Nuclear power plants rely on a limited number of large, bespoke power transformers to ensure continuous operation.
Although located outside the nuclear island, these assets represent a critical point of vulnerability: their failure can force reactor shutdowns, extended outages and heightened regulatory scrutiny.

Why Nuclear Is Unique
Risks and Failure Modes
In nuclear environments, electrical failures do not remain purely technical events — they can escalate into availability, safety and regulatory crises, making rapid containment of failure essential.
Further technical insight
For a detailed analysis of transformer-related failure scenarios in nuclear environments, including regulatory and operational implications, please refer to our dedicated nuclear insight.
Why Nuclear Is Unique
In nuclear contexts, compliance extends beyond standards — it is a condition of continued operation.
SERGI’s Approach for Nuclear
In nuclear environments, protection strategies must address non-nuclear failure modes capable of producing nuclear-level consequences.
SERGI develops passive mechanical systems designed to rapidly relieve internal transformer pressure, limiting escalation and supporting nuclear availability objectives.
These systems operate independently of external power, control logic or digital interfaces, aligning with nuclear safety and defense-in-depth principles.
In nuclear power generation, non-nuclear electrical failures can have nuclear-level consequences.
Understanding and addressing these vulnerabilities is essential to maintaining availability, safety and regulatory confidence.








