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New CRP: Role of Nuclear Cogeneration within the Context of Sustainable Development (I35008)

New Coordinated Research Project
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Non-electric applications powered by nuclear energy include seawater desalination, hydrogen production, district heating and process heating for industry (glass and cement manufacturing, metal production), refining and synthesis gas production.

The IAEA is launching a new Coordinated Research Project (CRP) to assess the various nuclear cogeneration applications and explore why and how countries could consider nuclear cogeneration in their portfolio of options to address the climate challenge. The CRP, entitled ‘Role of Nuclear Cogeneration within the Context of Sustainable Development’, will be conducted over three years.

Nuclear cogeneration, where nuclear power reactors are integrated with other systems and applications to produce not only electricity but also hydrogen, desalination, district heating or industrial process heat, has proven to be an efficient and environmentally attractive option for energy conversion. However, the expertise gained in existing nuclear cogeneration projects has not been easily accessible so far to experts in all countries interested in considering the use of nuclear energy for non-electric applications. This CRP will therefore foster an opportunity to learn from the experience of several countries that have been using nuclear reactors for cogeneration and highlight its benefits.

“Nuclear cogeneration has an enormous potential to contribute to sustainable development while reducing carbon emissions, by taking advantage of the carbon free heat of nuclear power plants to provide fresh water, district heating, process heat and hydrogen,” said Francesco Ganda, Technical Lead for Non‑Electric Applications at the IAEA.  “This CRP can contribute to the further development of nuclear cogeneration, and eventually to more versatile and sustainable nuclear energy systems, while also supporting climate goals.”

The CRP will also provide techno-economic examination and investigate competitiveness of various nuclear cogeneration options considering several dimensions, such as technology, economics, environment, including climate change mitigation. It will also assess the challenges in implementing nuclear cogeneration projects, in terms of the business model, licensing, economics and technical aspects, and safety related issues, as well as envisage solutions to address these challenges and enable a faster deployment of nuclear cogeneration projects. The nuclear component will be represented by various technologies, including the existent operating nuclear fleet, small modular reactors and innovative nuclear reactors under development.

CRP Overall Objective

The overall objective of this CRP is to enable Member States to assess technologies and integration schemes – considering several dimensions, such as technology, economics, environment, sustainability – that can increase the attractiveness and competitiveness of nuclear cogeneration, within their broader national energy context and objectives, including those related to climate change.

Specific Research Objectives

  • Identification and development of technological aspects and advances related to increased competitiveness of nuclear cogeneration, including waste heat recovery, schemes for integration of hybrid desalination systems, and integration in hybrid energy systems.
  • Development of methods and approaches to quantify the benefits of nuclear waste heat utilization on the water impact of nuclear installations and resulting environmental benefits for water bodies and climate change.
  • Identification of risk factors, uncertainties and best practices in nuclear cogeneration projects to guide Member States' informed decision on the deployment of such projects.
  • Development of approaches, case studies, and supporting data for the techno-economic assessment of nuclear cogeneration schemes, in particular advanced thermal desalination using nuclear energy, advanced nuclear hydrogen production, district heating and industrial uses of nuclear heat, in the context of climate change mitigation, towards enabling their deployment by Member States.

How to join this CRP

Please submit your Proposal for Research Contract or Agreement by email, no later than 31 August 2022 to the IAEA’s Research Contracts Administration Section, using CRP ID ‘I35008’ and using the appropriate template on the Coordinated Research Activities web portal. A kick-off meeting for the project is tentatively scheduled for 18-21 April 2023 in Vienna.

For further information related to this CRP, potential applicants should use the contact form on the CRP page.

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