New service ship for handling, storing and transportation of spent nuclear fuel in the Russian Arctic region. Illustration by ЦКБ «Айсберг»

New ship to handle all nuclear waste from Rosatom’s Arctic operations

The new special purpose vessel will serve the new icebreakers and the floating nuclear power plants and possible other reactor installations
December 05, 2019

ADVERTISEMENT

Iceberg Central Design Bureau in St. Petersburg has completed the technical design and says construction will take about five years.

Described as a multifunctional vessel for nuclear technology services, the 159 meters long ship will be able to sail all along the Northern Sea Route. That includes Pevek, the port town on the coast of te Chukotka Peninsula where Russia’s first floating nuclear power plant is supposed to be connected to the grid by the end of December.

«At the end of 2019, early 2020, we will transfer the documentation of the project to Zvezda shipyard. After that, equipment suppliers can begin to be chosen,» says CEO of Iceberg, Aleksandr Ryshkov, to the state nuclear corporations’ own newspaper Strana Rosatom

He tells that the ship is designed to serve icebreakers and floating structures with reactors of the RITM-200, RITM-400, KLT-40 and OK-900 types.

KLT-40 is the reactor design used on Rosatom’s four operating nuclear-powered icebreakers, «Taymyr», «Vaigash», «50 Let Podedy», «Yamal» and the container carrier «Sevmorput».

RITM-200 are onboard the three new icebreakers currently under construction at the Baltisky Yard in St. Petersburg, the «Arktika», «Ural» and «Sibir».

ADVERTISEMENT

RITM-400 are an even larger maritime reactor, planned for the giant Lider-class icebreakers og which Russia plans to built three by the year 2030.

The floating nuclear power plant «Akademik Lomonosov» has two KLT-40 reactors.

Currently, Rosatomflot has two older service ships for storing spent nuclear fuel from the icebreaker fleet.. The two ships, «Imandra» and «Lotta», are mainly moored at port in Murmansk, but «Imandra» is ocationally sailing to the Nerpa shipyard north of Murmansk to pick up containers with spent nuclear fuel from older navy submarines.

 

“Imandra” at RTP Atomflot, the service base for Russia’s fleet of nuclear powered civilian vessels north of Murmansk. Photo: Thomas Nilsen

 

Two other ships, the «Rosita» and «Serebryanka» are serving other missions, like transporting spent nuclear fuel casks from Andreeva Bay to Atomflot. «Serebryanka» has also served during military special operations, like when a crashed Burevestnik nuclear-powered cruise-missile was to be recovered from the sea-floor in the White Sea in August this year. That operation ended catastrophic.

The new vessel is about 30 meters longer than «Imandra» and has a draft at full displacement of 22,661 tons.

Equipped with two larger cranes, the new ship will be able to autonomously serve the reactor installations, like lifting out spent nuclear fuel casks from the «Akademik Lomonosov» and sail it back to Murmansk for loading onshore to railway wagons for further transport to Rosatom’s reprocessing plant in Mayak in the South Urals.

Normally, spent nuclear fuel are stored for a few years onboard the service ships before being transported by rail. As it seems from the drawings, the new vessel have at least eight compartments for storing spent nuclear fuel, but nothing is said about how many reactor cores there are space for in the compartments.

Barents Observer report   

The Barents Observer has recently published an overview (pdf) listing the increasing number of reactors in the Russian Arctic. The paper is part of Barents Observer’s analytical popular science studies on developments in the Euro-Arctic Region.

According to the list there are 39 nuclear-powered vessels or installations in the Russian Arctic today with a total of 62 reactors. This includes 31 submarines, one surface warship, five icebreakers, two onshore and one floating nuclear power plants.

Looking 15 years ahead, the number of ships, including submarines, and installations powered by reactors is estimated to increase to 74 with a total of 94 reactors, maybe as many as 114. Additional to new icebreakers and submarines already under construction, Russia is brushing dust of older Soviet ideas of utilizing nuclear-power for different kind of Arctic shelf industrial developments, like oil- and gas exploration, mining and research.  “By 2035, the Russian Arctic will be the most nuclearized waters on the planet,” the paper reads.

Also, existing icebreakers and submarines get life-time prolongation. The average age of the Northern Fleet’s nuclear-powered submarines has never been older than today. Several of the submarines built in the 1980s will continue to sail the Barents Sea and under the Arctic ice-cap until the late 2020s.

Map: The Barents Observer / Google Earth

 


You can help us…

…. we hope you enjoyed reading this article. Unlike many others, the Barents Observer has no paywall. We want to keep our journalism open to everyone, including to our Russian readers. The Independent Barents Observer is a journalist-owned newspaper. It takes a lot of hard work and money to produce. But, we strongly believe our bilingual reporting makes a difference in the north. We therefore got a small favor to ask; make a contribution to our work.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Barents Observer Newsletter

After confirming you're a real person, you can write your email below and we include you to the subscription list.

Privacy policy