Parts
of two nuclear power plants were shut down and another one put on
alert, as the ‘Superstorm’ Sandy ravished the US East Coast. The
storm may hit as many as 26 of the nuclear facilities along its path.
RT,
30
October, 2012
At
the Salem plant in Hancocks Bridge, New Jersey, a unit was shut down
Tuesday, because four of its six circulating water pumps were no
longer available, PSEG Nuclear reported. The plant's other unit,
Salem 2, was already offline for maintenance when the storm hit.
A
unit at Indian Point plant north of New York City was shut down on
Monday due to an external grid issue, the plant operator said. The
facility itself and its employees are not at risk, the Entergy Corp.
said.
America's
oldest nuclear power plant at Oyster Creek was already out of service
for scheduled refueling when the storm hit. The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) officials have put the facility on alert due to
unusually high water there. The agency assured that the water levels
are expected to recede soon and pose no threat to the plant.
But
Professor Christopher Busby from the European Committee on Radiation
Risks says that Oyster Creek – which was commissioned in 1969 –
could pose danger because of its age.
“The
older the nuclear power station, the less good the integrity of the
various control systems and the actual metallic components of the
control systems…if they’re that much older, they’re more
corroded. They can be brittle as a result of neutron effects. So
that’s certainly a factor,” Busby told RT.
In
other parts of the East Coast, nuclear plants were weathering the
storm without incident.
Arnie
Gundersen, the chief engineer of energy consulting company Fairewinds
Associates, warns in a recent podcast that even if engineers at
plants from North Carolina to New England say their plants have been
shut down and are safe from disaster, it may already be too late.
During
a recording uploaded to the Fairewinds website on October 28, the
nuclear expert explains that facilities that are shut-down in
preparation of severe storms like Sandy could still contain dangerous
radioactive materials in their cooling pools for as long as two days.
“The
plant can withstand relatively high winds, but the transmission grid
can’t — that’s all those transmission towers that are all over
the states,” Gundersen says. “So what’s like to happen is that
power lines will go down and the plant will suffer what will call
loss of offsite power,” the same thing that happened at Fukushima,
Japan.
Gundersen
says that once offsite power is shut down, plants will automatically
halt its nuclear chain reaction process because that energy will have
nowhere to go. “The plant needs to drop its power immediately
because there is no wire at the other end to send it anywhere if the
offsite power is lost,” he says.
“There’s
26 power plants in the East Coast that are in the area where sandy is
like to hit, and hopefully as the storm track becomes better defined,
the plants that are most subject to it — likely New Jersey and
Pennsylvania — preventively shut down,” Gundersen says. Assuming
those facilities preemptively put their nuclear plans on hold, he
adds, “will of course minimize the impact: the jarring to the
nuclear reactor and its safety systems.”
But
even if plants are shut down, though, onsite power will need to be
pushed somewhere, which then raises an entirely independent question
of how to handle a surplus of radioactive, intense energy.
“When
offsite power is lost, the plant is forced to dramatically reduce
power real quickly and then it still needs to be cooled,” he says.
“You’ll
hear in the next two days, ‘we’ve shut down the plant,’” he
says, “but what that means is they stopped the chain reaction. But
what Fukushima taught us was that that doesn’t stop the decay heat.
There is still as much as 5 percent of the power from the power plant
that doesn’t go away when the plant shuts down, and for that you
need the diesels to keep the plant cool,” referring to the
diesel-powered generators that will control the reservoirs.
“Some
of these plants have two diesels, and some of these have three
diesels, and they are designed so that if one of these fails then
they can still get by,” he says. “As the plant operator, as the
people running the plant, it’s a little bit of a nervous time to
realize that you’re on your last fall-back,” he warns. “You
just hope that’s your last fall-back.”
Even
if pools can still be powered and cooled, that doesn’t mean that a
chance of a disaster is nil: according to a McClatchy report from
2011, the cooling pool used in the US contain much more nuclear
material on average than those in Japan.
Some
facilities in the storm’s trajectory, such as the nation’s oldest
nuclear plant — Oyster Creek in Lacey, New Jersey — have already
pulled the plug for other reasons. In that case, routine maintenance
has already allowed the facility a few days to cool down and will
likely spare South Jersey from any otherwise imminent disaster.
Across the East Coast, though, other sites might still pose a risk.
Speaking
to Bloomberg News, Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman Neil
Sheehan says the agency is prepared to see “an impact to coastal
and inland plants” and is planning on stationing inspectors at
plants expected to be hit.
‘Oyster
Creek proximity to New York poses threat during flooding’ - Prof.
Busby
RT,
30
October, 2012
Less
than 24 hours after Hurricane Sandy ripped through eastern United
States, the country’s oldest nuclear power plant – located in
Forked River, New Jersey - has been has been put on alert.
You
can never make nuclear power stations perfectly safe. You can’t
make it impossible for these situations to occur and when they do
occur, they can be pretty catastrophic, Professor Christopher Busby
from the European Committee on Radiation Risks told RT. The Professor
added Oyster Creek plant was a particular risk, located just 65 miles
from New York City.
All
of the power stations in the area were built against the express
wishes of the people who lived there. They were pushed through by
some kind of federal axe which overcame the opposition of the people,
he said.
Busby
spoke to RT about the possible dangers that could occur if waters
from Hurricane Sandy flood the nuclear station’s cooling system.
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