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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Monday, October 28, 2013

Plymouth: ....a nuclear waste storage facility




Pilgrim No. 1 in U.S. for shutdowns

This is the first installment of a two-part series about the future of Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station, which was published on Sunday, Oct. 27, 2013.
 
PLYMOUTH — From broken water pumps, leaky valves and steaming pipes to elusive electrical problems, it's been a tough year for Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station.

PILGRIM'S FUTURE

Sunday:
Part 1:Pilgrim No. 1 in U.S. for shutdowns

Mondayz:

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
2013 Pilgrim shutdowns and glitches

Jan. 10-17: Both recirculation pumps tripped, followed by a head drain valve leak

  • Jan. 20-24: Leaking safety valve 
  • Feb. 8-16: Winter storm, 169 hours down 
  • Aug. 22-26: All three main water pumps shut down 
  • Sept. 8-17: Steam pipe leak
  • Oct. 14-21: Off-site power to plant unavailable because of NStar problem, which caused initial shutdown. Plant remained closed for two days after power restored because of faulty mechanical pressure regulator, which caused water levels in the nuclear reactor to become too high.


OTHER INCIDENTS
  • July 15: Loss of control room alarms. Plant stayed online. Alarms came back on with no explanation. Reason for malfunction never found. 
  • July 16: Heat wave warmed seawater temperatures, forcing the plant to power down to about 85 percent intermittently. Federal regulation required seawater, used for cooling the reactor, to be no warmer than 75 degrees.

Source: NRC website and Entergy press releases
 
Entergy, Pilgrim's owner and operator, has poured $500 million into the 41-year-old plant since buying it from Boston Edison in 1999, yet mechanical problems and off-site power outages have forced the operation to shut down six times since January, making it No. 1 among the U.S. fleet of 100 commercial nuclear reactors for shutdowns this year.
 
Pilgrim has spent 79 days in shutdown since January, although company officials are quick to attribute 46 of those to planned refueling last spring.
 
Even when Pilgrim has been operating, the reactor has frequently been kept below peak level while workers address mechanical glitches. Between Aug. 22 and Sept. 21, for instance, the plant underwent two complete shutdowns and never reached peak power.
 
During July, a heat wave forced plant operators to frequently drop below peak levels because of the rising temperature of sea water used to cool the reactor. Federal regulations won't allow use of seawater above 75 degrees.
 
Bill Mohl, president of Entergy Wholesale Commodities, agreed in a recent interview that Pilgrim has had more than its share of problems.
 
"We've had our challenges with that facility this year," Mohl said. "But we are very focused on improving that operation."
 
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, after a five-year review process, agreed to re-license the plant for another 20 years just 16 months ago, despite considerable outcry from anti-nuclear groups and local and state officials, including the governor and attorney general.
 
"The issue is that the NRC has never truly met a plant it didn't like," said Jeffrey Berger, a former longtime chairman of the Plymouth Nuclear Matters Committee. "Many people, including me, quite pointedly question whether the NRC is the guard dog over the industry that it's supposed to be or simply the lapdog."
 
Darrell Roberts, director of NRC's Region I Division of Reactor Projects, in King of Prussia, Pa., countered that his agency did "an exhaustive review" of Pilgrim before granting Entergy a new license. "Pilgrim was the longest license renewal process of any plant," Roberts said.


ENTERGY: PILGRIM IS FINE

The operation's stuttering performance since its re-licensing, coupled with Entergy's recently announced plan to shutter its Vermont Yankee nuclear plant for financial reasons, has caused some to wonder about Pilgrim's future despite the decision by federal regulators to license it until 2032.
 
The plant's frequent unplanned shutdowns since January, with four of those related to mechanical problems, will probably also affect its level of oversight, once the NRC finishes its review of third quarter performance records, expected to wrap up next month.
 
"Shutdowns like that would get our attention," Roberts said.
 
More than three forced shutdowns in 7,000 operating hours (there are 8,200 hours in a year) will lower a plant's "performance indicators."
 
Pilgrim, now in a category that requires only standard oversight, may end up joining 22 other plants that must undergo more intense scrutiny.
 
Thomas Kauffman, spokesman for Nuclear Energy Institute in Washington, an advocacy group for the nuclear industry, argues that Pilgrim has a good operating record. The plant's three-year average for being at full operating level is 91 percent, Kauffman said, "several points higher than the U.S. nuclear fleet's national average."
 
Not surprisingly, Entergy officials also say Pilgrim is just fine, although a company spokeswoman refused discuss plant financial specifics.
 
"Pilgrim is about 10 percent larger than Vermont Yankee," said Entergy spokeswoman Joyce McMahon in an email. "In addition, Pilgrim is located in a region of the electrical grid where there is a stronger and growing demand for electricity. Those two factors provide Pilgrim with a significant economic advantage over Vermont Yankee."
 
In its announcement of Yankee's planned closure, set for the end of 2014, Entergy cited the low price of natural gas, increasing cost of meeting federal standards, particularly for smaller single reactors, and maintenance costs as reasons to shutter the 41-year-old plant.
 
Dave Lochbaum, director of the Nuclear Safety Project for the Union of Concerned Scientists, said Vermont Yankee has performed at 90 percent capacity over the last three years, "a tad below Pilgrim."
 
"It's hard to believe that such minor differences yield a red light for Vermont Yankee and a green light for Pilgrim," Lochbaum said. "At best, it would seem a yellow light for Pilgrim, cautioning about another premature retirement due to unfavorable economics."


OPPONENT: 'A DANGEROUS PERIOD'

Pilgrim has stirred up considerable public opposition over the years, particularly during the plant's re-licensing process, as well as since then.
 
Residents of the Cape are concerned about the plant's safety and the lack of an evacuation plan should there be an accident. That latter problem has prompted items such as T-shirts emblazoned with slogans like "No Escape from the Cape" and "Cape Evacuation Plan: Swim East."
 
Fourteen Cape towns, through town meeting or ballot votes, approved petitions last spring asking Gov. Deval Patrick, as the state's top official, to call for Pilgrim's closure because the safety of Cape residents can't be guaranteed.
 
Barnstable, the final town to vote, will consider the petition on Nov. 5.
 
"We've been concerned over public safety, but the decision has always been in Entergy's court on whether they operate or not," said Diane Turco, a Harwich resident and founder of the Cape Downwinders, the group that penned the petitions. "It will probably close down over company profits, not public health and safety."
 
Mary Lampert, a Duxbury resident and founder of Pilgrim Watch, has called Pilgrim "an antique."
 
"The plant was built when leisure suits were in style," Lampert said. "I think we're in a particularly dangerous period with an old reactor and no investment. People are thinking, 'Should I live here?'"
 
There is also some worry in the plant's host town. "Every time I get a shutdown notice, it makes me more concerned about their operating system," Plymouth Town Manager Melissa Arrighi said. "I think there's a townwide desire they improve safety and security. Fukushima made us all sit back and say, 'Do we have enough in place to protect our residents?'"


FIVE REACTORS CLOSING

Peter Friedman, a retired naval nuclear engineer and current chairman of the mechanical engineering department at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, said Pilgrim and other U.S. nuclear plants are strictly regulated and safely operated.
 
"People should realize that a statistical analysis of base-load power generators like coal, natural gas and hydroelectricity, nuclear power is by far the safest, and that includes accidents at Fukushima Dai-ichi, Three Mile Island and Chernobyl," Friedman said.
 
None of glitches that caused Pilgrim's shutdowns or power downs this year posed any risk to the public, he said.
 
Nuclear plants in the United States are staffed with personnel who are more highly trained than their counterparts at Fukushima, according to Friedman.
 
Meanwhile, five reactors are slated to close within the next year: Crystal River 3 in Florida, Kewaunee in Wisconsin, Vermont Yankee in Vermont and two reactors at San Onofre in California.
 
Kewaunee and Yankee will close for financial reasons. San Onofre and Crystal River are closing because of mechanical problems that proved too expensive to repair.
 
All five are shutting down before their licenses were set to expire.
 
Lochbaum said it's not uncommon for plants to close before the expiration of their licenses. "To date, about two dozen nuclear power reactors have been permanently closed in the U.S.," Lochbaum said.
 
"Only one (Big Rock Point) shut down at the end of its operating license period. All the rest shut down unexpectedly ahead of the license expiration date."
 
Entergy's Mohl remained vague when asked recently whether any consideration was being given to closing Pilgrim anytime soon.
 
While he said there were no current plans to shutter the plant, Mohl added, "We're always looking at holding and optimizing an asset, selling it or shutting it down."

http://www.capecodonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20131027/NEWS/310270335/-1/news01



Pilgrim plant: Taxing future ahead?
This is the second part of a two-part series on Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station. The first installment was published on Sunday, Oct. 27, 2013.
 
PLYMOUTH — In the late 1960s, the promise of decent-paying jobs and reduced real estate taxes in exchange for hosting a commercial nuclear power plant seemed like a good deal to Plymouth residents and officials.

PILGRIM'S FUTURE

Sunday:

Monday
Part 2: Pilgrim plant: Taxing future ahead?
 
Selectman Belinda Brewster, a lifelong Plymouth resident, said people apparently didn't consider the long-term ramifications of opening their arms to the relatively new industry.
 
"I wish we had a crystal ball when that decision was made," Brewster said.
 
Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station, which began churning out fusion-generated electricity in November 1972, has meanwhile changed this historic seaside community forever.
 
"It lowered taxes and the people all came," Brewster said. "We went from a small sleepy town to tripling in size."
 
The 1970 census set the population at 18,600. By 2010, census figures topped 56,000.
 
Pilgrim currently employs 650 area residents. The plant's annual payment in lieu of taxes to Plymouth, at about $9 million per year, represents 8 percent of the town's overall tax revenue.
 
Local officials recently signed a contract with Entergy that will net the town $28 million over its three-year duration.
 
But what comes after the three years is up?
 
"We know the decommissioning process takes some time," said Plymouth Town Manager Melissa Arrighi. "We're already right around the corner from year two. Even if they decide to decommission now, we can get to three years and see what happens then."
 
With Entergy's recent announcement of its plan to close Vermont Yankee, a nuclear plant similar to Plymouth's in size and output, some are beginning to wonder whether Pilgrim's closure could come years before its 2032 federal license expiration date rolls around.
 
Pilgrim is one of 20 plants in the U.S. fleet of 100 reactors that are more than 40 years old. Lately frequent mechanical glitches have forced the plant to shut down or operate well below peak.
 
Arrighi said she hoped the closure of Vermont Yankee might cause Entergy to rely on Pilgrim even more. But the town is already working on a strategy for recouping the lost taxes should Pilgrim close, the town manager said.
 
"We set up a plant mitigation fund last year," Arrighi said. "We're going to put money into it every year to soften the impact when taxes go down."
 
Local officials are also working to lure more business and industry to town, Arrighi said.
 
Denis Hanks, Plymouth's economic development director, said officials have fretted over the impacts of the power plant's eventual closure since he arrived 10 years ago.
 
"Since then, the Pinehills came," Hanks said. The upscale residential and commercial development in south Plymouth contributes about $9.5 million to the local tax base.
 
Hanks said the town should be making more land available for commercial development as a first step. But whatever measures are taken, the loss of revenue from Pilgrim, when it closes, will be felt.
 
"It's unrealistic to think you can ever recover the entire amount from the plant," Hanks said. "If Pilgrim stopped generating $9 million, you'd have to build 40 commercial developments the size of Walmart to make up the revenue."
 
Asked for her "post-Pilgrim" vision of the town, Selectman Brewster answered that Plymouth is several decades or more away from reaching that point, regardless of when the 680-megawatt power station closes.
 
"We'll have a decommissioned nuclear power plant in our community, and we'll have thousands of spent fuel rods until the federal government gets a repository," Brewster said. "We'll basically be a nuclear waste storage facility."
 
Decades ago, the federal government had planned to establish a repository for nuclear waste from the nation's fleet of power stations. Under the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, nuclear plant operators were required to contribute annually to a National Nuclear Waste Fund.
 
The fund's balance now stands at $26 billion, and Pilgrim has paid in more than $150 million, yet plans for a repository remain elusive and nuclear waste is being stored in large pools and mammoth concrete casks on power plant properties under heavy security.
 
Pilgrim already has more than 3,200 spent fuel rods on site.
 
 
 
 
Plymouth resident Jeffrey Berger, longtime former chairman of the town's Nuclear Matters Committee, agreed residents are probably very concerned over the plant's effects on the historic town.
 
"My sense is that there is at the very least profound unease that Plymouth has become a nuclear waste dump," Berger said. "That is not what was sold to us and it is not what the U.S. government promised."
 
 
 

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