From
Mark Austin
www.nnsa.energy.gov
here at work we also have the fact that all older nuclear reactors
and spent fuel cooling ponds hit a tipping point when temps are
steadily over 37 to 44c. Yet all federal safety standards have
recently been De regulated in order to increase energy company
profits. Despite monthly warnings that NASA and all agencies see an
abrupt impact event by 2023. Please copy and share this. Last chance
year for more than 1% of the human race to understand that nuclear
power consequence management is serious. Chain reaction meltdowns
will impact earth beyond any other effect of methane burps.
Radioactivity eats ozone and oxygen. The half life of isotopes is
thousands of years destroying the chances of any future evolution!
Hot
Weather Spells Trouble For Nuclear Power Plants
NPR,
27
July, 2018
Nuclear
power plants in Europe have been forced to cut back electricity
production because of warmer-than-usual seawater.
Plants
in Finland, Sweden and Germany have been affected by a heat wave that
has broken records in Scandinavia and the British Isles and
exacerbated deadly wildfires along the Mediterranean.
Air
temperatures have stubbornly lingered above 90 degrees in many parts
of Sweden, Finland and Germany, and water temperatures are abnormally
high — 75 degrees or higher in the usually temperate Baltic Sea.
That's
bad news for nuclear power plants, which rely on seawater to cool
reactors.
Finland's
Loviisa power plant, located about 65 miles outside Helsinki, first
slightly reduced its output on Wednesday. "The situation does
not endanger people, [the] environment or the power plant," its
operator, the energy company Fortum, wrote in a statement.
The
seawater has not cooled since then, and the plant continued to reduce
its output on both Thursday and Friday, confirmed the plant's chief
of operations, Timo Eurasto. "The weather forecast [means] it
can continue at least a week. But hopefully not that long," he
said.
Eurasto
says customers have not been affected by the relatively small
reduction in output, because other power plants are satisfying
electricity demand. The power plant produced about 10 percent of
Finland's electricity last year.
The
company also cut production at the Loviisa facility in 2010 and 2011,
also due to warm water, but Eurasto said this summer's heatwave has
been more severe than previous ones.
Nuclear
power stations in Sweden and Germany have also reduced production
because of cooling problems, Reuters reported. A spokesperson for
Sweden's nuclear energy regulator told the wire service on Tuesday
that the Forsmark nuclear power plant in Sweden had cut energy
production "by a few percentage points."
Cooling
issues at nuclear power plants may get worse in the future. Climate
change is causing global ocean temperatures to rise and making heat
waves more frequent and severe in many parts of the world. A 2011
report by the Union of Concerned Scientists warned that warmer seas
could affect the efficiency of nuclear power plants, noting:
"...during
times of extreme heat, nuclear power plants operate less efficiently
and are dually under the stress of increased electricity demand from
air conditioning use. When cooling systems cannot operate, power
plants are forced to shut down or reduce output."
It's
not just warmer oceans that could spell trouble for nuclear power
plants. Climate change is also producing more powerful storms and
contributing to drought conditions, threatening facilities on coasts
with wave and wind damage, and reducing the amount of water available
to plants that cool their reactors with fresh water.
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