Taiwan energy plan failed

Half of Taiwan experienced a power outage yesterday and the Minister of Economic Affairs Lee Chih-kung resigned after a blunder at a large natural gas plant. Three of Taiwan’s six reactors are offline due to political blocking. All six units tripped, removing around 4200 MWe from the grid and triggering a much wider failure.
Some 6.68 million homes and businesses were affected by the blackout, the ministry said.
Taiwan’s power supply is dominated by coal 46% and gas 32%. Nuclear power plants used to provide about 16% of the electricity but the figure has dropped to around 13% in recent years with political obstruction. Kuosheng 2 remains closed following a fire in mid-2016 despite having been repaired, Chinshan 1 has been closed for two years following a fuel fault which has been rectified and Chinshan 2 has not been allowed to restart after a recent typhoon. All these units have regulatory approval to operate.

President Tasi Ing-wen apologized publicly for the blackout and repeated the government’s goal to reduce nuclear power and replace it with a mixture of gas, wind and solar generation, which said gas would meet around 50% of supply in 2025

Elaine Li

Elaine Li

Elaine Li (李益楠) is Marketing Manager for the Chinese Market. With ten years of experience in the nuclear power market, Elaine is experts for the certification of safety equipment (HAF 604 and 601) and marketing intelligence.
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