In response to the 1973 oil crisis, the Philippines decided to build the two-unit Bataan Nuclear Power Plant (BNPP). Construction of Bataan 1 - a 621 MWe Westinghouse pressurized water reactor - began in 1976 and it was completed in 1984 at a cost of $460 million. However, due to financial issues and safety concerns related to earthquakes, the plant was never loaded with fuel or operated. In April 2007, the Philippine government made the final payment for the plant. The government was considering converting it into a natural gas-fired power plant, but this was impractical, and the plant has simply been maintained. In 2007 the Philippines Department of Energy (DOE) set up a project to study the development of nuclear energy, in the context of an overall energy plan for the country. Nuclear energy would be considered in order to reduce the country's dependency on imported oil and coal. In its 2008 update of the national energy plan, 600 MWe was projected on line in 2025, with further 600 MWe increments in 2027, 2030 and 2034 to give 2400 MWe. In 2008 an IAEA mission commissioned by the government advised that Bataan-1 could be refurbished and economically and safely be operated for 30 years. Refurbishment is estimated to cost $800 million. The IAEA was also to recommend a policy framework for nuclear power development in the country. In December 2008 the National Power Corporation announced that it would commission Korea Electric Power Corp (KEPCO, parent company of KHNP) to conduct an 18-month feasibility study on commissioning Bataan. One factor in choosing KEPCO for this was its experience with Kori-2, a very similar unit in Korea.
One of the advantage of the Bataan nuclear power plant is that it only occupies a small piece of land. The Bataan nuclear power plant has also offered employment opportunities for many of the locals around.
Nothing happens in the nuclear plant in Bataan. This plant was built but never operated.
The Bataan nuclear power plant uses nuclear fission as the nuclear reaction to generate electricity. In nuclear fission, the nucleus of an atom is split into two smaller nuclei, releasing a large amount of energy, which is harnessed to produce electricity.
Only the Philippines can answer this
The Bataan nuclear power plant located in the Philippines technically never closed because its construction was stopped after the Three Mile Island nuclear meltdown in the US. Additionally, many citizens of Bataan protested the building of the nuclear power plant.
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If it is left unfuelled it has no benefits at all
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electricity will be cheaper and it will reduce the need of oil
The Bataan Nuclear Power Plant was suspended in the 1980s due to safety concerns, high construction costs, and a shift in government policy away from nuclear power following the Chernobyl disaster. The plant was never operational and remains mothballed.
It was never fuelled and operated, for political reasons, not technical ones
Philippines has a nuclear power plant, but it does not operate.it can be found in Bataan. it is not operating, because the people of Bataan are afraid of the hazards that might happen. these arepossible accidents, routine emissions of radiation, radioactive wastes and thermal pollution.another reason why it does not operate is because of what had happened in Chernobyl, Russia, wherein, the power plant exploded because of flawed nuclear power plant structure and inadequately trained personnel.