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CBS 5 - KPHO
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'Explosion' at Palo Verde nuclear plant not reported for 5 months
KPHO,
18
April, 2018
TONOPAH,
AZ (CBS5) -
There
was a small explosion at the Palo Verde Nuclear Power Plant late last
year but plant officials didn't report it to federal officials until
six days ago.
APS
said at no point was public health and safety in danger.
The
incident happened on a non-nuclear side of the plant and there was no
damage to the reactors' components.
William
Londrie has had no fear in calling the Palo Verde nuclear power plant
his next door neighbor of nine years.
"They
got so many back up systems that pretty much nothing wrong could
happen," Londrie said.
On
the contrary, something did go wrong at the plant back on Nov. 6 of
last year.
APS
officials said there was a leak in a hydraulic fluid tank that's
about the size of a file cabinet. When a worker opened the tank to
inspect it, there was a small explosion by rapid decompression. APS
said there was only damage to the tank, but no flames and no one was
injured.
"What
you had here was equipment failure," thinks Steve Brittle, an
environmentalist and former volunteer with the Maricopa County
emergency planning committee.
Plant
officials didn't consider it an explosion by nuclear standards, and
therefore didn't publicly report it or notify the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission.
"There's
something fishy there. They should notify them within that week I'd
say," Londrie said.
But
just six days ago, APS finally reported it to the feds as an "unusual
event." When NRC inspectors joined the investigation, APS
discovered it had been an explosion.
"This
is six months later. What were you doing?" Brittle asked. "For
them to not realize that it should be classified as an explosion
raises questions about their safety and their training," he
added.
The
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission considers the incident a "failure
to report an unusual event." There will be no fines, neither for
the explosion, nor for failing to report it.
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