Cernavoda nuclear power plant.

Currently, the plant, with two reactors, produces approximately 20% of the country’s electricity.

Orban said the partners would construct reactors three and four at the plant over the next ten years, with an investment of between €8 billion and €9 billion coming from the Romanian government.

The announcement has surprised many industry observers who anticipated only one new reactor would be commissioned by 2030. The project is currently running more than a decade behind its original schedule.

The Prime Minister’s statement follows Romania’s signing last September of a memorandum of understanding on nuclear cooperation with the United States.

That agreement was reached after Nuclearelectrica, the state-owned developer of Cernavoda, announced the termination of its contract with China Nuclear Power for the construction of the two new reactors at the plant.

Webinar: Caterpillar experts to discuss the increasing importance of temporary power
Live event on July 7, will explore how businesses are using temporary power solutions to strengthen energy resilience
Product launch update: new tower cranes
New tower cranes launched into the North American market this year
Why rugged electronics are becoming mission-critical for off-road OEMs
Connectivity and digital controls are reshaping heavy equipment and manufacturers are finding performance depends as much on durable electronics as on the vehicles themselves