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posted by takyon on Tuesday May 01 2018, @09:55PM   Printer-friendly
from the hot-water dept.

The Akademik Lomonosov, under construction since 2007, has been launched. The barge,

has a length of 144 metres (472 ft) and width of 30 metres (98 ft). It has a displacement of 21,500 tonnes and a crew of 69 people. For the power generation, it has two modified KLT-40 naval propulsion reactors together providing up to 70 MW of electricity or 300 MW of heat.

According to Engadget:

Starting from St Petersburg, it will be towed around Norway to a Russian town called Murmansk to take on nuclear fuel. From there, it will head to the Arctic to power the oil-industry town of Pevek, along with a desalination plant and drilling rigs. While it's not the first floating nuclear plant -- the US used one from 1968 to 1975 -- it will be the first one in almost 40 years.

Futurism reports that:

Rosatom, the government-owned Russian energy company that developed the Lomonosov, released a statement saying that the floating reactor will be "invincible" to tsunamis and other natural disasters, and that it has met all the requirements of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The company argues that they have rendered Lomonosov harmless to the environment.

A press release from Greenpeace says:

The floating nuclear power plant was initially supposed to be loaded with nuclear fuel and tested on site in the centre of St. Petersburg. However, due to pressure from the Baltic states and a successful petition organised by Greenpeace Russia, Rosatom, the state-controlled nuclear giant that owns and operates the floating nuclear power plant, decided on 21 July 2017 to move loading and testing to Murmansk.

A 2013 RT article said:

The Akademik Lomonosov is to become the spearhead of a series of floating nuclear power plants, which Russia plans to put into mass-production.
[...]

15 countries, including China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Algeria, Namibia, Cape Verde and Argentina, have previously expressed interest in acquiring such power stations.

The Times of London has an infographic that can be viewed by non-subscribers.

Science Magazine has a loosely related article, Floating Nuclear Plants: Power from the Assembly Line; the first page can be viewed by non-subscribers.


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  • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Tuesday May 01 2018, @10:03PM (4 children)

    Whatever floats their boat, I guess.

    --
    My rights don't end where your fear begins.
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  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 01 2018, @10:08PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 01 2018, @10:08PM (#674335)

    No what we want to know is how this going to bring down Trump. MATCH ME!!!

    • (Score: -1, Spam) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 01 2018, @10:44PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 01 2018, @10:44PM (#674342)

      The man's excessively long aftermule lambasted forth without mercy. After all, how could he possibly have mercy to spare for a mere sow? The woman's screamed continued for hours before she finally succumbed to her wounds. The joys of manhoodism had once again emerged victorious.

  • (Score: 2) by LoRdTAW on Wednesday May 02 2018, @12:58AM (1 child)

    by LoRdTAW (3755) on Wednesday May 02 2018, @12:58AM (#674376) Journal

    Indeed. Barge carrying nuclear power plants are certainly an odd use case for a nuclear plant. I mean, getting all that concrete and uranium buoyant enough to carry a whole barge. Amazing.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 02 2018, @05:08AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 02 2018, @05:08AM (#674459)

      It was the tsunami-proof claim that had me scratching my head.
      (Thinking of the flicks "The Perfect Storm" and "The Poseidon Adventure".)

      .
      FTFS: Murmansk

      That was the destination of the USAian Merchant Marine in a 1943 propaganda flick with Humphrey Bogart.
      Action in the North Atlantic [wikipedia.org]

      In the cast is Alan Hale, Sr. (swashbuckling Errol Flynn's sidekick and father to Gilligan's "Skipper").

      With Nazi submarines patrolling those waters, "The Murmansk Run" was a dangerous assignment.

      .
      Oh, and big props to the AC submitter.
      Crackerjack job!

      -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]