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Hinkley Point A nuclear power station

Hinkley Point A nuclear power station
Hinkley Point A Power Station - geograph.org.uk - 1951616.jpg
Hinkley Point A twin buildings housing the Magnox reactors
Hinkley Point A nuclear power station is located in Somerset
Hinkley Point A nuclear power station
Location of Hinkley Point A nuclear power station in Somerset
Country England
Location Hinkley Point, Somerset, South West England
Coordinates 51°12′31″N 3°08′01″W / 51.208739°N 3.133743°W / 51.208739; -3.133743Coordinates: 51°12′31″N 3°08′01″W / 51.208739°N 3.133743°W / 51.208739; -3.133743
Status Decommissioned
Construction began 1957
Commission date 1965
Decommission date 2000
Owner(s) Central Electricity Generating Board
(1965–1989)
Nuclear Electric
(1989–1996)
Magnox Electric
(1996-2005)
Nuclear Decommissioning Authority
(2005-Present)
Operator(s) Magnox Limited
Nuclear power station
Reactor type Magnox GCR
Reactor supplier English Electric & Babcock & Wilcox Ltd
Fuel type Magnox
Fuel supplier British Nuclear Fuels Limited
Cooling source Sea water Severn Estuary
Power generation
Make and model English Electric
Units decommissioned 2 x 267 MWe
Thermal capacity 2 x 900 MWt
Nameplate capacity 534 MW
1994 output 3,261 GW·h
Website
www.magnoxsites.co.uk/site/hinkley-point-a/
grid reference ST211460

Hinkley Point A nuclear power station is a decommissioned Magnox Nuclear power station located on a 19.4-hectare (48-acre) site in Somerset on the Bristol Channel coast, 5 miles (8 km) west of the River Parrett estuary.

Hinkley Point A was one of three Magnox power stations located close to the mouth of the River Severn and the Bristol Channel, the others being Oldbury, and Berkeley.

The construction of the power station, which was undertaken by a consortium backed by English Electric, Babcock & Wilcox Ltd and Taylor Woodrow Construction, began in 1957. The reactors and the turbines were supplied by English Electric.

The power station, which is currently being decommissioned, had two Magnox reactors, each supplying steam to three English Electric 93.5 MWe turbine generator sets which were all together across both reactors designed to produce 500 MWe net but, after de-rating of the reactor power output due to corrosion concerns, both reactors combined produced 470 MWe net.

The design followed the principles established by the Calder Hall nuclear power station, in that it used a reactor core of natural uranium fuel in Magnox alloy cans within a graphite moderator, all contained in a welded steel pressure vessel. The core was cooled by CO2 pumped by six nominal 7,000 hp (5.2 MW) gas circulators, which transported the hot gas from the core to the six Steam Raising Units (boilers) via steel ducts. The gas circulators could be driven by induction motors supplied with mains electricity or, when steam was available, dedicated variable speed turbo alternator sets. The design pressure of the gas circuit was 185 psig, and the temperature of the gas leaving the reactor was 378 °C, although this was later reduced when the hot CO2 was found to be corroding the mild steel components of the gas circuit more quickly than had been anticipated. Like all Magnox reactors, Hinkley Point A was designed for on-load refuelling so that exhausted fuel elements could be replaced with fresh without shutting down the reactor.


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