4. Nuclear Waste Pools in North Carolina
Source:
CounterPunch, August 9, 2008
Title: Pools of Fire
Author: Jeffrey St. Clair
Student Researchers: Krisden Kidd and Karene Schelert
Faculty Evaluator: Heidi LaMoreaux, PhD, Sonoma State University
One of the most lethal patches of ground in North America is located
in the backwoods of North Carolina, where Shearon Harris nuclear plant
is housed and owned by Progress Energy. The plant contains the largest
radioactive waste storage pools in the country. It is not just a nuclear-power-generating
station, but also a repository for highly radioactive spent fuel rods
from two other nuclear plants. The spent fuel rods are transported by
rail and stored in four densely packed pools filled with circulating
cold water to keep the waste from heating. The Department of Homeland
Security has marked Shearon Harris as one of the most vulnerable terrorist
targets in the nation.
The threat exists, however, without the speculation of terrorist attack.
Should the cooling system malfunction, the resulting fire would be virtually
unquenchable and could trigger a nuclear meltdown, putting more than
two hundred million residents of this rapidly growing section of North
Carolina in extreme peril. A recent study by Brookhaven Labs estimates
that a pool fire could cause 140,000 cancers, contaminate thousands
of square miles of land, and cause over $500 billion in off-site property
damage.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has estimated that there is
a 1:100 chance of pool fire happening under the best of scenarios. And
the dossier on the Shearon Harris plant is far from the best.
In 1999 the plant experienced four emergency shutdowns. A few months
later, in April 2000, the plants safety monitoring system, designed
to provide early warning of a serious emergency, failed. And it wasnt
the first time. Indeed, the emergency warning system at Shearon Harris
has failed fifteen times since the plant opened in 1987.
In 2002 the NRC put the plant on notice for nine unresolved safety
issues detected during a fire prevention inspection by NRC investigators.
When the NRC returned to the plant a few months later for reinspection,
it determined that the corrective actions were not acceptable.
Between January and July of 2002, Harris plant managers were forced
to manually shut down the reactors four times.
The problems continue with chilling regularity. In the spring of 2003
there were four emergency shutdowns of the plant, including three over
a four-day period. One of the incidents occurred when the reactor core
failed to cool down during a refueling operation while the reactor dome
was off of the planta potentially catastrophic series of circumstances.
Between 1999 and 2003, there were twelve major problems requiring the
shutdown of the plant. According to the NRC, the national average for
commercial reactors is one shutdown per eighteen months.
Congressman David Price of North Carolina sent the NRC a report by
scientists at MIT and Princeton that pinpointed the waste pools as the
biggest risk at the plant. Spent fuel recently discharged from
a reactor could heat up relatively rapidly and catch fire, wrote
Bob Alvarez, a former advisor to the Department of Energy and co-author
of the report. The fire could well spread to older fuel. The long-term
land contamination consequences of such an event could be significantly
worse than Chernobyl.
The study recommended relatively inexpensive fixes, which would have
cost Progress approximately $5 million a yearless than the $6.6
million annual bonus for Progress CEO Warren Cavanaugh. Progress scoffed
at the idea and recruited the help of NRC Commissioner Edward McGaffigan
to smear the MIT/Princeton report. McGaffigan is a nuclear enthusiast
who has worked for both Republicans and Democrats. A veteran of the
National Security Council in the Reagan administration, McGaffigan took
a special interest in promoting nuclear plants to US client states.
He served two terms as NRC Commissioner under Clinton as a tireless
proponent of nuclear plant construction and deregulation, and consistently
dismissed the risks associated with the transport and storage of nuclear
waste.
McGaffigans meddling has outraged many anti-nuclear activists.
Lewis Pitts, an environmental attorney in North Carolina says, The
NRC has directed the production of a bogus study to deny decades of
science on the perils of pool fires.
Author Jeffrey St. Clair concludes, If the worst happens, the
blame will reside in Washington, which has permitted the Shearon Harris
facility to become a nuclear time bomb.