Roger Hannah
Senior Public Affairs Officer
Region II, Atlanta
The
NRC requires all nuclear power plants to consider the effects of
possible earthquakes in their area – designing, operating and
maintaining safety-related structures and equipment to ensure that they
can endure a seismic event and still function.
Two events in 2011 only a few months apart highlighted the importance of the NRC’s seismic regulations.
In
March 2011, a strong earthquake off the coast of Japan caused a tsunami
that disabled power supplies and cooling to several nuclear reactors at
the Fukushima Daiichi
nuclear station. Important safety structures and equipment were largely
undamaged by the earthquake’s ground motion, but flooding created major
problems.
Months later, In August 2011, a much smaller earthquake occurred near Mineral, Va., close to the North Anna nuclear station.
The
quake exceeded some levels for which the plant was designed and
licensed, but detailed reviews and inspections by Dominion, the plant
operator, and the NRC confirmed there was no damage to safety equipment.
Both North Anna units remained offline until November of that year when
the NRC was certain they could be restarted safely.
NRC
seismologists have worked closely with NRC inspectors, license
reviewers and others within the agency to apply the real-world lessons
of Fukushima and North Anna to all other U.S. nuclear plants. The NRC is
working to ensure potential earthquake hazard information for each
nuclear plant site accurately reflects what might be expected, and the
agency is requiring nuclear plants to reanalyze those risks over the
next several years.
Fortunately,
the seismic risk for most U.S. nuclear plants is very low, but the NRC
continues to examine information from actual earthquakes, review
improved predictive models and inspect plants to be certain that people
living near U.S. nuclear plants are adequately protected if an
earthquake does occur in that area.
We'll be posting a new YouTube video on the subject soon, and please join our Chat, tomorrow,
with NRC seismic expert Dr. Annie Kammerer. She’ll be “chatting” about
the NRC makes sure plants can withstand any earthquakes they may
experience. She can also talk about the Mineral, Va., earthquake but
won’t be able to address specific questions about designs or risk at
other sites.
You can submit questions ahead of time to opa.resource@nrc.gov .
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