Lara Uselding
Public Affairs Officer
Region IV
Following
a two-and-a-half year shutdown, Omaha Public Power District (OPPD) is
ready to heat up Fort Calhoun’s reactor coolant system to inspect for
any leaks. Heat-up is not the same as restarting the plant. The plant
has been shut down since April 2011 for a refueling outage. The outage
was extended due to historic Missouri River flooding followed by an
electrical fire and other restart complications.
Fort
Calhoun Station is heating up the reactor coolant system to ensure that
the pipes carrying high pressure water or steam do not have leaks.
Rather than heating up the reactor using the fission process, OPPD will
use the reactor coolant pumps to heat up water and get steam flowing
through the system. NRC inspectors are on site to observe licensee
activities as well as perform independent inspections to ensure there
are no leaks.
In
early October, OPPD submitted a license amendment request seeking NRC
permission to use a different methodology to evaluate high-pressure pipe
breaks. OPPD has to demonstrate that if a high pressure pipe ruptures,
that it would not negatively impact nearby equipment.
On
Oct. 25, after reviewing public comments and additional information
provided by the licensee, NRC approved this license amendment. OPPD did
plant modifications and has performed calculations that show a potential
pipe rupture will not affect nearby equipment. NRC inspectors are
independently verifying the licensee’s analysis and modifications.
In
addition, the staff has finalized its review of OPPD’s request to be
exempt from the NRC’s fatigue rule which sets work hour limits in
support of plant heat-up activities. The NRC’s fatigue rule puts limits
on certain workers’ weekly hours to protect against fatigue. For
example, during a refueling outage, a worker is allowed to work up to 72
hours every week versus an average of 54 hours over six weeks.
Before
the NRC issued the exemption, the staff ensured that workers will have
sufficient time to rest prior to working additional hours in support of
the heat-up activities.
In addition, the NRC is continuing independent review of the remaining restart checklist items.
Next
steps include preparations for the next public meeting whereby staff
will update the public on NRC’s oversight status. No decision about
restart will be made at that meeting.
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