Commercial operations of the Kudankulam nuclear power plant’s first unit is expected to take more time with the Nuclear Power Corporation setting the deadline till July 22 for commissioning the 1,000 MW unit.
Nuclear Power Corporation of India is implementing the 2,000 MW Kudankulam project in Tamil Nadu. The plant, which has two units having 1,000 MW generation capacity each, is being set up with the technical co-operation of Russia.
In a petition submitted to the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC), Nuclear Power Corporation has sought permission to inject ‘infirm power’ into the grid from the first unit up to the date of commercial operation or till July 22, 2014.
CERC has granted permission for the same after taking into consideration submissions made by Nuclear Power Corporation.
Successful testing of reactor, turbine generator, feed water pump system and the control and protection system of different transients are mandatory as per Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, before declaring Commercial Operation Date (COD) of the project.
COD refers to the day from which the unit starts full commercial generation of electricity.
As per rules, a generator can inject infirm power into the grid before the COD only for a maximum of six months from the date of first synchronisation of the concerned unit. For the same, the entity has to also seek approval from the Regional Load Despatch Centre (RLDC).
Generally infirm power refers to supply that is not committed and mainly fed into the grid as part of testing purposes.
In the case of Kudankulam project’s first unit, the synchronisation was carried out on October 22, 2013 but commercial operation has not been declared for various reasons.
Against this backdrop, Nuclear Power Corporation had requested CERC for permission to inject infirm power into the grid up to the date of commercial operation of first unit or till July 22, 2014.
As per Nuclear Power Corp’s website, the first unit of 1,000 MW is expected to commercially operate from June 2014.
Going by the schedule, commissioning tests under Phase C1 and Phase C2 were completed on January 3 and April 5, respectively, while Phase C3 activities were to start from April 25.
The Phase C3 related to commissioning involves test of reactor, turbine generator, secondary feed water system, control systems and full load rejection tests, among others, CERC said.