CrashListers:
FYI.
Seth Sandronsky
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: San Onofre accident is key story behind CA blackouts
Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 15:43:16 -0500
From: michael mariotte <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Organization: NIRS
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

NEWS FROM NIRS
Nuclear Information and Resource Service
1424 16th Street NW, #404, Washington, DC 20036. 202.328.0002;
f:202.462.2183 [EMAIL PROTECTED]; www.nirs.org

For Immediate Release			Contact: Michael Mariotte or Paul Gunter
March 22, 2001					   202.328.0002


LITTLE NOTICED ACCIDENT AT SAN ONOFRE NUCLEAR POWER REACTOR IS KEY STORY
BEHIND CALIFORNIA BLACKOUTS

A significant accident February 3 at Southern California Edison's San
Onofre-3 nuclear power reactor is a major cause of the rolling blackouts
that have plagued California this week.

According to published reports, California has lacked up to 800
Megawatts (MW) of power during the blackout periods. When running at
full power, San Onofre-3 produces 1120 MW of electricity. Had the
reactor been operating, the blackouts almost certainly would not have
occurred.

The accident occurred when a circuit breaker fault caused a fire-that
lasted nearly three hours-a loss of offsite power, and a reactor scram.
A related failure of an oil pump resulted in extensive damage to the
plant's turbine. The reactor is expected to be shutdown for repairs for
at least three months. Although the utility claims no radiation was
released and no nuclear safety issues were involved, the federal Nuclear
Regulatory Commission sent a Special Inspection Team to the plant site
to investigate the accident. The NRC met with SCE officials today to go
over their findings. That team's report is expected to be publicly
released soon.

"This serious accident, which has gone virtually unnoticed in the daily
attention given to California's electricity problems, highlights the
vulnerability of electrical systems that rely on nuclear power, and is a
clear demonstration why atomic reactors can never be counted on to meet
our energy needs. Not only have nuclear plants always been too costly,
they are too unreliable as well," said Michael Mariotte, executive
director of the Nuclear Information and Resource Service (NIRS), a
Washington-DC based nuclear watchdog group. "When one of these large
reactors goes down-and as reactors age, they will go down more
often-large amounts of replacement power are needed-but are not always
available. This situation is likely to worsen as time goes on, not
improve."

In January, California's electricity shortage was prompted in part by a
storm which washed large amounts of kelp into the Diablo Canyon nuclear
plant's water intake system, forcing those two reactors to reduce power
to 20% to avoid a potential meltdown accident.

"Using nuclear power to meet electricity needs is a lot like playing
Russian Roulette," said Paul Gunter, chief of NIRS' Reactor Watchdog
Project. "Most of the time you'll win, but when you lose, the results
can be catastrophic."

NIRS was among the organizations that opposed California's deregulation
law from the beginning, and supported a 1998 referendum that would have
repealed that law. But California utilities spent $40 million to defeat
the referendum, thereby ensuring their steady march toward bankruptcy.

"At the time, Pacific Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison were
eyeing some $25 Billion in 'stranded costs' charged under the
deregulation scheme to California ratepayers to pay for San Onofre and
Diablo Canyon," explained Mariotte. "Much of that money seems to have
been distributed to their holding companies, and has not been used for
the benefit of Californians. And the bailout certainly hasn't made their
reactors any more reliable, nor any safer."

"Anyone who believes nuclear power is a way out of California's (or the
nation's) energy problem should simply consider how much electricity
could have been provided by safe, clean renewable energy and energy
efficiency programs for the $25 Billion California spent on its
unreliable nuclear reactors," concluded Gunter. "The choice is clear: we
can meet our energy needs economically, or we can have nuclear power. We
can't have both."

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