With the exception of a few weeks each year, nuclear power plants produce electricity around the clock, day in, day out. Ensuring a continuous supply of essential baseload energy that is both safe and climate-friendly, nuclear power plants account for a third of Switzerland’s electricity production.
A vital source of power, especially during the winter months, Axpo maintains nearly 60 per cent of the installed production capacity of Switzerland’s nuclear power plants.
Axpo’s nuclear power plant portfolio includes our own Beznau facility (comprising the Beznau 1 and Beznau 2 reactors), the partially owned Leibstadt and Gösgen partner plants, and procurement rights from French nuclear power plants.
Nuclear power plants use the energy of nuclear fission to produce electricity. Like their coal and gas-fired counterparts, they are thermal power plants. The difference, however, is that nuclear plants don’t produce air pollutants or greenhouse gases when generating heat.
In a nuclear power plant, uranium atoms are ‘fissioned’ (split) in the reactor under controlled conditions. The energy released is used to heat water under high pressure, just like in a domestic pressure cooker. This produces hot steam, which drives a turbine connected to a generator. The generator then produces electricity, which is supplied to consumers through the power grid.