PO Box 531  •  Durham,NC 27702  •  Telephone: (919) 419-8311  •  Fax: (919) 419-8315

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

NRC shuts public out of meeting on Progress Energy nuke

A watchdog group is criticizing the Nuclear Regulatory Commission for abruptly halting a public meeting last week after problems arose with Progress Energy's application for a new reactor in North Carolina -- and for continuing the discussion with company officials in private. The N.C. Waste Awareness and Reduction Network says the agency's action violates federal policy and has asked U.S. Rep. David Price (D-N.C.) to intervene.

The meeting on technical aspects of the company's plan to build a new reactor at its Shearon Harris nuclear plant near Raleigh was held Thursday at NRC's headquarters in Rockville, Md. N.C. WARN's attorney, executive director and other representatives were participating via phone when NRC staff raised questions about the site's geology and availability of cooling water. The historic drought afflicting North Carolina recently forced Progress to warn that it might have to shut down the existing Harris reactor because of low levels in the adjacent cooling lake.

When the answers offered failed to satisfy the NRC, Progress officials suggested that the issues be resolved after the meeting. At that point, a meeting that had been scheduled to last two and a half hours was ended after 70 minutes. In a letter sent to the NRC today, N.C. WARN Attorney John Runkle criticized the move:
You essentially went into "closed session" after some tough questions from the NRC staff that lengthy discussions did not resolve. Representatives from Progress Energy were the ones to suggest that issues be resolved "after the meeting." Nothing being discussed was proprietary or safeguards-related, so all of the meeting should have been public.
N.C. WARN called on Rep. Price to help ensure all future meetings regarding Progress Energy's proposed reactor are held near the Harris plant to allow greater public participation. Price has proved willing to use his post as chair of the House Appropriations' Homeland Security Subcommittee to exercise oversight of the nuclear industry: In response to a recent Inspector General report that found Harris and other nuclear plants are violating fire safety regulations, for example, Price wrote a letter to NRC Chair Dale Klein urging him to demonstrate that the agency's actions on the matter "are fully transparent." Hearings on that report are set for next month. Price has also requested a Government Accountability Office investigation into nuclear fire safety issues.

* * *

In other nuclear news, Progress Energy is raising eyebrows with its cost estimate for the two nuclear reactors it's planning to build near its Crystal River Nuclear Plant in Levy County, Fla.: $14 billion for construction costs and an additional $3 billion for transmission facilities, with the expense to be passed on to its customers in the form of higher bills. Cost estimates for new nuclear plants have as much as tripled in the past two years due to climbing prices for materials, labor and reactor technology. Progress Energy's initial estimate for the Crystal Rivers reactors, for example, was $5 billion to $7 billion -- off by more than half. The reactors chosen for Florida -- the Westinghouse AP1000 -- are the same model Progress plans for Harris.

Labels: , , , , , ,

posted by Sue Sturgis at 3:16 PM | Email this post

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Massive Florida power outage wreaks havoc, raises questions

A major power outage across South Florida today brought normal life screeching to a halt, as traffic signals, schools, homes, and workplaces went dark around 1 p.m. At the peak of the outage, about 700,000 customers were left without power.

Throughout much of the afternoon, Florida Power & Light had a statement on the main page of its Web site saying it did not know the cause of the outage. But a company spokesperson assured the Miami Herald that the "failure is in no way a safety issue."

The problem reportedly began in an FPL substation in West Miami-Dade County and then spread through the transmission system, leading to an automatic shutdown of both nuclear reactors at FPL's Turkey Point power plant as well as three fossil-fuel-burning units. But that explanation raised questions for some, according to the paper:
Many experts ... remained puzzled. Normally, a problem at a single substation should not cause an outage of the magnitude that dominoed through the state Tuesday.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission released a statement this afternoon saying the Turkey Point reactors shut down in response to an "undervoltage" caused when two power distribution lines failed following the substation malfunction. The reactor shutdown -- a safety measure to protect plant equipment from abnormal power line voltages -- is expected to last from 12 to 24 hours.

The NRC says it's monitoring the situation.

Labels: , , , , ,

posted by Sue Sturgis at 5:37 PM | Email this post

Southern News Update

Who Are These Folks?

CHRIS KROMM blogs three days a week for Facing South. He is Executive Director of the Institute for Southern Studies and publisher of the Institute’s award-winning magazine, Southern Exposure.

R. NEAL blogs two days a week for Facing South. Based in Knoxville, TN, R. Neal formerly ran the popular blog South Knox Bubba. He is now coordinator of KnoxViews.

SUE STURGIS blogs three days a week for Facing South. The editorial coordinator of the Institute's Gulf Coast Reconstruction Watch website, she is a freelance reporter who lives and works in Raleigh, NC.

Previous Posts

Archives

Site Feed