13. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Dirty Secret
Source: PUBLIC CITIZEN, Date: January/February 1994, Title:
"What the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Won't Tell You: Aging Reactors, Poorly
Trained Workers," Authors: Matthew Freedman and Jim Riccio
SSU Censored
Researcher: Kate Kauffman
SYNOPSIS: Secret internal industry documents obtained by Public
Citizen's Critical Mass Energy Project reveal that America's nuclear
reactors have more serious safety, training, and equipment problems
than government regulators acknowledge.
The internal documents are plant evaluations performed
by the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO), an Atlanta-based group founded
by nuclear utilities in the wake of the 1979 accident at Three Mile Island. INPO
routinely sends inspection teams to operating reactors, reviews significant operating
problems and equipment malfunctions, and maintains data bases on nuclear power
plant operation. The detailed reports are submitted to the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC), where they are required reading for NRC inspectors. However,
the NRC has not released the reports to the public nor has it been diligent in
acting on reported problems.
A 1991 report by the General Accounting Office
(GAO), the investigative arm of Congress, found 12 instances in the previous two
years where "NRC decided not to issue its own information notice because
INPO had already alerted the industry to a potential problem." The GAO concluded
that "information that may be important to the public's understanding of
nuclear power operations is not publicly available." Public Citizen's examination
of the documents reveals longstanding deficiencies at nuclear reactors across
the nation that could jeopardize public health and safety. The findings conflict
with public assessments made by the NRC.
While the NRC is expected to use
the INPO reports to improve conditions at the nuclear reactors, a comparison of
the INPO and NRC documents by Public Citizen reveals that NRC regulators often
recommend reduced oversight at reactors where INPO identified serious deficiencies.
Altogether, NRC's reports only managed to report on about one-third of the total
findings identified by INPO; the other two-thirds were either ignored or directly
contradicted. Out of 55 findings at 34 reactors cited by INPO for deficient chemistry
programs, NRC addressed only two.
The failure of NRC to report and correct deficiencies at the nation's
nuclear reactors is a serious one; since current reactors are the first
generation to operate for any substantial length of time (the oldest
operating unit just turned 30 years old), much of the understanding
of long-term aging problems remains incomplete -- and hypothetical.
Most importantly,
the secret documents reported by Public Citizen reveal that the aging nuclear
reactors are plagued by a variety of management and technical problems which reduce
the margin of safety at operating reactors. And while the NRC has evidence of
the problems, it is neither reporting nor admitting them.
COMMENTS: While the story was reported in most daily newspapers
and carried on the Associated Press and Reuters wires, no major television
networks nor newsweekly magazines carried it. The authors, Matthew Freedman
and Jim Riccio, felt that the level of exposure was constrained by the
paucity of reporters who cover nuclear energy and the tendency of many
major newspapers to bury stories critical of the nuclear industry. The
New York Times placed the story in the Metro Section while the Boston
Globe put it on page 70.
Equally important, according to the authors, "There
was no follow-up by any reporters, despite our urging them to investigate further
the connections between the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and the Institute
of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO). Reporters are generally reactive on nuclear
safety issues and rarely take any initiative to investigate nuclear regulation
unless there is an accident or an imminent risk of disaster. Our report raised
many questions about the propriety of relations between NRC and INPO and asserted
that NRC is misrepresenting the state of nuclear safety in public evaluations
of specific reactors. No reporters attempted to explore the reasons for such misrepresentation,
nor have they subsequently challenged other NRC public evaluations on the basis
of our report's findings."
Noting that nuclear regulation is extremely
complex and difficult for most citizens to understand, the authors also feel that
the arcane nature of regulatory procedures do not facilitate a free exchange of
information between regulators and the public. However, they add, "Government
regulators, charged with overseeing the operation of the nation's commercial nuclear
reactors, have a special duty to be open, honest and aggressive about safety problems.
When agencies like the NRC find deficiencies at licensed facilities, the public
has a right to know that their health and safety may be in danger.
"If
regulators provide incomplete or incorrect information, then reporters have a
responsibility to publicize the agency's failure to act in the public interest.
"Without
timely and thorough media coverage of federal regulatory actions, citizens have
no ability to know whether or not they are being adequately protected from risks
which could endanger their families and communities."
The authors consider
the primary beneficiaries of the limited coverage to include "the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission and the commercial nuclear power industry, which includes
reactor manufacturers, industry associations and electric utilities who own or
operate nuclear facilities. In the absence of information to the contrary, the
public will continue to trust the NRC and local utilities to ensure the safe and
economical operation of nuclear reactors."
While the authors feel their
investigative article issued a strong wake-up call to the nuclear industry and
journalists, they doubt whether anyone was listening.
"Our article
details the first comprehensive comparison of internal nuclear industry documents
with public evaluations of reactor safety performed by the NRC. Our findings that
wide disparities exist between what the industry knows and what NRC makes publicly
available should have generated far more investigation into the INPO-NRC relationship.
It also should make reporters increasingly skeptical about the NRC's willingness
to be forthright about safety concerns and provide accurate information to the
public.
"These results failed to materialize primarily because reporters
tended to treat our report as a one day flash in the pan, not a basis
for undermining long-term confidence in the behavior of federal nuclear
regulators.
"Since
our initial release, there has been little, if any, further press attention given
to the story."