美国将以核动力航母为基地供电,海军正考虑新的浮动反应堆计划。
US To Power Base With Nuclear Aircraft Carrier As Navy Mulls New Floating Reactor Program

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/us-chases-russia-exploring-nuclear-barges-navy-mulls-new-reactor-program

今年夏天,美国海军将进行一项历史性测试,将“杰拉尔德·R·福特”号航空母舰接入诺福克海军基地的电网。该航母的两座A1B核反应堆将为基地提供“基础负荷电力”,以验证该舰在停电、灾难或遭受攻击时作为浮动备用发电机的潜力。官员们还表示,这些多余的能源未来或许能用于支持饮用水的生产。 虽然这是美国国内的首例尝试,但它反映了全球对移动核能日益增长的兴趣。俄罗斯自2019年起便已启用浮动核电站“罗蒙诺索夫院士”号,几家欧洲公司目前也在开发类似的概念。 美国海军的目光也不仅限于码头边的临时供电方案。海军作战部长达里尔·考德尔上将表示,他强烈希望海军能加入陆军和空军的行列,部署陆基微型反应堆。随着军方寻求通过能源独立来保障任务的执行,海军旨在建立一个正式的试点项目,将可靠的核能整合到其岸上基础设施中。

相关文章

原文

Later this summer, the nuclear-powered USS Gerald R. Ford will export electricity from its two A1B reactors directly to Naval Station Norfolk, powering the largest naval base in the world from a $13 billion supercarrier sitting at the pier.

Acting Secretary of the Navy Hung Cao provided the news during a May 14 House Armed Services Committee hearing on the FY2027 budget. “This summer, Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia is going to be powered from an aircraft carrier,” he said plainly. “We’re going to export the energy from the aircraft carrier to the base.” 

A Navy spokesperson later confirmed the initial test will happen later this year as part of a broader push for “firm, baseload power” and mission assurance at installations.

The Ford just returned to Norfolk after a record 326-day deployment. Its A1B reactors built by Bechtel and BWXT deliver roughly 25% more energy and operational availability than the older A4W plants on Nimitz-class carriers, with fewer sailors needed to run them. The test will show whether a docked supercarrier can serve as a floating backup generator during grid outages, attacks, or disasters. The idea is also being pitched that the power could also be utilized in drought-stricken areas for potable water production. 

But this isn’t the world’s first floating nuclear power play. The concept dates back to the 70s when a Westinghouse-Tenneco joint venture proposed mass-producing 1,200 MW plants on massive concrete barges off the U.S. East Coast. The idea died in regulatory and political quicksand, but only in the US. 

Russia actually built and operates one. The Akademik Lomonosov, with two KLT-40S reactors delivering about 70 MWe plus district heat, has been supplying the remote Arctic town of Pevek in Chukotka since 2019. It replaced the aging Bilibino nuclear plant and a coal facility. 

Rosatom has pushed follow-on designs using RITM-200M reactors for mining projects like Baimskaya in the far north, with some fabrication shifting to Chinese shipyards. 

Europe remains mostly conceptual. Denmark’s Copenhagen Atomics is reviewing reactor tech for Norwegian firm Ocean-Power’s floating barge ideas, and UK-based Core Power has partnered with Samsung on molten-salt concepts. No steel in the water yet. 

At the same hearing, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Daryl Caudle floated something bigger. He called for a Navy reactor pilot program modeled on the Army’s Janus initiative, which has already shortlisted nine domestic bases and is using DIU milestone contracts for microreactors targeted by 2028, and the Air Force’s ANPI program, which selected companies including Antares Nuclear and Radiant, aiming for first power around 2030. 

“While the Army may be tapped to be the overall lead,” Caudle said, “I see no world in which the Navy is not going to be part of that discussion… But we need to get a pilot established and a target date and get one going.”

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com