Brunsbüttel

Shut down climate protector

Brunsbüttel Nuclear Power Plant is a nuclear power plant in Brunsbüttel near Hamburg, Germany. It is owned 67% by Vattenfall and 33% by E.ON. It started operation in 1976 and has a gross power production of 806 MW. As part of the nuclear power phase-out, it is scheduled to be taken out of service in 2009. After a fire in June 2007, the plant has been closed for the latter half of the year.

Vattenfall says German reactor to reopen soon

Monday, June 1st, 2009

STOCKHOLM/LONDON (Reuters) – Sweden’s Vattenfall is ready to reopen one of its two north German nuclear plants shortly and the second will reopen later this year at the earliest as the operator completes safety-related measures, Chief Executive Lars Josefsson said on Monday.

“Kruemmel is almost ready to go live but of course requires approval while the time schedule for Brunsbuettel is not as firm,” he said at the Reuters Energy Summit by video link from Stockholm. (more…)

New malfunction reported at deactivated N.German nuclear plant

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

A malfunctioning transformer led to an unintentional shutdown of the emergency power system of an offline nuclear plant in northern Germany which had been the scene of numerous glitches in the past, press reports said Thursday.

The cause of the breakdown was a defect electronic card but it did not have any impact on the operations of the plant, said the operator of the Brunsbuettel nuclear reactor which has been deactivated since the summer of 2007. (more…)

Vattenfall getting past nuclear mishaps-CEO

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

STOCKHOLM, Feb 7 (Reuters) – Utility Vattenfall is putting a string of nuclear mishaps behind it and sees a bright future for atomic power in Europe, although it cannot yet say when its hobbled German plants will be back online.

“You should be a little humble and not overconfident but we have taken a lot of measures and we are definitely on the right track to be the benchmark of our industry,” Lars Josefsson, chief executive of the Swedish state-owned firm, told Reuters. (more…)

Vattenfall CEO-no estimate on German nuclear plants

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

STOCKHOLM, Feb 7 (Reuters) – Vattenfall Chief Executive Lars Josefsson said on Thursday he was not prepared to estimate when the Brunsbuettel and Kruemmel nuclear plants in Germany would come back on line.

Josefsson told a conference call on Vattenfall’s 2007 results he was “not prepared to give any estimation” on when the plants, jointly owned with E.ON, would come back on line. (more…)

German nuclear reactor row goes to higher court

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

FRANKFURT (Reuters) – A court ruled on Wednesday that a dispute between the German government and a power group about whether to close a major nuclear reactor will be referred to the country’s Federal Administrative Court.

The decision prolongs a dispute between the operator, Vattenfall Europe, which last year applied to keep the 806 megawatts plant open beyond 2010, and the Environment Ministry, which threw out the application. (more…)

Germany to remain anti-nuclear stronghold

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

FRANKFURT, Jan 10 (Reuters) – Germany will uphold staunch political opposition to atomic energy, unperturbed by the mood swinging back in favour of nuclear power elsewhere.

Oil at record highs, climate worries, and the need to cut dependency on energy imports is due to move the British government to back new nuclear power plants on Thursday.

But Germany, Europe’s biggest and most central power market, will not follow suit.
(more…)

RWE and Vattenfall Europe’s chances to delay nuclear exit have risen

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

AFX News Limited

FRANKFURT (Thomson Financial) – RWE AG and Vattenfall Europe AG’s chances of delaying the shut-down of nuclear reactors until after the next German parliamentary elections have risen after a fall in power volumes following the closure of two reactors, Handelsblatt reported. (more…)

Sweden’s Vattenfall says to boost nuclear safety

Friday, November 16th, 2007

Mon Nov 12, 2007 1:17pm GMT

STOCKHOLM, Nov 12 (Reuters) – Swedish utility group Vattenfall said on Monday it will create a new executive post to keep tabs on its nuclear power activities after criticism over operations at plants in Sweden and Germany. (more…)

Sweden’s Vattenfall loses 200,000 clients after nuclear plant incidents

Sunday, November 4th, 2007

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

STOCKHOLM, Sweden: Swedish utility Vattenfall AB has lost almost 200,000 customers in Germany because of a “crisis in confidence” after failing to properly inform the public about a fire in a nuclear power plant and the shutdown of another, company officials said Wednesday. (more…)

German chain reaction

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

Incidents on 28 June at Brunsbüttel and Krümmel, both situated in the German federal state of Schleswig-Holstein, have led to dismissals and resignations of staff and board members of the reactor operating company Vattenfall Europe AG. The managers and the company have come under intense criticism from both pro- and antinuclear politicians, more for the way in which they handled the public information campaign following the incidents rather than for the actual incidents. Even German chancellor Angela Merkel said she had no compassion for Vattenfall because of their information policy. (more…)