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Nuclear Facts
HISTORY
Nuclear technology milestones 1942-2000
40s
| 50s | 60s | 70s|
80s | 90s
40's
December 2, 1942—Dr. Enrico Fermi achieves the first
controlled nuclear chain reaction with the first demonstration
reactor—the Chicago Pile 1.
July 16, 1945—Trinity Test of the first
atomic explosive device at Alamogordo, New Mexico.
August 6, 1945—The U.S. drops an atomic bomb
on Hiroshima, Japan, and three days later drops another bomb on
Nagasaki. World War II ends days later.
August 1, 1946—President Harry S. Truman
signs the Atomic Energy Act of 1946, putting the fledgling nuclear
energy industry under civilian control, and creating the powerful
Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy.
October 6, 1947—The U.S. Atomic Energy
Commission first investigates the possibility of peaceful uses of
atomic energy, issuing a report the following year.
50's
December 20, 1951—An experimental reactor produces
the first electric power from the atom, lighting four light bulbs.
June 14, 1952—Keel for the Navy’s first
nuclear submarine, Nautilus, laid at Groton, Connecticut.
March 30, 1953—Nautilus first starts its
nuclear power units.
December 8, 1953—President Dwight D.
Eisenhower unveils his "Atoms-for-Peace" program, proposing
an international agency to develop peaceful nuclear technologies.
August 30, 1954—President Eisenhower signs
the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, the first major amendment of the
original Atomic Energy Act, giving the civilian nuclear energy program
further access to nuclear technology.
January 10, 1955—The Atomic Energy Commission
announces the beginning of a cooperative program between government
and industry to develop nuclear power plants.
July 17, 1955—The first U.S. town is powered
by nuclear energy—Arco, Idaho, population 1,000—by the
experimental boiling water reactor BORAX III.
August 8-20, 1955—The first international
conference on the peaceful uses of nuclear energy is held in Geneva,
Switzerland, sponsored by the United Nations.
July 12, 1957—The first power from a civilian
nuclear unit is generated by the Sodium Reactor Experiment at Santa
Susana, California. The unit provided power until 1966.
September 2, 1957—President Eisenhower signs
into law the Price-Anderson Act, legislation to protect the public,
utilities and contractors financially in the event of an accident at a
nuclear power plant.
December 2, 1957—The first full-scale nuclear
power plant at Shippingport, Pennsylvania, goes into service.
Twenty-one days later it reaches full power, generating 60 megawatts
of electricity.
May 22, 1958—Keel is laid for the first
nuclear-powered merchant vessel, Savannah, at Camden, New Jersey. She
is launched on July 21, 1959, and operates for 12 years, calling at
most major ports of the world.
October 15, 1959—Dresden-1 Nuclear Power
Station in Illinois, the first U.S. plant built entirely without
government funding, achieves a self-sustaining nuclear reaction.
60's
February 16, 1960—The Atomic Energy Commission
publishes its 10-year plan for nuclear energy.
August 19, 1960—The third U.S. nuclear power
plant, Yankee Nuclear Power Station in Rowe, Massachusetts, achieves a
self-sustaining nuclear reaction.
Early 1960s—Small nuclear-power generators
are first used in remote areas to power weather stations and to light
buoys for sea navigation.
March 17, 1962—President John F. Kennedy asks
the Atomic Energy Commission to report on the role of nuclear energy
in the economy.
December 12, 1963—Jersey Central Power and
Light Company announces its commitment for the Oyster Creek nuclear
power plant, the first time a nuclear plant is ordered as an
economical alternative to a fossil-fuel plant.
August 26, 1964—President Lyndon B. Johnson
signs the Private Ownership of Special Nuclear Materials Act, which
allows the nuclear energy industry to own the fuel for its units.
After June 30, 1973, private ownership of the uranium fuel is
mandatory.
October 1964—Three surface ships powered by
the atom—Enterprise, Long Beach and Bainbridge—complete a
round-the-world cruise without any logistical support.
December 16, 1964—The Atomic Energy
Commission issues Oyster Creek nuclear power plant's construction
permit.
April 3, 1965—First nuclear reactor operates
in space.
November 1965—The Atomic Energy Commission
gives the Liquid Metal Fast Breeder reactor highest priority and
decides to build the Fast Flux Test Facility. The facility begins
operation in April 1982.
November 9, 1965—The first major electrical
blackout occurs in the Northeast United States.
70's
April 20, 1970—The first Earth Day is celebrated.
September 23, 1970—Electricity
"brownouts" hit the Northeast during a heat wave.
June 4, 1971—President Richard M. Nixon
announces a national goal of completing the Liquid Metal Fast Breeder
unit by 1980.
June 29, 1973—President Nixon proposes to
replace the Atomic Energy Commission with the Energy Research and
Development Administration and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
October 17, 1973—The Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) agrees to use oil as a foreign
policy weapon, cutting exports 5 percent until Israel withdraws from
Arab territory occupied during the Yom Kippur War. Days later Saudi
Arabia cuts oil production by 25 percent and joins many other
oil-producing nations in embargoing oil shipments to the United
States.
1973—U.S. utilities order 41 nuclear power
plants, a one-year record.
1974—The first 1,000-MWe nuclear plant goes
into service—Commonwealth Edison’s Zion 1 plant.
October 11, 1974—President Gerald Ford
abolishes the Atomic Energy Commission and creates in its place the
Energy Research and Development Administration and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission to begin regulating the nuclear industry. The
Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy is also abolished.
January 19, 1975—Energy Research and
Development Administration begins operating.
April 7, 1977—President Jimmy Carter
announces a new policy banning reprocessing of used nuclear fuel.
August 4, 1977—President Carter combines the
Energy Research and Development Administration with the Federal Energy
Administration, creating the Department of Energy.
March 28, 1979—A major accident occurs at
Unit 2 of the Three Mile Island nuclear plant near Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania. Damage is limited to inside the reactor, and no one is
injured.
October 1979—The U.S. nuclear energy industry
creates the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations to address issues of
safety and performance.
80's
1980—Nuclear energy generates more electricity
than oil.
October 8, 1981—President Ronald Reagan's
administration lifts the ban on reprocessing used nuclear fuel and
announces a policy that anticipates the need for a high-level
radioactive waste storage facility.
January 7, 1983—President Reagan signs into
law the Nuclear Waste Policy Act.
October 26, 1983—Funding for the Clinch River
Breeder Reactor project is killed by Congress.
1983—Nuclear energy generates more
electricity than natural gas.
1984—The atom overtakes hydropower to become
the second-largest source of electricity, after coal.
1985—The Institute of Nuclear Power
Operations forms a national academy—the National Academy for Nuclear
Training—to accredit every nuclear power plant's training program.
1986—The Perry power plant in Ohio becomes
the 100th U.S. nuclear power plant in operation.
1988—U.S. electricity demand is 50 percent
higher than in 1973.
1989—America’s nuclear power plants provide
19 percent of the electricity used in the United States; 46 units have
entered service during the decade.
90's
1991—America’s nuclear power plants set record
for amount of electricity generated, surpassing the 1956 level for all
fuel sources combined.
1992—Nuclear power plants account for about
20 percent of all electricity used in the United States.
August 1992—The fourth and final standardized
nuclear power plant design is submitted to the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) for certification and approval. Getting the plant
designs approved by the NRC is a step toward building uniform nuclear
power plants in the United States.
October 24, 1992—President George Bush signs
into law the Energy Policy Act, which sets the U.S. on course for
planning its energy needs, and reforms the licensing process for
advanced, standardized nuclear power plants. The updated process
affords the public more timely opportunities to participate in
decisions to build new nuclear plants and is expected to create a more
stable financial environment for investors.
March 1993—The nuclear energy industry
positions itself for the future when 16 nuclear utilities sign the
first of two contracts with U.S. nuclear plant manufacturers—each
agreeing to develop first-of-a-kind engineering on two advanced plant
designs. General Electric signs in March and Westinghouse signs in
June.
April 6, 1993—Another nuclear power
plant—the Comanche Peak Unit 2 in Glen Rose, Texas—goes on line,
providing 1,150 megawatts of electricity to U.S. consumers.
December 1993—In 1993, two decades after the
first oil embargo, the 109 nuclear power plants operating in the
United States generate 610 billion kilowatt-hours of net electricity,
providing about one-fifth of the nation’s electricity.
Jan. 14, 1994—More than a half century after
President Eisenhower stood before the United Nations and urged the
countries of the world to take nuclear materials "out of the
hands of the soldiers...[and place them] into the hands of those who
will...adapt [them] to the arts of peace," the U.S. again leads
the world in promoting the peaceful uses of nuclear technology by
signing a contract to buy uranium from the Russian Federation that
could be blended down into power plant fuel, ensuring it will never
again be used for warheads.
July 1994—The Nuclear Regulatory Commission
issues final design approval for the first two of four advanced
nuclear power plant designs—General Electric’s Advanced Boiling
Water Reactor (ABWR) and ABB Combustion Engineering's System 80+. The
approval means that all major design and safety issues have been
resolved to the satisfaction of the NRC staff and the Advisory
Committee on Reactor Safeguards. The two plants are the first to
obtain final design approval under the NRC’s new regulations for
licensing standardized plant designs. The NRC will now prepare a
rulemaking, which will include public comment, to codify the designs.
April 7, 1995—The NRC publishes proposed
design certification rules for General Electric’s Advanced Boiling
Water Reactor (ABWR) and ABB Combustion Engineering’s System 80+
plant designs. These rulemakings will codify the ABWR and System 80+
final design approvals issued in 1994. Certification is expected in
1996.
February 9, 1996—The NRC grants the Tennessee
Valley Authority (TVA) a full-power license for its Watts Bar 1
nuclear power plant, bringing the number of operating nuclear units in
the United States to 110.
September 30, 1996—First-of-a-kind
engineering design is completed for the GE Advanced Boiling Water
Reactor.
November 7, 1996—Kashiwazaki-Kariwa 6, the
world’s first Advanced Boiling Water Reactor, begins commercial
service in Japan—ahead of schedule and under budget.
May 12, 1997—The NRC issues design
certification for the General Electric Advanced Boiling Water Reactor.
It is valid for the next 15 years.
May 20, 1997—The NRC issues design
certification for the ABB Combustion Engineering System 80+. It is
valid for the next 15 years.
January 12, 1998—President Clinton certifies
that China supports international nuclear nonproliferation efforts,
paving the way for the sale of U.S. nuclear technology to that
country.
April 10, 1998—Baltimore Gas and Electric Co.
submits an application to the NRC to renew the license of its two-unit
Calvert Cliffs nuclear power plant—the first U.S. company to apply
for a 20-year extension of its 40-year license.
July 7, 1998—Duke Power Co. submits an
application to the NRC to renew the license of its three-unit Oconee
nuclear power plant.
July 13, 1999—Entergy Nuclear closes on its
purchase of the Pilgrim Station from Boston Edison Co., the first
completed nuclear plant sale in the nation.
2000: First decade
March 23, 2000—The NRC issues the first-ever license
renewal to Constellation Energy’s Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power
Plant, allowing an additional 20 years of operation.
May 23, 2000—The NRC approves a 20-year
extension to the operating license of Duke Energy’s three-unit
Oconee Nuclear Station.
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