‘The minimum controllable power is the lowest capacity level that enables us to conduct a number of tests and to verify the physical parameters of the reactor core to make sure it complies with the project requirements.
Once these operations are completed and the associated calculations are submitted to Rostekhnadzor, we will have to obtain a power start-up license and to start gradual power ramp-up’, Alexander Belyaev, the chief engineer at the Leningrad NPP-2, said.
During the week, over 50 tests will take place at the power unit in accordance with the physical launch schedule. Those reviews will help to specify the neutron-physical parameters of the nuclear reactor’s 1st fuel loading that were obtained by the calculations as well as to confirm that the safety, blocks and the whole nuclear-physical control and reactor facility’s nuclear safety systems are working in a reliable manner.
The commercial launch of unit 2 of Leningrad NPP-2 is scheduled for 2021. The new power unit will take over its ‘elder brother’, the RBMK 2nd power block that had been effectively in use for 45 years.




