Nuclear
Emergency Declared At Brunswick North Carolina Nuclear Power Plant
"Inaccessible" North Carolina Nuclear Plant Declares "Unusual Event" During Storm-Driven "Hot Shutdown"
17
September, 2018
Duke
Energy’s Brunswick nuclear plant, about 30 miles south of
Wilmington, has declared
a state of emergency as
the 1,200-acre complexremains
cut off by flood waters and and is inaccessible to outside personnel.
Just
as we
warned a week ago,
The News
& Observer reports,
at this time, no
one can come in and relieve the Duke Energy workers and NRC “storm
riders” who have been on site for days,
NRC spokesman Joey Ledford said. And it would not be possible
to evacuate the 10-mile emergency evacuation zone around the site if
a higher level of emergency were declared.
“None of the roads are passable,” Ledford said.
“The plant is safe. The reactors are in hot stand-by mode 3 shutdown.”
But
as Intellihub reports, The
Nuclear Regulatory Commission is being tight-lipped about an
“unusual event” which occurred at the Brunswick Nuclear
Plant last
Saturday which forced a “hot shutdown” of both the plant’s
Generation IV-type reactors 1 and 2.
The NRC
classified the emergency as an “unusual event” but
provided little to no details on the situation.
Additionally,
the NRC reports that weather conditions from Tropical Storm Florence
are currently preventing workers from accessing the plant.
“A hazardous event has resulted in on site conditions sufficient to prohibit the plant staff from accessing the site via personal vehicles due to flooding of local roads by Tropical Storm Florence.”
From
the NRC regarding Event 53609:
h/t @tronictime
The
current rector mode is showing as “hot shutdown” and more rain is
on the way.
River
waters in the area are expected to rise as much as 20 feet in the
coming days. Not to mention, local dams in the area may be to
capacity.
Brunswick
is equipped with emergency
backup diesel generators to operate essential equipment if the
facility lost off-site power from the grid.
Ledford said that the reactors never lost power and the generators
never had to be activated.
North Carolina Nuclear Plant Declares EMERGENCY
17
September, 2018
Duke
Energy’s Brunswick nuclear plant, about 30 miles south of
Wilmington, has declared a state of emergency as the
1,200-acre complex remains cut off by flood waters and and is
inaccessible to outside personnel.
Just
as I warned
a week ago,
The News
& Observer reports,
at this time, no
one can come in and relieve the Duke Energy workers and NRC “storm
riders” who have been on site for days,
NRC
spokesman Joey Ledford said. And it would not be possible to evacuate
the 10-mile emergency evacuation zone around the site if a higher
level of emergency were declared.
“None of the roads are passable,” Ledford said.
“The plant is safe. The reactors are in hot stand-by mode 3 shutdown.”
The
Nuclear Regulatory Commission is being tight-lipped about an
“unusual event” which occurred at the Brunswick Nuclear
Plant last
Saturday which forced a “hot shutdown” of both the plant’s
Generation IV-type reactors 1 and 2.
The NRC
classified the emergency as an “unusual event” but
provided little to no details on the situation. (HT
Note: It
was my understanding at the time that the NRC decided the plant
should be shut down BEFORE the Hurricane arrived with the hope to be
able to better manage any troubles at the facility due to anticipated
flooding. So to me, the shutdown was the right thing to do.)
Additionally,
the NRC reports that weather conditions from Tropical Storm Florence
are currently preventing workers from accessing the plant.
“A hazardous event has resulted in on site conditions sufficient to prohibit the plant staff from accessing the site via personal vehicles due to flooding of local roads by Tropical Storm Florence.”
From
the NRC regarding Event 53609:
The
current rector mode is showing as “hot shutdown” and more rain is
on the way.
River
waters in the area are expected to rise as much as 20 feet in the
coming days. Not to mention, local dams in the area may to
capacity. (Several dams have already failed elsewhere in North
Carolina)
Brunswick
is equipped with emergency
backup diesel generators to operate essential equipment if the
facility lost off-site power from the grid.
Ledford said that the reactors never lost power and the generators
never had to be activated.
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