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Nuclearelectrica Romania approves SMR nuclear plant

Nuclearelectrica, a state-owned Romanian nuclear power company, announced on Thursday that it had made a decision to invest in a small modular plant. This could be the first project in Europe using this technology.

The project in central Romania, Doicesti, is to have six reactors with a capacity total of 460MW. It will be using technology from the U.S. NuScale Power. Romanian Nuclearelectrica holds a 50% stake in the joint-venture.

The first reactor is the final investment decision, and the other five are dependent on the success of the technology. The original deadline of 2029 for the finalization of the first reactor was pushed back to?2030.

The cost of the SMR was not specified by the company.

Romania wants to 'cut its carbon emissions' in order to meet EU reduction goals and boost energy security. This is a pressing issue after Russia's invasion into Ukraine in February 2022.

The European Union uses a mixture of gas, coal and renewable energy sources to generate electricity. It has also committed to phase out brown coal under the terms agreed as part of the exchange for European Union funding.

Nuclearelectrica is a company that has two 706-megawatt reactors using Canadian CANDU technologies. These are owned by AtkinsRealis (formerly SNC Lavalin), and account for about a fifth of the EU state's electricity production.

It signed a 3.2-billion-euro ($3.80-billion) main engineering contract in 2024 to build two additional 700 MW reactors by 2032, with a consortium including U.S. Fluor Corp. and Sargent & Lundy.

Two new reactors, as well as the SMR project, would allow Romania to double its nuclear power capacity. This is in order to reduce carbon emissions and meet EU goals for reductions.

(source: Reuters)