San Onofre at the No Nukes Brink
  
In January, it seemed the restart of San Onofre Unit 2 would be a corporate 
cake walk. 
With its massive money and clout, Southern California Edison
was ready to ram through a license exception for a reactor whose botched
 $770 million steam generator fix had kept it shut for a year. 
But a funny thing has happened on the way to the restart:  a No Nukes 
groundswell has turned this routine rubber stamping into an epic battle 
the grassroots just might win. 
Indeed, if ever there was a time when individual activism could have a 
magnified impact, this is it (see www.sanonofresafety.org and www.a4nr.org). 
This comes as the nuclear industry is in nearly full retreat.  Two US 
reactors are already down this year.  Yet another proposed project has 
just been cancelled in North Carolina.  And powerful grassroots 
campaigns have pushed numerous operating reactors to the brink of 
extinction throughout the US, Europe and Japan, where all but two 
reactors remain shut since Fukushima. 
In California, it's San Onofre that's perched at the brink.  
By all accounts Southern California Edison should have the clout to 
restart it with ease.   The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has been a 
notorious rubber stamp for decades.  The California Public Utilities 
Commission, which decides how much the utilities can gouge from the 
ratepayers, has long been in Edison's pocket.  State water quality 
regulations could force Edison to build cooling towers, a very expensive 
proposition that would likely lead to a quick retirement.  But Gov. 
Jerry Brown has been deafeningly silent on the issue. 
But San Onofre sits in an earthquake/tsunami zone halfway between Los 
Angeles and San Diego.  At least 8 million people live within a 50 mile 
radius, many millions more within 100. The reactors are a stone's throw 
from both a major interstate and the high tide line, with a 14-foot 
flood wall a bare fraction of the height of the tsunami that overwhelmed at 
Fukushima. 
San Onofre Unit One was shut in 1992 by steam generator issues.   Edison 
recently spent some three-quarters of a billion dollars upgrading the 
steam generators for Units 2 and 3.  But the pipes have leaked and 
failed.  Units 2 and 3 have been shut since January 2012.  Edison has 
now asked the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for permission to run Unit 2 at 70% 
power for five months to see how the reactor might do.  An NRC 
panel has termed the idea "experimental." 
Edison is desperate to get the reactor running before summer.  But in 
the wake of Fukushima, and in the midst of a major boom in solar energy, 
southern California is rising up to stop that from happening.  
X  A dozen cities, towns and public organizations---including a 
unanimous Los Angeles city council and the public school district of San 
Diego---have asked that public hearings and/or further in-depth, 
transparent investigations be held before the reactors reopen.    
X  US Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Representative Ed Markey (D-MA) 
have asked the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to thoroughly investigate 
all relevant issues----and to make them public---before restart can 
occur. The Boxer/Markey inquiry has included some heated dialogue with 
regulatory staff.  It's raised critical questions about whether Edison 
knew it was installing faulty equipment in the first place, a 
potentially explosive revelation given the dangers and costs involved.   
X  Newly revealed correspondence between Edison and Mitsubishi over 
additional steam generator issues reveal persistent unresolved 
disagreements about the technology involved and what needs to be done 
about it, casting further doubt on what might constitute safe operating 
procedures.   
X  In response to a suit by Friends of the Earth, the NRC's Atomic 
Safety and Licensing Board has ruled that Edison's restart application 
in fact constitutes a license amendment, which should require a full 
public hearing.  The NRC Commissioners could overrule its licensing 
board.  But this was a unanimous decision and the public and 
Congressional outcry would be substantial.  It's a huge setback for 
Edison, damaging what's left of its credibility and likely pushing 
restart far into the future.  There's also much Edison is likely to want hidden 
from the public record. 
X  NRC Chair Allison Macfarlane now says San Onofre cannot be licensed 
to restart at least until late June, which probably pushes any actual 
restart date until after the summer.   
X  So this could become the region's second straight peak season with no power 
from San Onofre.  Despite utility rhetoric, its absence last 
summer caused no blackouts or significant shortages, and none are 
expected this summer either.  Edison's argument that the reactors are 
needed to keep the region cool and lit will thus disappear. 
X  Edison CEO Theodore Craver now says San Onofre could be permanently 
shut before the end of the year.  "Edison is hemorrhaging cash at San 
Onofre," says FOE's Damon Moglen.  Craver is "a financial guy" who is 
now just "looking for the right numbers to get to shut-down." 
It's common in the nuke blackmail business for a utility to threaten to 
shut a reactor where jobs and power are desperately needed.  But Edison 
now has a more desperate theme.  The spread of solar throughout southern 
California will bring far more jobs than San Onofre can begin to 
promise.  A new feed-in tariff in Los Angeles has helped spread solar 
panels throughout the region 
( http://prn.fm/2013/04/08/green-power-and-wellness-040813/#axzz2TW6S1BP3 ).   
Edison billed southern California ratepayers roughly $1 billion for San 
Onofre in 2012 even though it generated no juice.  The CPUC would 
probably let them do it again, but public awareness and anger levels 
have soared. Major media throughout the region have been pummeling 
Edison, largely over economic issues. 
Should San Onofre stay dead, its power void will fast be filled by 
cheaper, cleaner, safer green technologies destined to make southern 
California a major focal point in the global march to Solartopia.   
This shutdown would take the number of licensed US reactors down to 
100.  With others on the brink at Indian Point, Vermont Yankee, Oyster 
Creek  and elsewhere, the race to shut the world's nukes before the next 
Fukushima is turning the so-called nuclear renaissance into an all-out 
reactor retreat.   


http://www.nukefree.org/


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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