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Presentation given during REMOO conference 2012
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An Architect Engineer’s response toAn Architect Engineer s response to Fukushima
Dr. Alexander Wolski, Ljubljana, 2012-11-16
Industry LeaderREMOO, 2012
Ljubljanay
2 19-Sep-13
WorleyParsons’ History of GrowthREMOO, 2012
Ljubljanay y
WorleyParsons in 2004 $ 0 5 BWorleyParsons in 2004 – $ 0.5 BToday – $ 7.4 B
18931960 1980 1990 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2011
143 Legacy Companies
3 1011R2926
Global ReachREMOO, 2012
Ljubljana
Global Reach
A combination of extensive global resources, world recognized technicalA combination of extensive global resources, world recognized technical expertise and deep local knowledge
40,800 personnel |163 offices | 41 countries
We Operate inREMOO, 2012
Ljubljanap
PowerAdvanced Coal
Minerals, Metals & ChemicalsBase Minerals
Infrastructure & Environment
HydrocarbonsArctic Advanced Coal
Coal Gas Turbine Based PlantsNuclear
CoalChemicalsFerrous MetalsAlumina
Resource InfrastructureUrban InfrastructurePorts & Marine T i l
Gas ProcessingHeavy Oil & Oil SandsINTECSEALNG Nuclear
Renewable EnergyTransmission Networks
AluminaAluminiumIron OreGas Cleaning
TerminalsWater & WastewaterTransportEnvironment
Onshore Production & Enhanced Oil RecoveryPipeline SystemsOffshore TopsidesPetrochemicalsRefiningSulphur TechnologyUnconventional Oil & Gas
WorleyParsons is a recognized leader in successful project delivery with distinguished technical experience, project management and control system, know-how and resource, which enables the group to provide the customers with a wide range of decisions tailored to suit the project requirements on each stage.
Power Customer Sector100Years of Power Experience Power Customer Sector192,000 MWGenerating Capacity Worldwide
1,800+ highly qualified engineering personnelWork from 4 company power hubs in
g p y
p y pUSA, Europe, Singapore and Australia Services provided for: • Nuclear• Nuclear • Coal-Fired Plants • Gas Turbine/Combined Cycle • Integrated Gasification Combined
Cycle (IGCC) • Renewable – Solar, Wind, Biomass • Air Quality Control • Transmission networks • Operations & Maintenance
740Power Generating Units
Operations & Maintenance18Nuclear Units Engineer of Record
Engineer of Record – Consultant Basic Design
Nuclear Plant Units Power MWe Client Role
1 Belene NPP 2 Units x 1000 MWe 2 000 Natsionalna Elektricheska Kompania (NEK) Architect Engineer1 Belene NPP 2 Units x 1000 MWe 2 000 Natsionalna Elektricheska Kompania (NEK) Architect Engineer
2 Crystal River NPP Unit 3 855 Florida Power Corporation A/E of Record
3 Erie NPP (cancelled) 2 Units x 1260 MWe 2 520 Central Area Power Coordinating Group A/E of Record
4 Ko-Ri 2 NPP Unit 2 600 Westinghouse Electric Corporation (Owner Korea Electric Company) A/E of RecordElectric Company)
5 Kozloduy NPP 2 Units x 1000 MWe 2 000 Kozloduy Nuclear Power Plant Consultant Basic Design & Execution
6 Krsko NPP, Slovenia Unit 1 630 Nuklearna Elektrarna Krsko A/E of Record
7 Limerick NPP 2 Units x 1100 MWe 2 200 Exelon (formerly Philadelphia Electric Company PECO) Consulting ServicesPECO) g
8 Mihama 1&2 NPP, Japan 1x340 + 1x525 865 Westinghouse Electric Corporation (Owner Kansai Electric Power Company) A/E of Record
9 Mochovce 3&4 NPP 2 Units x 440 Mwe 880 Slovenske Elektrarne Consultant Basic Design & Feasibility
W ti h El t i C ti (O K i10 Ohi 1&2 NPP, Japan 2 Units x 1100 MWe 2 200 Westinghouse Electric Corporation (Owner Kansai Electric Power Company) A/E of Record
11 Peach Bottom 2&3 NPP 2 Units x 800 MWe 1 600 Exelon (formerly Philadelphia Electric Company PECO) Re-start A/E
12 Perry 1&2 NPP (U2 cancelled) 1 Unit x 1200 MWe 1 200 The Cleveland Electric Illuminating Company A/E of Record
13 R.E.Ginna NPP 1 Unit x 490 MWe 490 Westinghouse Electric Corporation A/E of Record
14 Susquehanna NPP 2 Units x 1100 MWe 2 200 Pennsylvannia Power & Light Company Consulting, Continuing Services A/E
15 Three Mile Island I 1 Unit x 870 Mwe 870 General Public Utilities (Nuclear) A/E of Record
16 Vi il C S 1 U it 900 M 900 S th C li El t i & G C A/E f R d16 Virgil C. Summer 1 Unit x 900 Mwe 900 South Carolina Electric & Gas Company A/E of Record
Total: 25 22 010
WorleyParsonsN l C t f E ll
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Nuclear Centers of Excellence
► EU Hub ► Canada Hub ► USA Hub• Approximately 560 employees
and staff augmentation support• Site selection and site hazards• Feasibility Studies, Licensing
• Approximately 100 employees and staff augmentation support
• Engineering and Design
• Approximately 450 employees and staff augmentation support
• Proven excellence in nuclear y , gand preconstruction services
• New build/Refurbishment Owner’s Engineer, design support
Support to Canadian nuclear program and main Canadian utilities
PM role and design• Vast US NRC regulations
application experience• New plant services
• Safety Assessment and Verification Analyses including stress tests
• Major nuclear PM experience accumulated last 10 years
(deployment, planning, COLA and ESP)
• Existing plant services• Decommissioning
8
accumulated last 10 years• Main centre for IAEA and EU
regulations application experience
• Post-Fukushima evaluations and modernizations
WorleyParsons Nuclear ServicesREMOO, 2012
Ljubljana
What We DoWe guide and support our clients through all 55+g pp gphases of a nuclear power plant lifecycle:• Pre-project phase – Czech, South Africa, Egypt,
Bulgaria, Russia, Saudi Arabia, USA, Slovenia
Years of Industry Experience
g• Project decision-making – Jordan, Egypt, Bulgaria,
Armenia, Slovakia, Russia • Construction – USA, Japan, Korea, Slovenia
18 Nuclear UnitsEngineer of Record, p , ,
• Operation:− Power-uprates, plant upgrades and modernization –
Canada, USA, Mexico, Slovenia, Sweden, Bulgaria,
g
30,000+MW Nuclear Projects, , , , , g ,
Russia and FSU countries (Lithuania, Ukraine, Armenia)
− Post-Fukushima Experience – Bulgaria, Turkey, Russia USA
MW Nuclear Projects
Russia, USA− License renewal – USA, Canada− SF and RAW management - USA, UK
D i i i USA
9
• Decommissioning – USA
Post FukushimaTh A id t
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
The AccidentCause of the DamageHuge Tsunami
46 MeterGrid Line
① Loss of Off site Power① Loss of Off-site Power due to the Earthquake
ReactorBuilding
TurbineBuilding
Building
Tsunami (estimated 14m)About20M
About40M
GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy
Elevation: about 10m
② Diesel Generator Inoperable due to the Tsunami
Diesel Generator5.4 ~5.7m
Breakwater
Seawater Pump
due to the TsunamiSeawater level
European Stress TestsC i ti t th E C i i
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Report to EC – Main Findings
Communication to the European Commission
(1) IAEA / WENRA to issue guidance on assessment of natural hazards and margin assessmentg
(2) PWR primary circuit depressurization to protect containment integrity (3) Installation of containment filtered venting systems (4) Passive hydrogen mitigation under SA conditions(5) Seismic Monitoring Systems to be installed(6) Measures to cope with SBO as ultimate limiting case (mobile and fixed SBO-(6) Measures to cope with SBO as ultimate limiting case (mobile and fixed SBO
PS, secure storage for mobile equipment(7) UHS not identified as key problem, but alternative UHS to be strengthened(8) M lti it id t t i i i l d i ( t ff d i t t b i d)(8) Multi-unit accident not in original design (staff and equipment to be increased)(9) Instrumentation and Communication means shall withstand severe accident(10) Enhancement of SAM tools (procedures, training, equipment, communication)( ) (p , g, q p , )
US NRCN T T k F
NTTF Recommendations (12 7 2011)
Near Term Task Force
NTTF Recommendations (12.7.2011)Regulatory Framework • Establishment of a logical, systematic and coherent
regulatory framework for adequate protection
E i P t ti Re e al ation of seismic and flooding design baseEnsuring Protection • Re-evaluation of seismic and flooding design base• Enhancement in prevention and mitigation of seismically
induced fires and floods
E h i Miti ti St th i SBO bilit i b d d i tEnhancing Mitigation • Strengthening SBO capability in beyond-design events• Hardened vents for MARK 1/2 containments• Identify improvements for H2 control and mitigation
Additi f di h d d SFP i t t ti• Addition of diverse hardened SFP instrumentation• SFP make-up capability• On-Site Emergency Preparedness (EOP, SAMG, EDMG)
Emergency Preparedness
• Specifically addressing SBO and multi-unit events in all emergency plans
Improve NRC • Stronger regulatory oversight focusing attention on Improve NRC Programs
g g y g gdefense-in-depth requirements
US NRCI l t ti
NNTF Recommendations - Prioritization
Implementation
NNTF Recommendations PrioritizationTier 1 To be implemented without unnecessary delay, required skills and
resources are available:Seismic and flooding hazard re evaluation• Seismic and flooding hazard re-evaluation
• Seismic and flooding walk-downs• Hardened vents for MARK 1 & 2• SFP Instrumentation
Tier 2 To be implemented once further technical assessments have been performed and critical skills and resources have been ensured availablep
Tier 3 • Implementation highly dependent on results of tier 1 and 2 implementation
• Coherent integration of EOP SAMG EDMGCoherent integration of EOP, SAMG, EDMG
Rule- making for Tier 1 implementation underway (today 3 recommendations to be i l t d b f 2017)implemented before 2017)
Post-Fukushima experienceREMOO, 2012
Ljubljana
Performing “Stress tests” for Kozloduy NPP:
p
• Full stress test analysis of Units 3 & 4
• Development of stress test report for Units 5 & 6
• Participation in the international stress test report review missionsp p
Performing “Design Stress Tests” of Generation III reactor designs:• Bulgaria – A92 (including participation in IAEA mission)
• Russia AES 2006• Russia – AES 2006
• Turkey – AES 2006
Development of Hardened vents for BWR containments• In response to one of the high-priority recommendations of the NRC
Active involvement in “Post-Fukushima” work of international expert missions and work groups:• IAEA expert workshops and missions
• ASME Task Force on Response to the Fukushima events
• ASME Code Case Sub- Committee
• Support the Boiling Water Reactor Owner’s Group
Stress Test ReportsW l P A l i d R lt
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Reviewed and analyzed all EU Progress and Final Stress Tests reports + id tifi d l t d th d l t i l di IAEA id
WorleyParsons Analysis and Results
identified related methodology reports, including IAEA guidance• Developed an activity & task-level work breakdown structure (WBS) for performing
stress testsE t t d ll id tifi d b t i t ( h th l d f d d• Extracted all identified robustness improvements (whether already performed, under implementation, planned or proposed) and developed categorized Improvements Database
Stress Test MethodologyD t il d I t ti M l
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
► Requirements? ENSREG “Stress T t R t St t ”
a Detailed Instruction Manual
Test Report Structure” ► Why? Every utility considered
relevant different aspects and h d h i d hmethods; no harmonized approach
► Basis? Activities performed by each participating Utility to answer the p p g yspecific requirement
► What? Activity & task-level work breakdown structure (WBS) SPECIFY( )
► Purpose? Basis / guideline for future stress tests & safety assessments based on EU best-
DESCRIBE
CONSIDER
DETERMINE
practise, using set of clearly identified activities
ASSESS
ESTIMATE
INVESTIGATE
EVALUATE
Improvements DatabaseG i C t i ti d C R f i
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Grouping, Categorization and Cross-Referencing
SEISMIC
►> 1500 d t i t GeneralFLOODINGGeneralFlooding protection engineering features/structures, e.g. dykesEXTREME WEATHER CONDITIONSELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
►> 1500 raw data improvements►Condensed to 209 across 72 plants
Almaraz ■■
Asco ■■
Emergency diesel generator (EDG) (Primary)Mobile diesel generator (MDG)…BatteriesHEAT REMOVAL SYSTEMSGeneral
Belene ■■
Borssele ■
Safety injection systems…Spent fuel poolMobile pumpsACCIDENT MANAGEMENTGeneral
…
…
PWR / VVER ■BWR �
GeneralStaffingProcedures (Development & updating)…Hydrogen analysis and mitigationEx-vessel coolingOTHER / GENERAL
Vandellos II ■
Zaporizhzhya ■■■■■■
PHWR ♦UNGG / AGR / Magnox ○
RBMK ‡
OTHER / GENERAL…
RBMK ‡
Improvements Database Interface - Overview
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Interface - Overview
Improvements DatabaseA I t Sit
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Average Improvements per Site
Improvements Database/Matrix Results
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Improvements Database/Matrix Results
COUNT BY CATEGORY
SEISMIC (GENERAL)
HEAT REMOVAL
OTHER
EXTREME WEATHER CONDITIONS
FLOODING
ELECTRICAL POWER
EXTREME WEATHER CONDITIONS
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500
ACCIDENT MANAGEMENT
Improvements DatabaseImprovements by Category and Reactor Type
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Improvements by Category and Reactor Type
Improvements DatabaseTop 30 Improvements
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Top 30 Improvements
Improvements DatabaseTop 10 Improvements
REMOO, 2012Ljubljana
Improvement BWR GCR PWR VVER Others1 Seismic survivability of relevant SSCs 99 99 11 33 11
Top 10 Improvements
1 Seismic survivability of relevant SSCs 99 99 11 33 11
2Seismic Margin Assessment (SMA) / Seismic -PSA 24 44 33 14 11
SSC used for flooding protection (dykes,
3mountable flood walls, building seals, air inlets, doors, flood valves, check valves, mobile pumps, etc.)
13 88 66 11 31
4Diesel and lube oil supplies (volume, versatility,
40 17 22 29 774pp ( , y,
diversity, etc.) 40 17 22 29 77
5 SAMGs 11 53 99 11 26
6Add more EDGs (preferably separated / independent) 60 14 44 43 15independent)
7Filtered containment venting (pressure relief), possibly seismically qualified 44 24 29 22 27
8Access to site and specific areas, transport and l i ti t ft i f t t d 22 33 34 49 168 logistics management after infrastructure damage due to external events (incl. weather)
22 33 34 49 16
9EFW bunkered system protected against floods and earthquakes 111 23 5 78 19
10 Flooding survivability of relevant SSCs 10 5 23 46 73
24Fukushima EventI t th “N l R i ”Impact on the “Nuclear Renaissance”
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