Atucha II is a
natural uranium fueled reactor, which construction started in July 1981 under a contract with
Siemens, but was halted in 1994. It was planned to have a much higher power (thermal power approx. 2,000 MW, electrical 750 MW) than Atucha I. At the time when it was started, it had the largest reactor pressure vessel of any nuclear power plant worldwide. The total cost as of 2006 was estimated at US$3.8 billion, or about $5500/kWe. Atucha II like Atucha I before it is one of only a handful of heavy water reactors of a type other than the
CANDU-type or the related
IPHWR-type ever built. Prior to the
EPR it was the last nuclear power plant built by Siemens. Partly as a response to the energy shortage caused by
natural gas crisis of 2004, the issue of Atucha II was taken up by the
Argentine government. In 2005 President
Néstor Kirchner signed a decree to reactivate the construction and pledged to finish it by 2009. New technicians were hired and a budget of about $120 million was requested for 2006. Eduardo Messi, president of Nucleoeléctrica Argentina S.A. (the firm in charge of the plant), told reporters that 93% of the components were either in storage or already installed. On 23 August 2006 the government announced the re-activation of the national nuclear programme, and updated its promise to finish Atucha II by 2010, devoting a total of 1,850 million pesos ($596/€466 million). The plant was slated to come online with an installed capacity of about 745 MW (3% of Argentina's total electric installed capacity). Atucha II was "pre-started" on 28 September 2011 by President
Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and it was scheduled to start commercial service by mid-2013. On 3 June 2014 reached its first criticality, and on 27 June 2014 began to produce energy. On 19 February 2015, the plant reached 100% power production for the first time, increasing the percentage of nuclear power in Argentina's
energy mix from 7% to 10%. ==Atucha III==