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Current Status and Future Developments in Nuclear-Power Industry of the World
Author(s) -
Igor Pioro,
Romney B. Duffey,
P. L. Kirillov,
R. Pioro,
A. Zvorykin,
R. Machrafi
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of nuclear engineering and radiation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.278
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 2332-8983
pISSN - 2332-8975
DOI - 10.1115/1.4042194
Subject(s) - electricity generation , renewable energy , nuclear power , environmental science , energy development , electric power , electricity , fossil fuel , coal , wind power , energy independence , natural resource economics , waste management , engineering , power (physics) , electrical engineering , physics , economics , nuclear physics , quantum mechanics
It is well known that electrical-power generation plays the key role in advances in industry, agriculture, technology, and standard of living. Also, strong power industry with diverse energy sources is very important for a country's independence. In general, electrical energy can be mainly generated from: (1) nonrenewable energy sources (75.5% of the total electricity generation) such as coal (38.3%), natural gas (23.1%), oil (3.7%), and nuclear (10.4%); and (2) renewable energy sources (24.5%) such as hydro, biomass, wind, geothermal, solar, and marine power. Today, the main sources for electrical-energy generation are: (1) thermal power (61.4%)—primarily using coal and secondarily using natural gas; (2) “large” hydro-electric plants (16.6%); and (3) nuclear power (10.4%). The balance of the energy sources (11.6%) is from using oil, biomass, wind, geothermal, and solar, and has visible impact just in a few countries. This paper presents the current status of electricity generation in the world, various sources of industrial electricity generation and role of nuclear power with a comparison of nuclear-energy systems to other energy systems. A comparison of the latest data on electricity generation with those several years old shows that world usage of coal, gas, nuclear, and oil has decreased by 1–2%, but usage of renewables has increased by 1% for hydro and 2% for other renewable sources. Unfortunately, within last years, electricity generation with nuclear power has decreased from 14% before the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) severe accident in March 2011 to about 10%. Therefore, it is important to evaluate current status of nuclear-power industry and to make projections on near (5–10 yr) and far away (10–25 yr and beyond) future trends.

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