EDF finds radioactive leak at EDF Civaux 1 reactor, says no safety risk

French utility EDF discovered a radioactive leak last Wednesday in the primary cooling circuit of its Civaux nuclear plant in south-west France, the company said, adding there was no safety risk and no radioactivity was measured outside the plant.


Reuters | Updated: 07-11-2022 23:41 IST | Created: 07-11-2022 23:41 IST
EDF finds radioactive leak at EDF Civaux 1 reactor, says no safety risk

French utility EDF discovered a radioactive leak last Wednesday in the primary cooling circuit of its Civaux nuclear plant in south-west France, the company said, adding there was no safety risk and no radioactivity was measured outside the plant. The leak could delay the reactor's planned Jan. 8 restart, an industry source familiar with the situation told Reuters on Monday. EDF said in a statement on Thursday last week that the leak happened during a hydraulics test aimed at verifying the sealing and resistance of piping, welding and valves of the reactor's primary circuit.

"As the pressure reached 190 bar and the temperature 95 degrees Celsius, steam has escaped into the reactor building and simultaneous depressurisation of the primary circuit was registered," EDF said. The company said no staff had been in proximity of the leak while it happened, that the incident had caused no injury or contamination of people and that no radiological activity had been registered outside the plant.

"A leak on the circuit has been confirmed. The water was caught in dedicated recipients and is confined within the reactor building," EDF said, adding that there had been no impact on plant safety. Nuclear regulator ASN was not immediately available for comment.

The Civaux 1 1500 megawatt reactor has been shut since August 2021 for scheduled 10-year maintenance. Work on the plant had already been delayed by a week and EDF now faces "a potential major further delay", the industry source familiar with the situation told Reuters. Civaux 1 is among a series of reactors that EDF hopes to restart early enough to be able to produce enough power this winter.

Although Civaux is one of several reactors affected by corrosion problems, the incident on Wednesday was not linked to that problem or to the works to fix it, the industry source said. On Thursday, EDF had to lower its 2022 nuclear output forecast again to 275-285 terawatt-hour due to the impact of strikes on reactor maintenance and due to an extension of four reactor outages for repairs linked to corrosion problems.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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