List nuclear reactors of the United States
The the United States represent the 1st country in the world of many active engines of power (104 engines in 2005).
The engines of the United States are classified in four administrative areas by the Autorité of American nuclear safety (Nuclear Regulatory Commission or NRC).
Area 1 of NRC (North-eastern)
- Beaver Valley, Pennsylvania
- Calvert Cliffs, Maryland
- Fitzpatrick, New York
- Ginna, New York
- Hope Creek, New Jersey
- Indian Not, New York
- Limerick, Pennsylvania
- Millstone, New York
- Nine Mile Not, New York
- Oyster Creek, New Jersey
- Peach Bottom, Pennsylvania
- Pilgrim, Massachusetts
- Salem, New Jersey
- Seabrook, New Hampshire
- Shippingport, Pennsylvania (stopped in 1982)
- Susquehanna, Pennsylvania
- Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania
- Vermont Yankee, Vermont
Area 2 of NRC (South-eastern)
- Bellefonte, Alabama (unfinished)
- Browns Ferry, Alabama
- Brunswick, North Carolina
- Catawba, South Carolina
- Hook To rivet, Florida
- Farley, Alabama
- Hatch, Georgia
- McGuire, North Carolina
- North Anna, Virginia
- Oconee, South Carolina
- Robinson, South Carolina
- Saint Lucia, Florida
- Sequoyah, Tennessee
- Shearon Harris, North Carolina
- Surry, Virginia
- Turkey Not, Florida
- Virgil Summer, South Carolina
- Vogtle, Georgia
- Watts Bar, Tennessee
Area 3 of NRC (Center)
- Big Rock'n'roll Not, Northern Michigan (Downgrading at the end of the years 1990)
- Braidwood, Illinois
- Byron, Illinois
- Clinton, Illinois
- Davis-Besse, Ohio
- Donald C. Cook, Michigan
- Dresden, Illinois
- Duane Arnold, Iowa
- Enrico Fermi, Michigan
- Kewaunee, Wisconsin
- the Stick, Wisconsin (stopped in 1983)
- LaSalle County, Illinois
- Monticello, Minnesota
- Palisades , Michigan
- Perry, Ohio
- Not Beach, Wisconsin
- Meadow Island, Minnesota
- Quad Cities, Illinois
Area 4 of NRC (Western)
- Arkansas Nuclear One, Arkansas
- Callaway, Missouri
- Columbia, Hanford Site, Washington
- Comanche Peak, Texas
- Cooper, Nebraska
- Diablo Canyon, California
- Strong Calhoun, Nebraska
- Strong Saint-Vrain, Colorado (stopped in 1989, converted with natural gas)
- Great GULF, the Mississippi
- National laboratory of Hanford, Washington
- Humboldt Bay, California
- National laboratory of Idaho, Idaho
- Palo Verde, Arizona
- Rancho Seco, California (closed in 1989 after a public vote)
- To rivet Bend, Louisiana
- National laboratory of Rocky Flats, Colorado
- San Onofre, California
- South Texas, Texas
- Trojan, Oregon (stopped in 1993)
- Vallecitos, California (closed in 1963)
- Waterford, Louisiana
- Wolf Creek, Kansas
See too
See also: List of the nuclear reactors
Sources
- * ECA: Publications - nuclear plants in the world at the 12/31/2005
- (in) DoE Site of the American Administration
- (in) Site of the " Nuclear Regulatory Commission" from the United States