Nineteen reactors operate at four plants in southeast Canada, 18 of which are in Ontario and one in New Brunswick.
Bulgaria has one nuclear power plant, Kozloduy, located on the Danube River about 110 km north of So a. It has two operating VVER-1000 reactors
Mainland China has 55 operable reactors with a total capacity of 53 GWe, primarily at sites along its southeast coastline. It also has 23 reactors under construction as of June 2023, totaling 24 GWe
The Czech Republic has six operable reactors: two VVER- 1000 units at Temelin, 100 km south of Prague; and four VVER-440 units at Dukovany, 30 km west of Brno.
Following the March 2011 tsunami and subsequent accident at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, all reactors in Japan have had to get regulatory approval to restart. Only ten (9500 MWe) of the country’s 33 operable reactors have since restarted as of June 2023.
South Africa has a single nuclear power plant at Koeberg, 30 km north of Cape Town. The plant’s two reactors, connected to the grid in 1984 and 1985, have a combined capacity of 1854 MWe.
Spain has seven operable nuclear reactors at five sites across the country.
So even your "USA 93, France 56 , China 55 davon 45 in Planung, Japan 33, Russia 27 South Korea 25, India 22, Canada 19, Ukraine 15, UK 9, Spanien 7, Pakistan 6, Romania 2, Armenia 1" is BULLSHIT!
https://t.me/EnergyFactsTelegram/801
USA 93, France 56+1 , China 55 +21/22, Japan 10/(33)+2, Russia 37+3 South Korea 25+3, India 22+8, Canada 19+0, Ukraine 15 + 2 in pause, UK 9+2, Spanien 7+0, Pakistan 6+0, Switzerland 4+0, Romania 2+0, Armenia 1+0
plus other like Belgium 2+0, Bulgaria 2+0, Czech 6+0, South Africa 2+0, ...
Facts you forget to cite ....
Germany 1990
Germany 21250 MW(e)
Germany 79.4 mio = 267.6MW(e)/mio
139.4 TWh - 33.1% = 1.8 TWh/mio
Switzerland 2942 MW(e)
Switzerland 6.7 mio = 439MW(e)/mio!! =1.6x
22.4 TWh - 42.6% = 3.3 TWh/mio = 1.8x
Means even in 1990 Switzerland won against Germany, if related to amount of people! Again, take less excuses ...
Bulgaria has one nuclear power plant, Kozloduy, located on the Danube River about 110 km north of So a. It has two operating VVER-1000 reactors
Mainland China has 55 operable reactors with a total capacity of 53 GWe, primarily at sites along its southeast coastline. It also has 23 reactors under construction as of June 2023, totaling 24 GWe
The Czech Republic has six operable reactors: two VVER- 1000 units at Temelin, 100 km south of Prague; and four VVER-440 units at Dukovany, 30 km west of Brno.
Following the March 2011 tsunami and subsequent accident at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, all reactors in Japan have had to get regulatory approval to restart. Only ten (9500 MWe) of the country’s 33 operable reactors have since restarted as of June 2023.
South Africa has a single nuclear power plant at Koeberg, 30 km north of Cape Town. The plant’s two reactors, connected to the grid in 1984 and 1985, have a combined capacity of 1854 MWe.
Spain has seven operable nuclear reactors at five sites across the country.
So even your "USA 93, France 56 , China 55 davon 45 in Planung, Japan 33, Russia 27 South Korea 25, India 22, Canada 19, Ukraine 15, UK 9, Spanien 7, Pakistan 6, Romania 2, Armenia 1" is BULLSHIT!
https://t.me/EnergyFactsTelegram/801
USA 93, France 56+1 , China 55 +21/22, Japan 10/(33)+2, Russia 37+3 South Korea 25+3, India 22+8, Canada 19+0, Ukraine 15 + 2 in pause, UK 9+2, Spanien 7+0, Pakistan 6+0, Switzerland 4+0, Romania 2+0, Armenia 1+0
plus other like Belgium 2+0, Bulgaria 2+0, Czech 6+0, South Africa 2+0, ...
Facts you forget to cite ....
Germany 1990
Germany 21250 MW(e)
Germany 79.4 mio = 267.6MW(e)/mio
139.4 TWh - 33.1% = 1.8 TWh/mio
Switzerland 2942 MW(e)
Switzerland 6.7 mio = 439MW(e)/mio!! =1.6x
22.4 TWh - 42.6% = 3.3 TWh/mio = 1.8x
Means even in 1990 Switzerland won against Germany, if related to amount of people! Again, take less excuses ...