I
reported on this yesterday. Here is confirmation from another
quarter.
As
1.5 Million Flee Hurricane Florence, Worries Grow Over Half Dozen
Nuclear Power Plants in Storm's Path
"Flooding-prone Brunswick Nuclear Plant among rickety old Fukushima-style reactors in likely path of Hurricane Florence."
by
With
1.5 million residents now under
orders to
evacuate their homes in preparation for Hurricane Florence's landfall
in Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, the region faces the
possibility of catastrophe should the storm damage one or more of the
nuclear power plants which lie in its potential path.
The
plants thought to lie in the path of the hurricane, which is expected
to make landfall on the Southeastern U.S. coast on Thursday, include
North Carolina's Brunswick Nuclear Power Plant in Southport, Duke
Energy Sutton Steam Plant in Wilmington, and South Carolina's V.C.
Summer Nuclear Station in Jenkinsville.
In
2015, the Huffington
Post and Weather.com identified Brunswick
as one of the East Coast's most at-risk nuclear power plants in the
event of rising sea levels and the storm surges that come with them.
The storm was labeled a Category 4 tropical storm with the potential to become a Category 5 as it nears the coast, with 130 mile-per-hour winds blowing about 900 miles off the coast of Cape Fear, North Carolina.
Meteorologists warned of hurricane-force winds in the region by mid-day Thursday, with storm surges reaching up to 12 feet or higher.
The
2011 Fukushima
disaster remains
the highest-profile nuclear catastrophe caused by a natural disaster.
The tsunami that hit Japan in March of that year disabled three of
the plant's reactors, causing a radioactive release which forced
hundreds of thousands of people from their homes.
Most nuclear power facilities were built well before scientists understood just how high sea levels might rise in the future. And for power plants, the most serious threat is likely to come from surges during storms. Higher sea levels mean that flooding will travel farther inland, creating potential hazards in areas that may have previously been considered safe.During hurricanes, many nuclear facilities will power down—but this is not a sure-fire way to avoid disaster, wrote Sheppard and Shifflett.
"Even when a plant is not operating, the spent fuel stored on-site, typically uranium, will continue to emit heat and must be cooled using equipment that relies on the plant's own power," they wrote. "Flooding can cause a loss of power, and in serious conditions it can damage backup generators. Without a cooling system, reactors can overheat and damage the facility to the point of releasing radioactive material."
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