Another nuclear power plant will be built on
the East China coast by 2015, according to a spokesman from the Nuclear
Engineering and Construction (Group) Corporation (CNECC).
Four Chinese companies on Wednesday signed an agreement
to invest in the
construction of the plant in Rushan City, on the southeast side of Shandong
Peninsula, said the spokesman.
The four investors are China Nuclear Engineering and Construction (Group)
Corporation (CNECC), Shandong Luneng Development Group Co. Ltd, Huadian Power
International CorporationLtd and Shandong International Trust and Investment
Corporation, with CNECC owning a 51-percent stake.
Also inaugurated at Wednesday's signing ceremony was Shandong Hongshiding
Nuclear Power Co. Ltd, the developer of the planned nuclear power project.
The Hongshiding nuclear power plant will be installed with two
one-million-kw generating units in its first phase, with four set to be added
later.
A spokesman for the Shandong Provincial Government said the plant would
guarantee Shandong a safe and reliable energy source to support the province's
fast economic growth.
China currently has six nuclear power plants with 11 generating units in
operation on the mainland, with a combined installed capacity of 8,700
megawatts. They include five in the Qinshan Nuclear Power Plant in East China's
Zhejiang Province and four in the Daya Bay and Ling'ao Nuclear Power plants in
South China's Guangdong Province.
The electricity generated by nuclear power plants accounted for2.1percent
of the country's total in 2005, according to CNECC General Manager Kang Rixin.