Westinghouse opens new nuclear engineering hub in Kitchener
CBC
Seemingly ripped from Silicon Valley, Westinghouse's new engineering hub in Kitchener aims to support both Canadian-based and international nuclear power projects.
The grand opening and ribbon cutting, attended by Mayor Berry Vrbanovic, Ontario's minister of economic development, Vic Fedeli, and a number of Westinghouse executives took place at the new, 1,200-square-metre facility on Sportsworld Crossing Drive.
Around 50 engineers will work on designing the future of nuclear reactors, including the highly anticipated eVinci microreactors that could prove invaluable to some rural and Indigenous communities.
Westinghouse intends to hire 100 more engineers for this facility by the end of next year — 90 per cent of which are expected to be new graduates.
Kitchener's proximity to post-secondary schools, like the University of Waterloo — Canada's largest engineering school, was a large factor in the decision to make Kitchener their fifth engineering hub, said Westinghouse CEO, Patrick Fragman in an interview with CBC Kitchener-Waterloo.
"We are in the knowledge based business," said Fragman. "People who have the right mindset and the right skills that we can grow and develop in the nuclear industry, for us, is number one."
While being Westinghouse's fifth engineering hub, Kitchener is the only one that focuses on the global reach, servicing nuclear projects in Europe, Asia, and South America. The other hubs are in Spain, Italy, and two in the United States, only focusing on projects within those countries.
Fragman said that Kitchener also serves as a great location because of its proximity to Ontario-based nuclear plants like those in Bruce and Darlington, overseen by Ontario Power Generation (OPG). Westinghouse and OPG signed a memorandum of understanding in 2023 which has led OPG to consider using Westinghouse for future nuclear projects in the province.
Fragman said that about 8,000 jobs could be created by developing their AP1000 plants in Ontario, just for the Westinghouse scope of activities. Each of these large reactors would also introduce about 55 gigawatts of dispatchable electricity.
Microreactors are also in development at this facility. The eVinci microreactors, which produce about 10 per cent of the electricity as the large AP1000 reactors, would serve as a modular version of a nuclear power plant that could be deployed to rural communities that currently use less reliable or more expensive methods of power generation.
"We have already made an agreement for the first machine…in Saskatchewan," said Fragman.
"It's going to be not only the first small reactor deployed in Canada, but the first small reactor deployed in the Western world."

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