Sandy
likely to shut at least two New Jersey nuclear reactors
At
least two major New Jersey nuclear power plants are likely to shut on
Monday as Hurricane Sandy makes landfall as a Category 1 storm and
more plants could reduce power as the storm triggers precautionary
safety measures.
29
October, 2012
In
Connecticut, Dominion Resources Inc already reduced the output of its
Millstone 3 reactor from full power to about 75 percent as a
precaution due to high water levels caused by Sandy, the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) said.
Sandy,
centered over the Atlantic Ocean about 175 miles southeast of New
York City, was expected to hit near Delaware and south New Jersey
later Monday as a Category 1 hurricane with winds of up to 90 miles
per hour.
The
nuclear reactors in Sandy's current path include units at Public
Service Enterprise Group Inc's 2,332-megawatt (MW) Salem and 1,161-MW
Hope Creek plants in New Jersey, which were likely to bear the brunt
of the storm before it moves inland. Those PSEG reactors combined
account for about 19 percent of the state's total electric capacity,
although New Jersey also draws supplies from the whole Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, Maryland (PJM) power region.
PJM
is the biggest power grid in the United States serving more than 60
million people in 13 U.S. Mid-Atlantic and Midwest states and the
District of Columbia.
Electricity
traders said if Sandy continues on her expected path it was likely
PSEG would have to shut the Salem and Hope Creek reactors later
Monday, but they were mixed on whether the storm's winds would still
be strong enough to force the shutdown of reactors in Pennsylvania
and Maryland.
PSEG
spokesman Joe Delmar said the company would take the Salem and Hope
Creek reactors offline if wind speeds reach greater than 74 miles per
hour onsite for more than 15 minutes or the river water level reaches
100 feet. Sandy's maximum winds were at 90 mph earlier on Monday.
The
mean river water level at the Salem-Hope Creek site was 89 feet and
the site grade was about 102 feet. The highest river level ever
recorded was 97.5 feet, Delmar said.
But
Sandy was expected to lose some punch as she moves over Pennsylvania
and Maryland, crossing near Constellation Nuclear Energy Group's
1,705-MW Calvert Cliffs nuclear plant in Maryland, Exelon Corp's
2,244-MW Peach Bottom, 805-MW Three Mile Island and 2,264-MW Limerick
in Pennsylvania, and PPL Corp's 2,450-MW Susquehanna in Pennsylvania.
All
U.S. reactors have procedures that require operators to shut the
units when hurricane-force winds reach their sites or when
floodwaters reach certain levels.
Nuclear
power represents about 18 percent of the generating capacity in the
U.S. Mid-Atlantic region. One megawatt powers about 1,000 homes.
A
few reactors in the area were already shut for refueling or other
maintenance, including Exelon's Oyster Creek in New Jersey, PSEG's
Salem 2 in New Jersey, PPL's Susquehanna in Pennsylvania and
Dominion's Millstone 2 in Connecticut.
Both
Salem Unit 1 and Hope Creek were at full power Monday morning and the
refueling work on Salem Unit 2 was suspended by 6 p.m. EDT Sunday,
Delmar said.
WIND
AND FLOOD WATER
Delmar
said only essential personnel were required to report to the Salem
and Hope Creek site on Monday.
He
said PSEG was in Phase 2 of its severe weather plan.
Phase
1 included inspecting, removing and securing objects outside that
could become airborne and putting emergency equipment and supplies in
place.
Phase
2 of the plan includes visual inspections of equipment, verifying
weather tight doors, checking on emergency diesel availability, and
ensuring water intakes are prepared for severe weather.
Power
companies from North Carolina to Maine have been preparing for Sandy
for days and urged customers to be ready for the possibility of days
without electricity. More than 700,000 homes and businesses were
already without power Monday afternoon.
The
Long Island Power Authority, which serves 1.1 million people on Long
Island, New York, and others said outages could last as long as seven
to 10 days.
IRENE
ALSO SHUT NUCLEAR PLANTS
The
last big storm to hit the U.S. East Coast was Hurricane Irene in
2011, which made landfall in the Outer Banks in North Carolina as a
Category 1 storm. Irene caused billions in property damage as it ran
up the coast from Carolinas to Maine.
Irene
left more than eight million homes and businesses without power, some
for a week or more in the hardest hit areas. It forced many power
plants to shut, including at least two reactors, at Oyster Creek in
New Jersey and Calvert Cliffs in Maryland.
Several
other reactors had to reduce power primarily due to debris in their
cooling water intakes and other reasons, like Duke Energy Corp's
Brunswick in North Carolina, Dominion's Millstone in Connecticut and
PSEG's Salem in New Jersey.
The
biggest utilities in Sandy's path include units of Duke, Exelon,
FirstEnergy Corp, National Grid Plc, Consolidated Edison Inc,
Northeast Utilities, Dominion, PSEG, PPL, Pepco Holdings Inc and
Iberdrola SA.
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