Active participation with other Nordic countries to share experiences in nuclear power plant operations;
Extensive support provided by the plant to research institutions on studies related to the management of potential severe accidents.
The mission made a number of recommendations to improve operational safety at the plant, including:
The plant should evaluate the effectiveness of the recent organizational changes and implement any needed corrective actions;
The plant should enhance maintenance practices to ensure equipment deficiencies are resolved in a timely manner;
The plant should ensure that adequate resources and expertise are available to secure the safe and reliable operation of the plant beyond its original design lifetime.
The team provided a draft of the report to the plant’s management. The plant management and the Finnish Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority will have an opportunity to make factual comments on the draft, which will be reviewed by the IAEA. The final report will be submitted to the Finnish Government within three months.
Finland is also planning to host OSART missions over the next year at Olkiluoto 3 and the two units at Loviisa.
“This means that the power companies and operators, TVO and Fortum, are getting a lot of support on safety and new ideas for their work from the three IAEA teams,” said Liisa Heikinheimo, Deputy Director General in the Energy Department at the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Employment. “For the Ministry, the timing of the OSART missions is good because we have operating license processes for Olkiluoto units under consideration and the OSART missions will support these as an external review.”
Plant management said it would address the areas identified for improvement and requested a follow-up OSART mission in about 18 months.
“TVO considers international peer reviews as an important element of improving nuclear safety. The results and development areas of this OSART assessment will be taken into account in TVO’s principle of continuous improvement,” said plant manager Mikko Kosonen. “The exchange of experience between experts in different fields is also a great opportunity for TVO to share our good practices and to get similar good practices from other plants.”
BACKGROUND: General information about OSART missions can be found on the IAEA Website. An OSART mission is designed as a review of programmes and activities essential to operational safety. It is not a regulatory inspection, nor is it a design review or a substitute for an exhaustive assessment of the plant’s overall safety status. This was the 193rd mission of the OSART programme, which began in 1982.