Questions
still remain on the the status of the area's nuclear power plants.
Entergy reports that Indian Point, 50 miles north of midtown
Manhattan, automatically closed at 10:41 last night not voluntarily
but because of "power-grid issues" from the storm, "Nine
Mile Point in Scriba, New York, was automatically shut down after a
power disruption to a switchyard" and "the nation’s
oldest nuclear plant, Exelon Corp. (EXC)’s Oyster Creek facility in
New Jersey, is on alert.".
Nuclear
Plant in N.J. on Alert as Sandy Tests Industry
Hurricane
Sandy forced three nuclear power plants to shut and put another on
alert as federal regulators dispatched inspectors to monitor 11
facilities in the path of the storm, the biggest test for the U.S.
industry since a crisis in Japan more than 18 months ago.
31
October, 2012
Public
Service Enterprise Group Inc. (PEG) manually closed its
1,174-megawatt Salem Unit 1, about 18 miles south of Wilmington,
Delaware, when four of six circulating pumps were no longer available
because of weather, according to Joe Delmar, a company spokesman. The
unit operated at full power yesterday, while unit 2 was shut for
refueling.
“The
biggest challenge for us overnight was waves hitting the circulating
water systems at both stations,” Delmar said in an e-mail response
to questions. There was also “lots of river grass and debris,” he
said.
Sandy,
the biggest Atlantic Ocean tropical storm on record, moved along the
East Coast for five days before slamming into the mid-Atlantic coast
yesterday, unlike the earthquake and tsunami in March 2011 that
crippled Japan’s Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant. Still, Sandy may disturb
intake of water for cooling or sever plants’ links to external
power.
Nine
Mile Point in Scriba, New York, was automatically shut down after a
power disruption to a switchyard, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission said. Entergy Corp.’s Indian Point 3 nuclear plant in
New York also automatically closed at 10:41 p.m. yesterday because of
power-grid issues from the storm, Neil Sheehan, an NRC spokesman
based in King of Prussian, Pennsylvania, said today in an e-mail.
Oyster
Creek
The
nation’s oldest nuclear plant, Exelon Corp. (EXC)’s Oyster Creek
facility in New Jersey, declared an alert last night due to elevated
levels of water in its water-intake structure, according to a
statement from the NRC. The plant, about 33 miles (53 kilometers)
north of Atlantic City and near the center of the storm’s landfall,
was already offline for a refueling outage.
“Nuclear
plant operators throughout the region had their hands full dealing
with this historic storm. While three reactors experienced shutdowns,
all are in a safe condition,” Sheehan said in the e-mail.
“Inspectors were on duty throughout the storm to keep a close watch
on plant conditions and will continue to do so as work on restoring
the units to service” begins.
Public
Safety
Exelon
said last night there was “no challenge to plant safety equipment
and no threat to the public health or safety,” according to an
e-mailed statement. “Exelon has staffed on-site and off-site
emergency operations centers to monitor weather and plant conditions
and to provide updated information to local, state and federal
officials.”
Exelon
said the alert was declared when water rose above 6 feet (1.8 meters)
above sea level, the threshold for an alert -- the second-lowest of
four levels of emergency declaration. A disruption was also reported
at the plant’s switchyard, which delivers power to the plant,
though diesel generators kicked in automatically.
Oyster
Creek began operating in December 1969 as the nation’s first
large-scale commercial nuclear power plant. The company announced in
2010 plans to close it by the end of 2019, when it will have been in
operation 50 years. Its single boiling-water reactor produces 645 net
megawatts, enough electricity to power 600,000 homes.
‘Breadth,
Intensity’
On
its website, the Chicago-based company called Oyster Creek “a
robust and fortified facility, capable of withstanding the most
severe weather.” Earlier yesterday, Exelon said it repositioned
emergency gear, activated back-up communications and boosted staffing
at its three Pennsylvania plants in the path of the storm: Limerick,
Peach Bottom and Three Mile Island.
Entergy
Corp. (ETR)’s Indian Point 3 nuclear plant in New York
automatically shut down at 10:41 p.m. yesterday because of power grid
issues from the storm, Sheehan said today in an e-mail.
Constellation
Energy Group Inc.’s Nine Mile Point 1 reactor in the state was also
shut because of a problem putting power onto the grid, Reuters
reported, citing an unidentified NRC spokesman. It wasn’t clear if
the outage was related to Sandy, Reuters said, citing the NRC. Nobody
answered calls to the press offices of Constellation or the NRC.
NRC
Inspectors
The
Washington-based NRC sent inspectors armed with satellite phones to
facilities from Maryland to Connecticut and said all plants remain in
a safe condition. Procedures require plants to shut before winds are
forecast to exceed hurricane force, the commission said in a
statement yesterday.
“Given
the breadth and intensity of this historic storm, the NRC is keeping
a close watch on all of the nuclear power plants that could be
impacted,” NRC Chairman Allison Macfarlane said in an e-mailed
statement. “Our extra inspectors sent to the potentially affected
sites will continue, on an around-the- clock basis, to independently
verify that the safety of these plants is maintained until the storm
has passed and afterwards.”
Analysts
said loss of outside power, which is necessary to keep nuclear cores
and spent fuel cool, would test adjustments being made at the plants
after an earthquake-triggered tsunami led to radiation releases at
the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant in 2011. The Tokyo Electric Power Co.
(9501) plant lost off-site power and backup generators failed after
the earthquake.
Nature’s
Power
Just
as with Fukushima, plant owners “look back to see what flooding
heights, wind speeds, etc. have occurred at the site and design their
plants to survive repeats,” Dave Lochbaum, director of the Nuclear
Safety Project at the Union of Concerned Scientists, said in an
e-mail. “But when nature reaches new levels, as at Fukushima, past
protections may be insufficient.”
“Designing
by rear-view mirror works when nature cooperates and stays consistent
with the past,” he said.
U.S.
nuclear plants are well-equipped to handle the threats from Sandy,
said Arthur Motta, chairman of the Nuclear Engineering Program at
Pennsylvania State University. “In terms of comparative risks, a
nuclear power plant is safer than most of the other things nearby,”
he said in an interview.
Plants
in the path of the storm included Indian Point and Calvert Cliffs in
Maryland, owned by Constellation Energy Nuclear Group LLC, a joint
venture of Exelon and Electricite de France SA in Paris.
Flood
Protection
“All
plants have flood protection above the predicted storm surge, and key
components and systems are housed in watertight buildings capable of
withstanding hurricane-force winds and flooding,” the NRC said.
At
Indian Point, debris in the Hudson River, which could disturb
water-intake, poses a greater risk than flooding, Sheehan said in an
interview. All the plants in the storm’s path were told to examine
their vicinity for large objects that could become “airborne
missiles” in high winds, he said.
Given
the threat of loss of power, “it would be more responsible if NRC
and plant operators would shut the plants down in advance,” Kevin
Kamps, a radioactive waste specialist at Beyond Nuclear, a Takoma
Park, Maryland, group that seeks to end nuclear power and nuclear
weapons, said in an interview.
It
takes longer to cool down the radioactive core at a plant operating
at full power, he said.
“In
terms of reactors, you had better hope those diesel generators work
adequately,” Kamps said.
Backup
Generators
Backup
diesel generators and cooling systems at Fukushima failed after a
15-meter surge of water tied to a 9-magnitude undersea earthquake on
March 11, 2011, led to the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in
1986. Hydrogen explosions occurred as water in the reactors and
spent-fuel ponds boiled away and radiation leaked.
Motta,
a member of a National Academy of Sciences panel on U.S. nuclear
safety, disagreed and said shutting the plants now wouldn’t make
much of a difference.
Hurricane
Sandy crossed the New Jersey coast south of Atlantic City. With winds
extending 1,100 miles, the storm shut the federal government in
Washington and state offices from Virginia to Massachusetts. It
halted travel, prevented U.S. stock markets from opening and upended
the presidential campaign.
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