Cooling
tubes at FPL St. Lucie nuke plant show significant wear
22 February, 2014
Yet
another Florida nuclear plant may be in trouble.
More
than 3,700 tubes that help cool a nuclear reactor at Florida Power &
Light's St. Lucie facility exhibit wear. Most other similar plants
have between zero and a few hundred.
Worst
case: A tube bursts and spews radioactive fluid. That's what happened
at the San Onofre plant in California two years ago. The plant shut
down forever because it would have cost too much to fix.
"The
bottom line is, these components are functioning within their
requirements, and if they weren't they would be removed from
service," said Michael Waldron, an FPL spokesman.
FPL
is so confident in St. Lucie's condition that it boosted the plant's
power. The utility acknowledged that will aggravate wear on the
tubes, located inside steam generators.
Critics
say that's like pressing hard on the accelerator, even when you know
the car has worn brakes.
"The
damn thing is grinding down," said Daniel Hirsch, a University
of California at Santa Cruz nuclear policy lecturer. "They must
be terrified internally. They've got steam generators that are now
just falling apart."
• • •
Nuclear
power plants are like very expensive tea kettles. The reactor heats
water. The steam generator turns hot water to steam, which powers a
turbine, which makes electricity.
The
steam generator also uses its thousands of alloy tubes to cool water,
which is pumped back to cool the reactor. In that sense, the steam
generators are a safety device.
"The
tubes need to be very thin to transfer heat, and they need to be very
strong to prevent a meltdown," said Hirsch, who reviewed the
tube problems at San Onofre and St. Lucie. "Steam generators are
really critical to safety. It's not a feature you want to play with."
FPL,
the state's largest electric utility, brought the St. Lucie 2 plant
online in 1983, about 50 miles north of West Palm Beach.
In
2007, FPL installed two new steam generators for $140 million,
intending them to last until the plant's license expires in 2043.
Each generator contained about 9,000 tubes, which are 50 to 70 feet
long.
In
2009, FPL shut down the reactor for routine refueling. An inspection
found that the tubes were banging against the stainless steel
antivibration bars, leaving dents and wear spots.
More
than 2,000 tubes showed some wear in 5,855 separate places. (A tube
can be worn in multiple spots.)
At
that time — this was three years before San Onofre — it was by
far the most wear found at the 20 or so similar plants with new
generators, according to filings with the federal Nuclear Regulatory
Commission. The Salem 2 plant in New Jersey had 1,567 wear
indications when first inspected, but no other plant had more than a
few hundred. The typical plant had fewer than 20.
Aging
steam generators near the end of their useful lives can develop
significant tube wear, but to sustain thousands of wear indications
just a couple of years after installation is unusual.
"St.
Lucie is the outlier of all the active plants," said Arnie
Gundersen, a nuclear engineer and frequent critic of the nuclear
industry.
FPL
turned the plant back on, telling the NRC in a subsequent report that
the tube wear was within allowable levels. Federal regulators agreed
that the plant was safe to operate, though they noted that the number
of wear indications was "much greater" than in other steam
generators of similar age.
In
2011, FPL again shut down the reactor and inspected the tubes. The
wear had spread.
Affected
tubes: 2,978, up 46 percent from 2009.
Worn
spots: 8,825, up 51 percent.
• • •
On
Jan. 31, 2012, a "high radiation alarm'' went off at the San
Onofre 3 plant south of Los Angeles.
A
tube inside a steam generator had burst, belching irradiated fluid
into the containment building. No one was hurt.
The
plant went into "rapid power reduction" and shut down,
according to NRC documents.
San
Onofre 3 had received two new steam generators less than a year
earlier. After the leak, inspectors found 1,806 tubes worn in 10,284
places. They also found an unusually high number of worn tubes at the
nearby San Onofre 2 plant.
The
burst tube had rubbed against another tube, which may explain why it
wore out so fast. But, as at St. Lucie, much of the wear to the tubes
appeared at the antivibration bars.
Plant
owner Southern California Edison concluded that a design change in
the Mitsubishi-made steam generators contributed to the wear.
They
lacked what are called stay cylinders. The space taken up by stay
cylinders was replaced with more tubes, which helped increase the
plant's power.
St.
Lucie 2's new steam generators also lack a stay cylinder, though they
were made by AREVA, a French company.
To
deal with the wear problem, Southern California Edison considered
reducing power by up to 40 percent or replacing the almost new steam
generators, at a cost of $1 billion or more.
Ultimately,
the utility decided closing the plants was the best alternative.
A
few months after the San Onofre leak, FPL inspected the St. Lucie
plant. Again, the problem had spread. More than 3,745 tubes showed
wear in 11,518 places, almost 1,250 more than at San Onofre 3.
In
answers to questions from the Tampa Bay Times,
the NRC said the plant has no safety issues and operates within
established guidelines. That includes holding up under "postulated
accident conditions."
FPL
insisted St. Lucie should not be linked to San Onofre from either a
safety or financial standpoint.
"From
an engineering perspective,'' said Waldron, the FPL spokesman, ''you
can neither make a comparison, nor can you assume an outcome because
the two systems are so different.''
Southern
California Edison, however, found plenty of similarities.
In
its analysis of what happened at San Onofre, the company called St.
Lucie "the next closest plant with a high number of wear
indications."
"Although
a different (steam generator) design, the (antivibration bars) serve
the same design function," Edison wrote in its April 2, 2012,
analysis. "So St. Lucie was used to determine similarities and
potential actions."
During
hearings, Edison repeatedly pointed to St. Lucie as having the same
problem, said Hirsch and Gundersen.
"I
think the comparison is dead on," Gundersen said. "All of
the failure modes except for (tubes hitting each other) are
identical. When the same problem popped at the two San Onofre plants,
it suddenly became a cluster."
• • •
Ultimately
it's not the number of instances of wear but the depth of wear that
matters most.
Think
of it this way: If hundreds of roof shingles all show minor wear, the
home remains dry. But if a hole wears right through to the attic,
water leaks into the living room every time it rains.
Inspectors
measure the depth in percentages. One percent is very shallow; 100
percent equals a burst tube. The tube walls are 0.043 inches thick,
about as thick as a compact disc.
Speaking
generally, Michel J. Pettigrew, principal research engineer for
Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd., said most tube wear stays shallow and
doesn't develop into anything significant.
"It
is the wear indications greater than 20 percent of tube wall that are
significant," he said. "These should be monitored closely."
When
it closed, San Onofre 3 had 2,519 wear spots at least 20 percent deep
into a tube wall. When last inspected in 2012, the St. Lucie plant
had 1,920, the Times analysis found.
As
for the deepest wear, FPL can correctly argue that San Onofre was in
far worse shape. More than 280 wear spots showed at least 50 percent
wear. At St. Lucie there were none.
When
a wear spot reaches 40 percent deep, federal regulations require a
utility to plug the tube. Plugging eliminates the possibility of a
tube bursting but also renders the tube useless. Plug too many and
the plant can't produce as much power.
FPL
had plugged only about 155 tubes as of the last inspection, far
less than the 807 at San Onofre 3.
But
St. Lucie's tubes are still in use, and some are still wearing down.
The last inspection found 480 wear spots at least 30 percent deep,
and 139 of those were at least 35 percent deep.
While
not as severe as San Onofre, the depth of wear at St. Lucie exceeds
other plants with replaced steam generators.
For
instance, neither of the two plants at the Joseph M. Farley complex
in Alabama had plugged any tubes as of their 2011 and 2012 reports.
Same for Diablo Canyon 1 in California. Beaver Valley 1 in
Pennsylvania and Comanche Peak 1 in Texas had plugged just one tube
since the new steam generators began operating.
The
last inspection of units 1 and 2 at the South Texas Project didn't
find a single wear spot due to antivibration bars, even though the
steam generators are several years older than the ones at St. Lucie.
"We
have not had any issues at all," said Buddy Eller, a spokesman
for South Texas.
In
its response to the Times, FPL pointed to the big
difference in the number of tubes with deep wear as a reason why its
nuclear plant will be fine in the long run. The tubes at San Onofre 3
wore out in less than a year, while St. Lucie's replacement steam
generators have been running for seven years and the wear still is
not as advanced, the company said.
FPL
also emphasized that the wear at the St. Lucie plant is mostly
contained to areas around the antivibration bars. There is none of
the rapid tube-to-tube wear like at San Onofre.
Waldron,
the FPL spokesman, said these numbers are not alarming.
"We
have very detailed, sophisticated engineering analysis that allow us
to predict the rate of wear, and we are actually seeing the rate of
wear slow significantly,'' he said.
• • •
For
the last 16 months, however, St. Lucie's tubes have been under more
stress.
Near
the end of 2012, FPL completed a $1.2 billion project to boost the
power from both St. Lucie reactors by almost 12 percent. The more
power the plant puts out, the harder the tubes work to do the dual
job of creating steam and cooling the reactor.
FPL
estimated the additional power could increase the rate of tube wear
by up to 24 percent, according to an NRC review dated Jan. 27.
Joey
Ledford, an NRC spokesman, said regulators reviewed the impact of the
increased power at St. Lucie. They determined that FPL would only be
allowed to "operate their steam generators if they could
maintain tube integrity for the period of time between inspections."
"The
reference to 24 percent is more representative of an upper limit for
potential wear during post-uprate operation and is not a prediction
of the actual wear rate," Ledford said.
But
Dave Lochbaum, a nuclear engineer with the Union of Concerned
Scientists, compared the power uprate to playing roulette.
"That
would seem to be a gamble," he said. “I don't want (a leak) to
be the indication I have a problem."
• • •
So
what happens next?
In
March, FPL will shut down the reactor and inspect the plant's steam
generator tubes for the first time since November 2012.
The
plant likely will have more tube wear. How much more will determine
the next step.
If
the additional tube wear is minor, FPL might simply fire up the
reactor and take another look in about 18 months.
If
the damage is substantially worse, FPL might have to plug a lot more
tubes. Individual tubes could be fixed in some cases, though that is
time consuming, can keep the plant offline longer and doesn't always
stop the problem.
At
some point, the company might feel compelled to lower the plant's
power output to ease the pressure on the remaining tubes or consider
the drastic step of replacing the generators again.
All
of those options cost money.
A
prolonged outage or lowering the power output would raise concerns
over spending $1.2 billion of customers' money on the power uprate in
the first place.
It
would also add to the state's grim track record recently with nuclear
plants. Last year, Duke Energy permanently closed the Crystal River
nuclear plant long crippled after a botched repair job. Duke also
announced it would not move forward with the planned Levy County
nuclear complex. Duke's customers are on the hook for about $3
billion related to the two failed projects.
FPL
rejects any suggestion that its plant should be part of that
conversation.
"Two
things are for certain,'' Waldron said. "The investment we have
made in (upgrading St. Lucie) will benefit FPL customers for decades,
and the plant continues to operate to the highest safety standards.
To suggest otherwise is patently untrue."
Nonetheless,
there are those who suggest otherwise.
"I'd
have to agree that every steam generator has dents," Gundersen
said. "But the magnitude of what is going on at St. Lucie is off
the charts. These guys are a hundred times worse than the industry
average."
Ivan
Penn can be reached at ipenn@tampabay.com or (727) 892-2332.
Abnormal
wear at nuclear plants
In
2012, a tube inside a steam generator at the San Onofre 3 nuclear
plant burst, releasing radioactive steam. An inspection showed that
hundreds of the tubes inside the generator had developed thousands of
dents, or what the industry calls "wear indications." Last
year, the San Onofre plant closed forever. ATampa Bay
Times analysis has found that the St. Lucie 2 nuclear plant
also has significant tube wear. By some measures, St. Lucie 2 was
already showing more wear during the last inspection in November 2012
than San Onofre 3 was when it closed.
|
ST.
LUCIE
|
SAN
ONOFRE
|
TUBES
AFFECTED* |
3,745
|
1,806
|
WEAR
INDICATIONS |
11,518
|
10,284
|
The
deeper the wear, the greater potential for problems. Which plant had
deeper wear? So far, San Onofre 3.
|
WEAR
INDICATIONS AT LEAST 20% DEEP
|
AT
LEAST 35%
|
AT
LEAST 50%
|
SAN
ONOFRE
|
2,519
|
955
|
282
|
ST.
LUCIE
|
1,920
|
139
|
0
|
But
San Onofre is closed. It can't get any worse.
St. Lucie's wear keeps getting deeper with each inspection.
St. Lucie's wear keeps getting deeper with each inspection.
|
MARCH
2009
|
APRIL
2011 |
NOV.
2012 |
WEAR
INDICATIONS
AT LEAST 20% DEEP |
75
|
1,228
|
1,920
|
WEAR
INDICATIONS
AT LEAST 30% DEEP |
2
|
180
|
480
|
That
much wear is not normal. Most similar plants with new steam
generators have between zero and a few hundred wear indications. Some
examples:
PLANT
(YEAR OF REPORT)
|
NUMBER
OF WEAR
INDICATIONS |
JOSEPH
M. FARLEY 2, ALA. (2011)
|
0
|
COMANCHE
PEAK 1, TEXAS (2013)
|
1
|
DIABLO
CANYON 1, CALIF. (2011)
|
1
|
JOSEPH
M. FARLEY 1, ALA. (2011)
|
6
|
PRAIRIE
ISLAND 1, MINN. (2012)
|
353
|
CALLAWAY
1, MO. (2011)
|
623
|
SALEM
2, N.J. (2012)
|
1,927
|
ST.
LUCIE, FLA. (2012)
|
11,518
|
*
Both St. Lucie 2 and San Onofre 3 installed two new steam generators
with about 9,000 tubes per generator. The generators were made by two
different companies but they operate in much the same manner. Some
tubes are worn in more than one place, which explains why the number
of wear indications is much higher than the number of affected tubes
.
Sources:
FPL and Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Growing
problem: The story of one tube
The
tube in row 80, column 103 of one of the steam generators at St.
Lucie shows how the wear is getting worse.
In
March 2009, the tube showed wear at five locations. The
depths were:
1. 6
percent through the tube
2. 6
percent
3. 8
percent
4. 15
percent
5. 17
percent
In
April 2011, the number of wear indications on the tube had
grown from five to six and they were all deeper.
1. 15
percent
2. 16
percent
3. 16
percent
4. 29
percent
5. 24
percent
6. 11
percent
By
November 2012, the six wear indications were again all
deeper.
1. 20
percent
2. 20
percent
3. 21
percent
4. 33
percent
5. 26
percent
6. 17
percent
Nuclear Expert: “They must be terrified” at South Florida nuke plant
“The damn thing is grinding down” — Gundersen: “Magnitude of what’s going on at St. Lucie is off the charts”; 100 times worse than average
22
February, 2014
......Michael
Waldron, FPL spokesman: “From
an engineering perspective [...] you can neither make a comparison
[between the San Onofre and St. Lucie plants], nor can you assume an
outcome because the two systems are so different.”
Southern
California Edison, owner of now-closed San Onofre nuclear plant
between San Diego and Los Angeles:
“[St. Lucie is] the next closest plant with a high number of wear
indications. [...] Although a different (steam generator) design, the
(antivibration bars) serve the same design function [...] So St.
Lucie was used to determine similarities and potential actions.”
Arnie
Gundersen, nuclear engineer:
“I think the comparison [with San Onofre] is dead on [...] All of
the failure modes except for (tubes hitting each other) are
identical. When the same problem popped at the two San Onofre plants,
it suddenly became a cluster. [...] St. Lucie is the outlier of all
the active plants [...] the magnitude of what is going on at St.
Lucie is off the charts. These guys are a hundred times worse than
the industry average.”
Daniel
Hirsch, University of California at Santa Cruz nuclear policy
lecturer:
“The damn thing is grinding down [...] They must be terrified
internally. They’ve got steam generators that are now just falling
apart. [The tubes] need to be very strong to prevent a meltdown [...]
Steam generators are really critical to safety. It’s not a feature
you want to play with.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.