As long as they remove the 300 million dollar liability cap and let the
private market take responsibility for the whole thing. 

 

REH

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Harry Pollard
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2011 11:47 AM
To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION'
Subject: Re: [Futurework] nuclear reactor power uprates

 

No doubt about it. We should replace the aging reactors with new improved
plants!

 

Harry

 

******************************

Henry George School of Los Angeles

Box 655  Tujunga  CA 91042

(818) 352-4141

******************************

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D and N
Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2011 3:57 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: [Futurework] nuclear reactor power uprates

 

On May 17th, we had the admission just below, then following, the scoop on
power uprating--a common disharmonious practice to boost output.
Natalia


(NaturalNews) The truth has finally come out, as officials from the Tokyo
Electric Power Company (TEPCO) now admit that fuel in Reactor 1 of the
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex melted just 16 hours after the devastating
earthquake and tsunami hit the area on March 11, 2011. When asked why it
took more than two months to reveal this critical information, TEPCO
officials claim that a lack of data left the company unaware of the core's
true condition until only recently -- and new reports indicate that other
meltdowns could soon follow.

According to a recent report from The Mainichi Daily News (MDN) in Japan
<http://www.naturalnews.com/Japan.html> , TEPCO officials recently announced
that, based on new data, water levels in the pressure vessel at Reactor 1
began to drop rapidly within just a few hours after losing power
<http://www.naturalnews.com/power.html>  at 3:30 pm on March 11. By 7:30 pm,
fuel <http://www.naturalnews.com/fuel.html>  was fully exposed, and by 9 pm,
reactor core temperatures reached an astounding 2,800 degrees Celsius, or
5,072 degrees Fahrenheit. And by 6:50 am the next morning, a full meltdown
<http://www.naturalnews.com/meltdown.html>  occurred
(http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news...
<http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20110516p2a00m0na028000c.html> ).

So for all the time that electric power was out in multiple reactors,
causing the cooling systems to fail, and during the months after it was
widely known that water levels were consistently dropping in Reactor 4 due
to leaks, TEPCO played the ignorance card, acting as though it had no idea
how serious the situation at the plant actually was. Surely the company must
know, even without access to a detailed analysis, that when cooling systems
fail and fuel rods become fully exposed, a meltdown is sure to follow --
even regular folks with no background in nuclear
<http://www.naturalnews.com/nuclear.html>  technology can put two-and-two
together to figure that one out.

But apparently TEPCO thinks it can keep playing dumb, and that the world
will simply believe whatever it says. This new revelation, however, proves
that the company is greatly underestimating the fallout from the situation
at best, and deliberately hiding the truth at worst. Either way, the
situation is far more dire than we have all been led to believe.

"[TEPCO] could have assumed that when the loss of power made it impossible
to cool down the reactor, it would soon lead to a meltdown of the core,"
said Hiroaki Koide, professor of nuclear safety engineering at Kyoto
University, to MDN. "TEPCO's persistent explanation that the damage to the
fuel had been limited turned out to be wrong."

And shortly after the announcement about Reactor 1, The Telegraph reported
that two more Fukushima <http://www.naturalnews.com/Fukushima.html>
reactors may soon suffer a meltdown as well. Efforts to cool fuel in
Reactors 2 and 3 have failed, and experts say that if the reactors cores
have not already melted, they soon will
(http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/japan/8517861/Japan-meltdown
-feared-at-two-more-Fukushima-reactors.html> ). 


Learn more:
<http://www.naturalnews.com/032437_Fukushima_nuclear_meltdown.html#ixzz1PxAz
owNR>
http://www.naturalnews.com/032437_Fukushima_nuclear_meltdown.html#ixzz1PxAzo
wNR

 


U.S. is increasing nuclear power through uprating


Turning up the power is a little-publicized way of getting more electricity
from existing nuclear plants. But scrutiny is likely to increase in the wake
of Japan's nuclear crisis.


April 17, 2011 <http://articles.latimes.com/2011/apr/17> |By Alan Zarembo
and Ben Welsh, Los Angeles Times

The U.S. nuclear industry is turning up the power on old reactors, spurring
quiet debate over the safety of pushing aging equipment beyond its original
specifications.

The little-publicized practice, known as uprating, has expanded the
country's nuclear capacity without the financial risks, public anxiety and
political obstacles that have halted the construction of new plants for the
last 15 years.

The power boosts come from more potent fuel rods in the reactor core and,
sometimes, more highly enriched uranium. As a result, the nuclear reactions
generate more heat, which boils more water into steam to drive the turbines
that make electricity.

Tiny uprates have long been common. But nuclear watchdogs and the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission's own safety advisory panel have expressed
concern over larger boosts - some by up to 20% - that the NRC began
approving in 1998. Twenty of the nation's 104 reactors
<http://spreadsheets.latimes.com/nuclear-uprates/>  have undergone these
"extended power uprates."

The safety discussions have largely escaped public attention, but they could
become more prominent as the Japanese nuclear crisis focuses more scrutiny
on U.S. reactors.

In an uprated reactor, more neutrons bombard the core, increasing stress on
its steel shell. Core temperatures are higher, lengthening the time to cool
it during a shutdown. Water and steam flow at higher pressures, increasing
corrosion of pipes, valves and other parts.

"This trend is, in principle, detrimental to the stability characteristics
of the reactor, inasmuch as it increases the probability of instability
events and increases the severity of such events, if they were to occur,"
the Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, which is mandated by Congress
to advise the NRC, has warned
<http://documents.latimes.com/background-on-nuclear-uprating/#document/p131/
a14451> .

Still, the committee has endorsed uprates, based on assurances that any
increased risk falls within federal safety standards and is countered by
additional safety measures such as plant modifications and more frequent
inspections.

"You can always make a plant safer," said William Shack, a materials
engineer and member of the safety committee. "The question is, when do I say
I've made it safe enough?"

Computer models used to analyze risk suggest that a properly uprated reactor
is no more vulnerable than one operating at its original capacity.

But critics of uprates point out that such analyses may fail to account for
unforeseen accident scenarios.

"It's beyond the wit of mankind to identify all challenges to a nuclear
plant," said John Large, a former researcher for the British atomic energy
agency who runs a consulting company in London specializing in nuclear
safety.

A case in point involved three uprated reactors in Illinois.

In 2002, both reactors at the Quad Cities Nuclear Plant were restarted after
having their capacity boosted by 17.8%. Pipes began to shake, and cracks
formed in a steam separator, which removes moisture from the steam before it
enters the turbines. In one case, a 9-by-6-inch metal chunk broke off and
disappeared.

Similar problems were discovered at the Dresden Nuclear Power Plant, about
60 miles southwest of Chicago, which had undergone a 17% uprate.

Broken parts were replaced, but the problem continued. Exelon Corp., which
owns the three plants, and the NRC were mystified.

"The greatest concern is loose parts that you can't find," John Sieber, a
nuclear engineer on the NRC advisory committee, said during a 2004 meeting
<http://documents.latimes.com/background-on-nuclear-uprating/#document/p14/a
14453> . "Are they in the bottom of the reactor vessel? .... Is it floating
around where it can damage internal parts of the core?"

Eventually the problem was uncovered: acoustic waves caused by the geometry
of the steam pipes. The pipes were acting like a musical instrument. Their
geometry was modified to "detune" them.

Plans to boost the power by 14.3% at three reactors in Athens, Ala., and
12.9% at a plant in Monticello, Minn., have been held up, in part, by NRC
concerns over the steam separators.

Nuclear industry officials and regulators say that safety calculations are
conservative and that even the biggest uprates fall far short of the power
loads the reactors could actually handle.

Craig Nesbit, an Exelon spokesman, said that uprates "do not cut into the
safety margins of these plants."

He and other industry officials note that uprates often require replacing
turbines, transformers and other major equipment to accommodate higher water
and steam flows.

But some things do not change, including the suppression pool, which is
designed to soak up heat from the reactor core during some kinds of
accidents, and the heat removal pumps, which deliver water from the pool
into the core to prevent the fuel from melting down.

David Lochbaum, a nuclear engineer with the environmental group Union of
Concerned Scientists, has argued that in some uprated reactors the pool may
be too small and could become so hot that its contents could begin to
vaporize, causing the pumps to lose suction.

But factoring in the pressure buildup "represents a decrease in the safety
margin available to deal with a phenomenon subject to large uncertainties,"
the agency's safety advisory committee wrote in a March 18, 2009, letter to
the agency
<http://documents.latimes.com/background-on-nuclear-uprating/#document/p122/
a14452> . Forcing regulators to show that the safety system would work
without the pressure buildup would offer an extra layer of protection
against "potential melting of the core," the letter said. 

The alternative would be requiring plant modifications so costly that
companies say it would no longer make economic sense to uprate.

For the U.S. nuclear industry, which supplies a fifth of the nation's
electricity, uprating is attractive because it is one of the cheapest ways
to add power to the grid.

The 1979 partial meltdown at Three Mile Island eroded public confidence in
nuclear power. Construction proceeded on many reactors that had already been
approved - the last one went into operation in 1996 - but the industry was
forced to look for ways to get more out of existing plants.

The biggest gains have been achieved by running reactors more efficiently -
less downtime for fuel changes, for example.

But uprates have played an important role, adding the equivalent output of
nearly five average-sized reactors since 1996. Regulators say they expect to
approve boosts totaling 3 1/2 more reactors over the next four years.

Exelon, the nation's top nuclear provider, plans to spend $3.65 billion on
power boosts equivalent to one new nuclear reactor over the next eight
years, according to its filings for investors.

"They would come at half the cost of a new plant and with less risk because
of the opportunity to defer expansion if power prices do not support it,"
its annual report says.

[email protected]

[email protected]

 

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