La centrale nucléaire de Niederaichbach (appelée en allemand Kernkraftwerk Niederaichbach et abrégée KKN) était une centrale de recherche avec un réacteur nucléaire modéré à l'eau lourde en Bavière en Allemagne. Elle avait une puissance électrique de 100 MW. À cause de problèmes techniques, elle n'avait qu'une période très courte d'exploitation, arrêté depuis 1974, et démantelée en 1978.
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Niederaichbach Nuclear Power Plant) was a German nuclear plant in Niederaichbach, Bavaria. The plant consisted of one heavy water gas cooled reactor with a gross capacity of 106 MWe. Safety and maintenance issues caused the reactor to be decommissioned after only a year and a half in operation. It was the first nuclear plant in Europe to be completely decommissioned, with the final work being completed in autumn 1995.
Although located at the same location as the Isar Nuclear Power Plant, the Niederaichbach plant used a different reactor type and was decommissioned five years before construction of the Isar plant was completed.
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Isar I and Isar II were two nuclear power plants situated on the Isar river, 14 kilometres from Landshut, between Essenbach and Niederaichbach in Bavaria, Germany.
Isar I is a boiling water reactor which began operation in 1979 and was permanently shut down in 2011 as a result of the Fukushima disaster in Japan. It had a nameplate capacity of 912MWe. Isar II is a Konvoi-type pressurized water reactor which began operation in 1988 and has a nameplate capacity of 1485MWe. As part of the country's nuclear power phase-out, Isar II was taken out of service on 15 April 2023, being among the last 3 reactors in Germany still operating at this time.
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Niederaichbach is a municipality in the district of Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
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The Lower Bavarian Upland, Lower Bavarian Hill Country or Lower Bavarian Hills, are part of the tertiary Hügelland or hill country south of the River Danube and cover much of the land within the Bavarian province of Lower Bavaria in southern Germany. To the north it is bordered by the Gäuboden region and the Bavarian Forest; to the south by Upper Bavaria, to the east by the Lower Inn Valley and to the west by the Franconian Jura. In the western part of the Lower Bavarian Hills lies the Hallertau, the world's largest hop-growing region. It belongs to two officially defined natural regions in Germany: the eponymous Lower Bavarian hills and the Isar-Inn Gravel Beds, and is sub-divided into the Danube-Isar Hills and the Isar-Inn Upland with the River Isar as the boundary. The hills continue over the border into Austria as the Upper Austrian Hills.
The biggest cities in the lower Bavarian Upland are Ingolstadt, Landshut and Freising. Other larger centres of population are Landau an der Isar, Pfarrkirchen, Eggenfelden, Vilsbiburg, Bad Griesbach im Rottal, Ortenburg, Triftern, Rottenburg an der Laaber and Pfeffenhausen. The Lower Bavarian Spa Triangle is of particular importance for tourism.
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Wörth an der Isar is a municipality in the district of Landshut in Bavaria in Germany.
Le cœur radioactif devait être retiré et stocké dans la mine de sel d'Asse près de Wolfenbüttel. La centrale a été démantelée entre 1986 et 1995 et le site de la centrale est retourné à l'herbe où un éleveur y fait brouter ses vaches.