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China Civilian Nuclear Industry, Technology, Exports and Supply Chain: News & Discussions

I guess, I much as the number of China's nuclear warheads (which I believe should be in lower to mid-1000s), an equal, if not more, priority must be given to developing advanced means to ensure the safe and speedy delivery of the warheads to their designated destination in times of serious crisis. Sitting on a stockpile won't help much if the opponent is as capable as the US. In that case, China should win the high-speed preparation, maneuverability and delivery race.

I'm afraid that will not be enough. You have to have enough so that if MAD does take place, your enemy and all its allies will not survive. Also you have to keep in mind that not all nuclear ICBM will reach its target. Thus that is why 5000+ is required.
 
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I guess, I much as the number of China's nuclear warheads (which I believe should be in lower to mid-1000s), an equal, if not more, priority must be given to developing advanced means to ensure the safe and speedy delivery of the warheads to their designated destination in times of serious crisis. Sitting on a stockpile won't help much if the opponent is as capable as the US. In that case, China should win the high-speed preparation, maneuverability and delivery race.


True bro, even according to conservative estimate (check citation provided by @Martian2 ), China already had at least 294 megatons of thermonuclear destructive power quite some years ago, about equivalent to 20,000 times of Hiroshima. The actual capacity should be much higher than this by now, however since not being a signatory of the START's (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties), and defense budget is low (only ~1.25% of GDP p.a.), China should maintain opaqueness in data related to nuclear stockpile.


While maintaining current fiscal budget level, priorities should be given to techs of delivery e.g. missile/MIRV/HGV tech, platform tech (SSBN, strategic bombers, improved survival of land-based launchers), and techs on defense e.g ABM, ASAT, space-based systems.
 
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I'm afraid that will not be enough. You have to have enough so that if MAD does take place, your enemy and all its allies will not survive. Also you have to keep in mind that not all nuclear ICBM will reach its target. Thus that is why 5000+ is required.

True bro, even according to conservative estimate (check citation provided by @Martian2 ), China already had at least 294 megatons of thermonuclear destructive power quite some years ago, about equivalent to 20,000 times of Hiroshima. The actual capacity should be much higher than this by now, however since not being a signatory of the START's (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties), and defense budget is low (only ~1.25% of GDP p.a.), China should maintain opaqueness in data related to nuclear stockpile.


While maintaining current fiscal budget level, priorities should be given to techs of delivery e.g. missile/MIRV/HGV tech, platform tech (SSBN, strategic bombers, improved survival of land-based launchers), and techs on defense e.g ABM, ASAT, space-based systems.

I think in the near to medium term, China's nuclear capability will grow moderately in quantity while greater effort will be given to quality of delivery systems.

I am not sure how much credit this news could be given. But it emerged recently:

China Conducts Fifth Test of Hypersonic Glide Vehicle | Washington Free Beacon
 
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Why not 20,000, to ensure a total annihilation of your enemies America and Russia?
20,000 were the amount of nuclear warheads the United States and USSR possessed during the cold war.

Actually the US was at 30,000 at one point.
 
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Iran sees China major partner in post-nuclear-deal era: Rouhani
August 29, 2015

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Iranian President Hassan Rouhani speaks at a press conference at the presidential palace in Tehran, Iran, Aug 29, 2015. Iran considers China its major partner in the country's development in the aftermath of the nuclear deal reached in the Austrian capital of Vienna last month, Iran's President Hassan Rouhani saidon Saturday. [Xinhua/Iran's Presidential Office]

Iran considers China its major partner in the country's development in the aftermath of the nuclear deal reached in the Austrian capital of Vienna last month, Iran's President Hassan Rouhani said on Saturday.

From the beginning of current Iranian government, "I had some meetings with the Chinese president including the meeting in Shanghai conference, where we held comprehensive discussions. We also met in Bishkek of Kyrgyzstan and in the recent trip to Russia," Rouhani said.

"Fortunately, our relations with China are at good levels ... and the trend of our relations is progressive," Rouhani told the Xinhua reporter in a press conference.

"There are myriad of plans ahead in Iran in which the Chinese can participate and have a share," he said.

Rouhani referred to the recent nuclear deal between Iran and the world powers, saying that based on the deal, for instance, Iran's heavy water Arak reactor should be improved and modernized with the participation of China and one of the P5+1 countries, probably the United States.

Also, "Iran and China have formed seven working groups which are tasked with studying the development of our future relations, and I hope that we would be able to materialize the plans in the agenda of ties," he said.

China is one of the most important countries in the world and Iran is determined to develop its ties with the country as well as with other regional states, he added.

In his recent trip to China, Iranian Vice President Ali-Akbar Salehi said that Iran looks forward to expanding practical cooperation with China in various fields.

Salehi, also Head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI), said Iran is fully ready to foster its nuclear cooperation with China, according to official IRNA news agency.

China has played a constructive role in the process of past negotiations over Iran's nuclear issue, he was quoted as saying

Salehi said the relations between Iran and China has entered a new stage following the nuclear deal, adding that the two countries have held several negotiations on the construction of a number of 100-megawatt multi-dimensional power plants by China in Iran.

@IR-TR , @Serpentine
 
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China in deal to develop nuclear reactor in Essex

7 September 2015 4:25am

by Caitlin Morrison

aliyun.php

Energy secretary Amber Rudd

CHINA is set to build a prototype nuclear reactor at an Essex site, with the government expected to give the project the go-ahead next month.

French energy firm EDF has been trying to offload its Bradwell development site in Essex since 2009, when it first began the sale process as a condition of its purchase of British Energy.

The sale of Bradwell comes as part of a wide-ranging civil nuclear co-operation agreement between the UK and China, reached during Chinese Premier Li Keqiang’s visit to the UK in June 2014.

When the agreement was announced, the department of energy & climate change (Decc) said it paved the way for Chinese firms to invest in Hinkley Point C.

A Decc spokesman said of the expected Bradwell sale: “Negotiations are ongoing and whatever the outcome it will need to be a good deal for the UK.”

EDF was forced to admit last week that Hinkley has been hit by delays and will not start generating power in 2023, as previously expected.

Discussions around the level of Chinese investment in the Somerset-based power station are also ongoing.

In 2013, EDF said it would retain a 45-50 per cent stake in Hinkley, with China General Nuclear Corporation and China National Nuclear Corporation taking a combined stake of up to 40 per cent. Other investors were expected to take on the remainder.

However, EDF boss Jean-Bernard Levy said last week that no further investors would be confirmed before the final investment decision is made.

China in deal to develop nuclear reactor in Essex | City A.M.
 
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China to build nuclear reactor in UK
September 15, 2015

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The construction site of a nuclear power project of China National Nuclear Corp in Fuqing county, Fujian province. The company and China General Nuclear Power Group will support Hinkley Point C project in the United Kingdom. [Photo/Xinhua]

Building a nuclear project in Britain with Chinese investment and technology is win-win for the two countries.

British Prime Minister David Cameron is set to sign a landmark deal next month to allow China to build a nuclear reactor in Essex in the southeast of England, local media reported. The plant would be the first Chinese-designed and operated facility in a Western developed countries.

As the British government aims to replace its aging fossil-fuel plants with low-carbon alternatives, the Chinese involvement is key to its nuclear plans.

The Chinese design is expected to be capable of producing 1 gigawatt of electricity-enough to satisfy the needs of 1 million British households.

It is very clear that nuclear projects require large up-front capital investment and take a long time to actually begin earning revenue from generating electricity, so a pure financial investor in a nuclear project may feel more uncertainty about future returns earned only through operational profit.

If an investor participates in a nuclear power plant's development, as well as the construction, operation, fuel cycle and decommissioning phases, then there is a chance to earn returns from the provision of a range of services as the project progresses.

In recent years, Chinese nuclear companies have been in discussion with various companies, research centers and organizations in the UK to invest and also localize its technology for the British market.

Talks started with the Hinkley Point C project, led by Electricite de France SA, a major electrical producer largely owned by the French government.

While this project was already in the advanced stages of planning, a major development occurred in 2013 when British energy firm Centrica decided to withdraw its 20 percent stake from the project due to escalating cost estimates and delays.

EDF Group and two Chinese nuclear companies, China General Nuclear Power Group and China National Nuclear Corp, reached an agreement in 2013. The two Chinese companies will support Hinkley Point C, and they would also be junior partners, and cover part of the costs, for a follow-on plant at Sizewell. EDF would lead the construction and operation of both sites.

In return, EDF will support the two Chinese companies in the development of a new atomic plant at Bradwell B, the site of a partially decommissioned nuclear power station in the UK. The French would become a minority partner and assist the Chinese through Britain's approval process for a new reactor design.

The UK nuclear regulator is one of the strictest in the world, and if Chinese firms successfully pass their design through the UK's generic design assessment, they will be in a good position to export to other countries.

While there are concerns about the safety of Chinese nuclear technology, China actually has the world's largest nuclear plant building program and rich experience, with 21 nuclear power reactors operating at eight separate sites and a further 28 under construction.

One important step for the export of Chinese nuclear technology took place in December, when China National Nuclear Corp's ACP1000 nuclear power reactor passed the International Atomic Energy Agency's Generic Reactor Safety Review.

Receiving this safety review recognition from the IAEA puts ACP1000 on a level playing field with other third-generation nuclear technology globally, and adds to its credibility in the export process.

Based on these, Chinese investment and technology to be used in the British nuclear project is beneficial for both sides.
 
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Chancellor George Osborne has announced that the UK will guarantee a £2bn deal under which China will invest in the Hinkley Point nuclear power station.

Mr Osborne, who is in China, said the deal would pave the way for a final investment decision on the delayed project by French energy company EDF.

He said it would also enable greater collaboration between Britain and China on the construction of nuclear plants.

Reports suggest one such reactor could be built at Bradwell-on-Sea in Essex.

Energy Secretary Amber Rudd told the Financial Times she wanted Beijing to take the lead in developing new nuclear plants in Britain.

She said China was expected to lead the construction of a Beijing-designed nuclear station at the Essex site.

UK guarantees £2bn nuclear plant deal as China investment announced - BBC News
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/52462048-5f8b-11e5-a28b-50226830d644.html#axzz3mTZHPE2A
Osborne expected to back Chinese nuclear power station in Essex | Environment | The Guardian
 
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Hi, Edison. Long time no see.

Need to be observed as we invest the nuclear power station. I think risk management may be kept up with for the country UK.
 
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This is a huge project with total investment well exceeding 100 billion yuan。:D

China-France to increase nuclear fuel recycling

2015-09-23 20:40:02 | Editor: huaxia

BEIJING, Sept. 23 (Xinhua) -- The China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) said on Wednesday that it is choosing a site for a Sino-France nuclear power project featuring mass nuclear fuel recycling.

The construction by the CNNC and the France-based Areva is expected to start in 2020 and finish in 2030.

Nuclear recycling refers reprocessing materials which has already been used and recovering unused uranium and plutonium.

The project will reprocess 800 tonnes of materials from domestic nuclear power stations.

The project will also store the spent fuel, manage nuclear power station discharges and solidify liquid waste via vitrification to make safe, clean nuclear power.

It is estimated that spent fuel produced by China's pressurized water reactors will add up to 23,500 tonnes by 2030.

Yang Changli, vice general manager of the CNNC, said that the project will ease the pressure of storing spent fuel around 2030, improve safety of spent fuel administration and speed up reactor development.

China-France to increase nuclear fuel recycling - Xinhua | English.news.cn
 
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Hi, Edison. Long time no see.

Need to be observed as we invest the nuclear power station. I think risk management may be kept up with for the country UK.

Long time no see bro! I was on a trip a few days back and can't actually get enough time and stable Internet connection.
 
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China to operate 110 nuclear power plants by 2030; to build 6-8 plants annually for 5 years

By IANS | 16 Oct, 2015, 01.21PM IST

browse.php

China will invest 500 billion yuan ($78 billion) on domestically-developed nuclear power plants, the China Daily reported.

BEIJING: China is set to build six to eight nuclear power plants annually for the next five years and operate 110 plants by 2030, a plan authorities believe would meet the urgent need for clean energy, the media reported on Friday.

China will invest 500 billion yuan ($78 billion) on domestically-developed nuclear power plants, the China Daily reported.

Zhou Dadi, vice director of the China Energy Research Society, on Thursday said that China is capable of building and managing a large number of nuclear power plants.

"After decades of development, China boasts advanced technology and valuable experience to build more nuclear power plants," he added.

According to analysts, the country plans to increase its electricity generation capacity to 58 gigawatts by 2020, three times the 2014 level.

More than 110 nuclear power plants will be put into operation by the end of 2030, exceeding the number of plants in the US.

The urgent need for clean energy to meet increasing power demand and reduce carbon dioxide emissions has led to the renewed development of nuclear projects, a nuclear safety expert said.

Zhou added that China generates only about two percent of its total electricity from nuclear power plants while the average global proportion is 14 percent, adding that China is in a great position to develop its nuclear projects.

China to operate 110 nuclear power plants by 2030; to build 6-8 plans annually for 5 years - The Economic Times
 
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I see China leading the way in case of using renewable energy and non polluting sources in the near future.. The Chinese people I've talked to are all environment conscious and want progress to go hand in hand with sustainability and all.
 
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China Details Next-Gen Nuclear Reactor Program

MIT Technology | Posted: 17 Oct 2015, 10:45

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Chinese and American scientists meet at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, scene of the historic molten-salt reactor experiment in the 1960s, to mark their collaboration on next-generation nuclear power.

A group of nuclear scientists and entrepreneurs gathered this week at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, in Tennessee, to observe the 50th anniversary of the molten-salt reactor experiment—a program carried out at Oak Ridge in the 1960s to build a novel nuclear reactor. Molten-salt reactors use liquid, rather than solid fuel rods, as the fuel to produce the nuclear reactions that heat water to make steam and, in turn, electricity. They have several advantages over conventional light-water reactors in terms of safety, anti-proliferation, and economics, and are enjoying a renaissance as the world searches for sources of low-cost, low-carbon energy.

The 50th anniversary workshop, which included presentations from reactor developers including TerraPower, Flibe Energy, Moltex Energy, and Terrestrial Energy, as well as the large utility Southern Power, marked the largest and most significant gathering to date of the people working to bring this innovative yet decades-old technology to commercialization.

Among the presenters was Xu Hongjie, the director of the molten-salt reactor program at the Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics. Under the auspices of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, SINAP is collaborating with Oak Ridge to advance research on both salt-cooled reactors (which use molten salts to transfer heat and to cool the reactor) and salt-fueled reactors (in which the fuel, where the energy-producing nuclear reactions occur, is dissolved within the salt coolant). Signed in December 2011, the Shanghai-Oak Ridge effort has been the subject of controversy and speculation among the nuclear power community, particularly those promoting advanced technologies such as molten-salt reactors and the use of thorium, an alternative nuclear fuel that is cleaner, safer, and more abundant than uranium.

At Oak Ridge this week, Xu outlined a roadmap that shows that China is further along than any other advanced reactor R&D program in the world. China, which still gets nearly three-quarters of its electricity from burning coal, is racing to develop low-carbon energy sources, including both conventional nuclear plants and advanced systems such as molten-salt reactors. The largest emitter of greenhouse gases in the world, China aims to more than double its nuclear capacity by 2020, according to the World Nuclear Association.

Xu detailed a multi-stage plan to build demonstration reactors in the next five years and deploy them commercially beginning around 2030. The institute plans to build a 10-megawatt prototype reactor, using solid fuel, by 2020, along with a two-megawatt liquid-fuel machine that will demonstrate the thorium-uranium fuel cycle. (Thorium, which is not fissile, is converted inside a reactor into a fissile isotope of uranium that produces energy and sustains the nuclear reaction.)

In all, there are 700 nuclear engineers working on the molten-salt reactor at SINAP, Xu said, a number that dwarfs other advanced-reactor research programs around the world. The team has a preliminary design for a 10-megawatt thorium-based molten-salt reactor, and has mastered some of the technical challenges involved in building and running such reactors, such as the preparation of high-purity molten salts and the control of tritium, a dangerous isotope of hydrogen that can be used in the making of nuclear weapons. Limiting the production of tritium is a key research goal for the development of molten-salt reactors.

While most of the audience at Oak Ridge was familiar with the outlines of the Chinese program, the level of sophistication and the progress to date were startling to many listeners.

"It’s very surprising how far they’ve come in four years,” said John Kutsch, the vice president for business development at Terrestrial Energy, which is developing its own version of a molten-salt reactor. “That shows you what throwing hundreds of researchers at a project will do to speed progress.”

The Chinese program alarms some American researchers, who view China as a rival in the nuclear arena and are opposed to the sharing of technology that was originally developed in the United States. China is seeking not only to build reactors to supply domestic power but also to become a major supplier of nuclear technology to the world market. When the U.S.-China agreement was first announced, some commentators described the collaboration as a dangerous, even treacherous, form of technology transfer.

Viewed from a broader perspective, the development of safe, economical nuclear power technology that can be commercialized and deployed rapidly would be a huge achievement in the struggle to limit global climate change, regardless of which country gets there first. Faced with a long path to funding and licensing their technology in the United States, many developers of next-generation nuclear reactors have said they will likely test their machines in other countries, including China.

Under the collaboration agreement, says David Holcomb, the principal investigator from Oak Ridge on the program, “both institutions are seeking to more rapidly advance salt-cooled reactors. As such, the coӧperative work is jointly approved by both governments.”

Like scientists everywhere, Xu is also faced with securing funding for the next phases of the program. SINAP’s molten-salt reactor research is funded through 2017, he says; beyond that the institute is seeking new funding from the central government, the Shanghai government, and the private sector. SINAP also recently signed an agreement with Fangda Group, a major Chinese conglomerate that produces carbon products, iron and steel, and chemicals, to help develop molten-salt coolants for the reactors.

"I’m very confident” that SINAP will be able to carry its molten-salt reactor program to commercialization, Xu says. “Because, you see, in general the Chinese government intends to support the development of future technologies for nuclear energy. And the China market is very big for nuclear energy technologies.”

China Details Next-Gen Nuclear Reactor Program - OFweek News
 
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