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Besnainou said those problems occurred because the nuclear supply chain was essentially dormant for years. Projects in China are meeting schedule, he said. "The key here is to be able to demonstrate that we can build a new reactor on time and on budget," he said. "Once we do that, the renaissance as a whole is golden." Engineers want not just reactors based off the same design but a more uniform method of building them. Instead of assembling the power plant piece by piece, the AP1000 would be assembled by hoisting more than 300 prefabricated blocks into place. Some are as small as a desk, others as big as a six-story building. Westinghouse says the technique is supposed to allow for better and quicker assembly. Construction has yet to begin. The NRC must first certify the reactor design as safe. Because of rules adopted after the Sept. 11 terror attacks, Westinghouse needed to engineer a concrete-and-steel shield building so the reactor would be protected from the impact of a large airliner. The NRC is still determining whether that shield meets its requirements. A final decision on the entire reactor is not expected until September 2011. A previous version of the reactor was approved and is being built in China. It was never constructed in the United States for lack of commercial demand. Federal regulators have not given approval to break ground on a new plant in a generation, mainly because power companies did not want them. A bad economy in the late 1970s curtailed the demand for energy and made it expensive to build. After the 1979 accident at Three Mile Island, a plant in Middletown, Pa., nuclear plants already under construction needed costly redesigns to comply with new safety rules. Issues must still be resolved with several of the reactors before they can be built. Arnold Gundersen, a Vermont-based engineer hired by groups opposed to the Plant Vogtle project, has warned regulators that the steel container housing the reactor vessel
-- which contains highly radioactive fuel -- could corrode, causing a radioactive leak if the reactor system ever suffered a breach. Westinghouse says the steel container is thick enough to avoid damage and would be frequently inspected to identify problems. Even skeptics such as Gundersen see benefits to standardization, but they worry about what will happen if there is a rush to build with little room to learn from experience. "Right now, nobody is learning from the first guy's mistakes," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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