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Brazil needs up to 8 nuclear plants to meet
energy demand
Brazil's rising energy demand has created the
need to build four to eight nuclear power plants
by 2030, the Ministry of Mining and Energy
estimated Wednesday.
Two nuclear power plants are operating in
Brazil: Angra I with the capacity of 657
megawatts; and Angra II with the capacity of
1,350 megawatts.
Secretary of Development and Planning Mauricio
Zimmermann said that according to the country's
energy construction plan, the proposed plants
will have a production capacity of about 1,000
megawatts.
Zimmermann said that every megawatt by a nuclear
plant costs about 150 reals (75 U.S. dollars),
while a 1,000-megawatt thermal plant, powered by
gas, operates at a cost of 170 reals (85 U.S.
dollars) per megawatt.
Discussing the impasse in authorizing the
building of two hydroelectric power plants on
the Madeira River, the secretary said the
government expects the environmental licenses to
be issued this month.
Otherwise, he added, the ministry will include
alternative projects "such as the nuclear power
plant Angra III" in the upcoming public bidding
process.
Minister of Mining and Energy Silas Rondeau said
earlier that the government believes Brazil's
geographical features make the country more
suited to other energy sources than
hydroelectricity, despite objections from
environmentalists.
According to Rondeau, the construction of Angra
III will probably be funded by the National Bank
of Social and Economic Development, as nuclear
energy must be controlled by the federal
government, according to the Brazilian
Constitution.
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