Romania is a country in Eastern Europe that draws its electricity production from a variety of sources. In 2020, the breakdown of electricity production in Romania was as follows: 34.5% hydroelectric, 31.7% thermal (natural gas and coal), 12.3% wind, 9.9% solar and 8.8% nuclear
Romania currently has one nuclear power plant, the Cernavodă plant, which supplies around 8.8% of the country’s electricity. Romania intends to expand its nuclear power production by building new units at the Cernavodă plant and exploring innovative reactor technologies, such as the ALFRED project. These developments could help diversify Romania’s energy mix, meet growing electricity demand and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
History of nuclear power generation in Romania
The history of nuclear energy in Romania dates back to the 1950s, with the creation of the Institute of Atomic Physics in 1956 and the establishment of a nuclear energy research program
The Cernavodă plant is located in southeastern Romania and currently has two reactors in operation, Unit 1, commissioned in 1996, and Unit 2, commissioned in 2007
Nuclear reactor technologies used in Romania
The reactors at the Cernavodă power plant are CANDU-6 heavy water pressure channel reactors (PHWRs), designed by Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL)
Innovative power plant and reactor projects
Romania aims to expand its nuclear power production by building new units at the Cernavodă power plant. Units 3 and 4 are planned to be CANDU-6 type reactors, similar to the existing units, and should have a total capacity of 1,400 MWe
In addition to plans to expand the Cernavodă plant, Romania is also exploring innovative reactor technologies. The “Horia Hulubei” Institute of Physics and Nuclear Engineering (IFIN-HH) has been selected in 2019 to host one of the Advanced Modular Reactors (ARMT) of the European-Romanian ALFRED (Advanced Lead Fast Reactor European Demonstrator) project
List of Romanian reactors
| Reactor name | Tech | Model | Mwe | TWh | Text | ConstructionStart | GridConnec | Dismantling | Load factor |
| CERNAVODA-1 | PHWR | CANDU6 | 650 | 134.59 | ROMANIA | march 1983 | july 1996 | 89.8% | |
| CERNAVODA-2 | PHWR | CANDU6 | 650 | 81.95 | ROMANIA | july 1983 | august 2007 | 94.0% |
Countries producing nuclear power
- United States: 94,718 GW
- France: 61,370 GW
- China: 53,170 GW
- Russia: 27,727 GW
- South Korea: 24,489 GW
- Japan: 16,321 GW
- Canada: 13,624 GW
- Ukraine: 13,107 GW
- Spain: 7,121 GW
- Sweden: 6,935 GW
- India: 6,795 GW
- United Kingdom: 5,883 GW
- Finland: 4,394 GW
- United Arab Emirates: 4,107 GW
- Germany: 4,055 GW
- Czech Republic: 3,934 GW
- Belgium: 3,928 GW
- Pakistan: 3,262 GW
- Switzerland: 2,973 GW
- Slovakia: 2,308 GW
References
ANRE. (2021). Raportul pieței de energie electrică și gaze naturale din România pentru anul 2020. Retrieved from http://www.anre.ro/ro/info-consumatori/rapoarte-si-studii[1] [2] World Nuclear Association. (2021). Nuclear Power in Romania. Retrieved from https://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/country-profiles/countries-o-s/romania.aspx[3] Nuclearelectrica. (n.d.). Cernavodă NPP. Retrieved from https://www.nuclearelectrica.ro/cernavoda-npp/?lang=en World Nuclear Association. (2021). Nuclear Power in Romania. Retrieved from https://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/country-profiles/countries-o-s/romania.aspx[4] World Nuclear Association. (2021). Heavy Water Reactors. Retrieved from https://www.world-nuclear.org/information-library/nuclear-fuel-cycle/nuclear-power-reactors/heavy-water-reactors.aspx[5] [6] Nuclearelectrica. (n.d.). Units 3 and 4. Retrieved from https://www.nuclearelectrica.ro/units-3-and-4/?lang=en[7] World Nuclear News. (2020). Romania ends agreement with China for new Cern- avodă units. Retrieved from https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/Articles/Romania-ends-agreement-with-China-for-new-Cernavod
[8] Institutul de Fizică și Inginerie Nucleară “Horia Hulubei” (IFIN-HH). (n.d.). ALFRED – Advanced Lead Fast Reactor European Demonstrator. Retrieved from https://www.nipne.ro/alice/alfred/en[9] European Commission. (n.d.). The Advanced Lead Fast Reactor European Demonstrator Project. Retrieved from https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/research-topic/advanced-lead-fast-reactor-european-demonstrator-project
