Waterford Nuclear Generating Station | |
---|---|
Official name | Waterford Steam Electric Station |
Country | United States |
Location | Killona, St. Charles Parish, Louisiana |
Coordinates | 29°59′43″N 90°28′16″W / 29.99528°N 90.47111°W |
Status | Operational |
Construction began | November 14, 1974 |
Commission date | September 24, 1985 |
Construction cost | $5.476 billion (2007 USD)[1] |
Owner(s) | Entergy Louisiana |
Operator(s) | Entergy Nuclear |
Nuclear power station | |
Reactor type | PWR |
Reactor supplier | Combustion Engineering |
Cooling source | Mississippi River |
Thermal capacity | 1 × 3716 MWth |
Power generation | |
Units operational | 1 × 1152 MW |
Make and model | CE 2-loop (DRYAMB) |
Nameplate capacity | 1152 MW |
Capacity factor | 97.17% (2021) 87.10% (lifetime) |
Annual net output | 9806 GWh (2021) |
External links | |
Website | Waterford 3 |
The Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3, also known as Waterford 3, is a nuclear power plant located on a 3,000-acre (1,200 ha) plot in Killona, Louisiana, in St. Charles Parish, about 25 miles (40 km) west of New Orleans.[2]
This plant has one Combustion Engineering two-loop pressurized water reactor. The plant has a maximum dependable capacity of 1,152 megawatts of electricity.[3] The power station's main generator is rated at 1333.2 MVA at a 0.9 power factor (60 psi hydrogen pressure). In 2005, the plant was approved for a 8% (275 MWt) power uprate. The post-uprate nominal main generator output was rated at 1231 MW.[4]
The reactor has a dry ambient pressure containment building.
On August 28, 2005, Waterford shut down due to Hurricane Katrina approaching and declared an unusual event,[5] the least-serious of a four-level emergency classification scale.[6] Shortly after Katrina, Waterford restarted and resumed normal operation.
During the 2011 Mississippi River floods, the plant was shut down briefly after a refueling shutdown on April 6,[7] but was restarted on May 12.[8][9]
The plant shut down on October 17, 2012, for steam-generator replacement. The plant returned to full power in the middle of January 2013.
The plant shut down on August 28, 2021 in preparation for Hurricane Ida. On August 29, 2021 the plant declared an “unusual event″ — its lowest level of emergency — after the facility lost offsite electrical power.[10]