Update
on threat to nuclear power stations from Hurricane Harvey
Via Facebook
Hurricane
warning for all those in the path of the reactors near the sea. If
anyone has the ability to test the areas after the storm for
unreported leaks , it would be great, but more so, to test within
miles of the areas waste holding sites of these reactors. We would
think the people whom we pay to tell us would, but they don't.
If
nothing else, be careful during the storm and the rarely talked about
aftermath from waste near all reactors
From Libbie Halevy of Nuclear Hotseat, via Facebook
HARVEY
ALERT: From Nancy Foust of Simply Info: South Texas Nuclear Plant is
playing a game of chicken with a hurricane. They are refusing to shut
down ahead of the storm making landfall. Their reasoning is if the
storm doesn't reach 154mph winds at the plant they won't shut down.
But they won't know this until the storm actually hits the area. By
then it is too late. If they shut down at the point the storm makes
landfall they are now doing a SCRAM shutdown in the middle of a
hurricane. So any of the long list of problems that can happen while
trying to safely shut down two reactors from 100% to zero would then
be happening while they likely do not have offsite power. They would
be unable to bring in equipment or people. They would be unable to
work outside. This storm could also cause the water intake pumps to
be either damaged or shut down. Damaged by high winds because they
are out in the open, Shut down because if the water levels become too
high it could force them to shut the pumps so they don't short out,
or they could lose power to the pump systems.
Why
are they doing this? Money. They would rather risk a meltdown or
other serious event and all the damage that might cause rather than
losing a day's worth of power generation profits.
Fukushima
happened because they lost a functioning power source (generator or
AC power from the grid) and the ability to use the lake as a cooling
loop. Anything that causes these two things to happen can cause a
massive disaster.
This video is hours old - he talks of a category 2 storm; it is now category 4
We don't need nuclear power : http://cognizantnationhq.weebly.com/free-energy.html. Free Energy Forever.
ReplyDeleteYou are absolutely right. But of all the replacement energy sources for fossil fuels, nuclear is the only one that can only be done by large corporations. I think that is the main reason the US has not invested in solar, wind or other small scale, decentralized sources of power.
DeleteFor a surprising alternative to nuclear power see Fuel Free Turbines at aesopinstitute.org
ReplyDelete