The Balkan grid at...

As winter settles across South-East Europe, the region’s electricity landscape enters a season...

The Balkan power mosaic:...

The final month of 2025 finds the electricity markets of South-East Europe entering...

Winter markets at the...

The western edge of the Balkan electricity system enters December 2025 with a...

Winter prices without the...

December 2025 opens the winter season in Central and South-East Europe with a...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsBulgaria: Kozloduy NPP...

Bulgaria: Kozloduy NPP unaffected by Danube drop as heat forces shutdowns elsewhere in Europe

The Bulgarian nuclear power plant Kozloduy has confirmed that the recent drop in the Danube River’s water level has not affected its operations or electricity production. On July 4, 2025, water depth at the plant’s intake measured 21.50 meters, which remains 0.53 meters above the record low observed at the end of summer in 2003. For comparison, the river reached its highest recorded level of 30.20 meters at this site on April 23, 2006.

Kozloduy’s design ensures a stable water supply even during periods of low river levels. The plant is equipped with an on-site pumping station containing 34 powerful pumps, engineered based on over a century of Danube hydrological data. This system draws cooling water from the river to condense steam in the turbines of the plant’s conventional (non-nuclear) power unit, maintaining consistent electricity generation.

In contrast, Switzerland’s Beznau nuclear power plant recently shut down both of its reactors due to elevated river temperatures. The operator, Axpo, stopped operations at the first unit on July 1, followed shortly by the second, citing safety concerns related to the aging facility’s water-intake infrastructure. Similar heat-related restrictions are expected to affect nuclear power plants along France’s Rhone River in the coming days.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

The Balkan grid at a turning point: How cross-border capacities shape the winter 2025–26 electricity market

As winter settles across South-East Europe, the region’s electricity landscape enters a season shaped not by crisis but by structural interdependence. December 2025 finds the Balkan and Central-European power systems operating under a degree of cross-border coordination once unimaginable....

The Balkan power mosaic: December 2025 prices and the regional outlook for Q1 2026

The final month of 2025 finds the electricity markets of South-East Europe entering winter with a stability few would have predicted even two years ago. The whip-saw volatility of the post-Ukraine crisis era has eased, gas is trading at...

Winter markets at the periphery: How Montenegro, Croatia and Albania shape their place in the regional power price landscape

The western edge of the Balkan electricity system enters December 2025 with a familiar imbalance: structurally small power exchanges, modest liquidity, highly weather-sensitive production, and an almost total dependence on neighbouring hubs for price formation. Montenegro, Croatia and Albania...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!