They still believe in magic.

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D & N
Sent: Sunday, April 08, 2012 2:14 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: [Futurework] state of US nuclear power plants

 


http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bs-ed-nuclear-20120311,0,11501
5.story


No more Fukushimas


One year after the Japanese disaster, the fact is that U.S. nuclear plants
still face similar risks


 

By Gwen L. DuBois 

12:00 p.m. EDT, March 11, 2012

 

The earthquake
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/disasters-accidents/earthquakes/tsunamis/
japan-earthquake-tsunami-%282011%29-EVWAN00003.topic>  and tsunami that
struck Japan
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/intl/japan-PLGEO000001.topic>  one year
ago today precipitated the most serious nuclear disaster since Chernobyl. A
worst-case scenario contemplated the voluntary evacuation of Tokyo, as the
Japanese Atomic Energy Commission feared a meltdown of the spent fuel pools
sitting atop the reactors more than of the reactors themselves, according to
an aide to then-prime minister Naoto Kan
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/politics/government/naoto-kan-PEPLT000077
13.topic> . Spent fuel pools, unlike nuclear reactors, are enclosed in no
primary containment building. The one atop Reactor 4, which also has the
"hottest fuel," sits directly exposed to the elements after an explosion
blew the roof off the building March 15.

Our nuclear plants are no better designed than those in Japan. Twenty-three
are Mark 1 boiling water reactors, identical to Fukushima Daiichi
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/economy-business-finance/energy-resource-
industries/nuclear-power/tokyo-electric-power-co.-ORCRP0000175859.topic>
reactors 1-5. This includes Peach Bottom, 36 miles from Baltimore in York
County
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/us/pennsylvania/york-county-%28pennsylvan
ia%29-PLGEO100100701410.topic> , Pa.; and Vermont Yankee, notorious for
pipes leaking radioactive tritium, which was relicensed for 20 years on
March 10, 2011, over the objection of Vermonters.

Nor are our plants immune from natural or manmade disasters. Nearly half of
the 104 reactors in the U.S. are near major fault lines. In August, a 5.8
earthquake 11 miles from Virginia's North Anna nuclear power plant, which is
70 miles from Washington D.C., rattled nerves in Baltimore and far beyond.
The quake caused twice the amount of ground movement for which North Anna
was designed. One backup generator failed. The presence of a geological
fault below the reactors was known and covered up by the owners and
regulators at the time of construction.

Twenty-seven reactors have not made adequate provisions for earthquake
protection, including Indian Point, the nuclear reactor within 25 miles of
New York City
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/us/new-york/new-york-city-PLGEO1001008040
00000.topic> . Forty-seven reactors do not meet Nuclear Regulatory
Commission
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/environmental-issues/environmental-politi
cs/u.s.-nuclear-regulatory-commission-ORGOV000259.topic>  requirements for
fire prevention. Fort Calhoun in Nebraska has remained off-line since a
major flood in June. A recent report by the NRC on nuclear power safety in
the U.S. supposedly redacted a section that dealt with the precarious state
of dams in this country. (Our neighbor plant at Peach Bottom uses the
Conowingo Dam as its water source).

  _____  

Follow @BaltSunLetters for the latest reader letters to The Sun.
<https://twitter.com/#%21/baltsunletters> 

  _____  

 

Any of these events could cause a loss of power, overheating of nuclear
fuel, and a partial or full meltdown. Just as in Japan, an event in the
spent fuel pool would be far worse than one in a reactor. Unlike the reactor
core, which sits in a steel vessel surrounded by a primary steel and
concrete container, the spent fuel pool is surrounded only by the easily
breached secondary structure, which nuclear expert Robert Alvarez describes
as a building "no more secure than a car dealership."

U.S. pools are generally more densely packed than in Japan. Vermont Yankee's
pool contains two to three times the amount of spent fuel as Fukushima
<http://www.baltimoresun.com/topic/intl/japan/fukushima-prefecture-%28japan%
29/fukushima-%28fukushima-japan%29-PLGEO1001007014111648.topic>  Daiichi's
Reactor 4, described above. The crowding increases the risk of initiating a
nuclear chain reaction. The NRC does not require backup generators or
batteries. Overheating could cause an explosion breaching the secondary
structure, carrying radioactive material hundreds of miles. Mr. Alvarez
estimated a meltdown of spent fuel in the Indian Point pool, which has three
times the radioactivity of four Fukushima spent fuel pools, would kill 5,600
people, do $461 billion in damage and render a large area uninhabitable.
(Calvert Cliffs, by the way, has generated the 10th-largest amount of
long-lived radioactivity in the country - among the largest concentrations
on the planet.)

A National Academy of Science report recommended that fuel be moved to casks
once sufficiently cooled. This has two inherent advantages over pool
storage: "(1) It is a passive system that relies on natural air circulation
for cooling; and (2) it divides the inventory of that spent fuel among a
large number of discrete, robust containers." Critics of nuclear power
agree: After five years, fuel from ponds should be moved into hardened
onsite storage as the best option until the unlikely time a permanent
repository is found.

The U.S. has 65,000 metric tons of nuclear waste, which we leave to our
children in perpetuity. "You don't build a house without a toilet" said
Jitsuro Terashima, president of the Japan Research Institute and a member of
a panel advising the Japanese government. This anniversary is a good time to
rethink how we should view our energy needs: consume less, manufacture
products that are maximally energy efficient, promote renewables like wind
and solar - and don't make more nuclear waste until we safely dispose of
what we have made.

Dr. Gwen L. DuBois is a member of Chesapeake Physicians for Social
Responsibility and a founding member of the Crabshell Alliance. Her email is
[email protected].

Copyright C 2012, The Baltimore Sun <http://www.baltimoresun.com/> 

 

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