Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant
0 sources
Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant
Summary
Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant is a nuclear power plant[1]. It draws 256 Wikipedia views per month (nuclear_power_plant category, ranking #110 of 308).[2]
Key Facts
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant is located in Oskarshamn Municipality[3].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant is in the country of Sweden[4].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's instance of is recorded as nuclear power plant[5].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant is owned by OKG[6].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant is operated by OKG[7].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's manufacturer is recorded as ABB Atom[8].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's manufacturer is recorded as STAL[9].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's Commons category is recorded as Oskarshamn nuclear power plant[10].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant comprises boiling water reactor[11].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's officially opened by is recorded as Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden[12].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 57.41555556, 'lon': 16.67111111}[13].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's service entry is recorded as February 2, 1972[14].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's official website is recorded as http://www.okg.se/en/About-OKG/Facilities/[15].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's nominal power output is recorded as {'unit': 'Q6982035', 'amount': '+1400'}[16].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's nominal power output is recorded as {'unit': 'Q6982035', 'amount': '+2500'}[17].
- Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's annual energy output is recorded as {'unit': 'Q2051195', 'amount': '+10689'}[18].
Body
Geography
Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant is in the country of Sweden[4]. It is located in Oskarshamn Municipality[3].
Designation and Status
Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant's instance of is recorded as nuclear power plant[5].
History and Context
Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant is owned by OKG[6].
Why It Matters
Oskarshamn Nuclear Power Plant draws 256 Wikipedia views per month (nuclear_power_plant category, ranking #110 of 308).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 17 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19]