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Power plant problems

July 4, 2009

A controversial German nuclear power plant at the center of a national energy debate has been forced to shut down again following a second mishap.

https://p.dw.com/p/IhFR
Exterior view of the Kruemmel nuclear power plant
Kruemmel was back on line after a two-year pauseImage: AP

The Swedish-owned electric utility, Vattenfall, which operates the Kruemmel nuclear power station in northern Germany, said it turned off the reactor on Saturday after a problem with one of the power plant's two machinery transformers.

The defect caused a sudden drop in voltage which, in turn, blacked out between 1,500 and 1,800 traffic lights in Germany's second-largest city of Hamburg and darkened a number of shopping malls.

There were also power cuts last Wednesday thought to have been caused by a transformer problem at the plant.

Safety versus energy security

Kruemmel only re-opened less than two weeks ago after a two-year shutdown triggered by a fire. The 2007 fire which was caused by a short circuit, and other incidents at Vattenfall's Brunsbuettel power plant in the same year, fueled a fierce debate in Germany about the safety of the country's nuclear power stations.

Firefighters extinguishing the transformer fire
No radioactivity was released by the fire, but concerns remainImage: AP

The German government and four companies operating nuclear power plants in the country subsequently agreed to tighter safety standards.

When Kruemmel re-opened in June, Vattenfall said the plant, which generates about 10 billion kilowatt hours of electricity per year, had been thoroughly modernized and that this would reduce the likelihood of a future incident.

In 2000, Germany decided to mothball its 17 reactors by the year 2020.

However, Chancellor Angela Merkel's CDU/CSU conservative bloc has for some time been calling for a re-assessment of that policy decision, arguing that Germany's dependence on foreign energy made nuclear power indispensable.


gb/AP/dpa/AFP/Reuters
Editor: Andreas Illmer