Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire
Major Energy and Environmental News and Commentary affecting the Nuclear Industry.
Saturday, August 13, 2016
FERC greenlights Apple's petition to sell electric power
Inside the hardball tactics to save FitzPatrick: NY threatened to seize the nuke plant
http://www.utilitydive.com/news/ferc-greenlights-apples-petition-to-sell-electric-power/423966/
Inside the hardball tactics to save FitzPatrick: NY threatened to seize the nuke plant
Inside the hardball tactics to save FitzPatrick: NY threatened to seize the nuke plant
http://www.syracuse.com/politics/index.ssf/2016/08/nys_threat_to_seize_fitzpatrick_nuclear_plant_sparked_deal_to_save_615_jobs.html
State nuclear official outlines possible Yucca scenarios
State nuclear official outlines possible Yucca scenarios
http://pvtimes.com/news/state-nuclear-official-outlines-possible-yucca-scenarios
Officials: Small Modular Reactor Plant would create more than 1,000 jobs in Idaho Falls
Officials: Small Modular Reactor Plant would create more than 1,000 jobs in Idaho Falls
http://www.eastidahonews.com/2016/08/officials-small-modular-reactor-plant-would-create-more-than-1000-jobs-in-idaho-falls/
Stop worrying about China’s nuclear investment – it will not compromise our national security
Stop worrying about China’s nuclear investment – it will not compromise our national security
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/hinkley-point-nuclear-power-stop-worrying-about-chinas-nuclear-investment-it-will-not-compromise-our-a7188781.html
EDITORIAL: Another nuclear plant restarted amid lingering safety concerns
EDITORIAL: Another nuclear plant restarted amid lingering safety concerns
http://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/AJ201608130031.html
Western Japan reactors powering up while east remains dark
Western Japan reactors powering up while east remains dark
http://asia.nikkei.com/Politics-Economy/Policy-Politics/Western-Japan-reactors-powering-up-while-east-remains-dark
Nuclear News Roundup for August 13, 2016
Nuclear News Roundup for August 13, 2016
May Urged to Pull the Plug on Hinkley Point Due to US Espionage Casehttps://neutronbytes.com/2016/08/13/nuclear-news-roundup-for-august-13-2016/
Nuclear fuel plant under gun to improve safety in wake of uranium buildup, explosion concerns
Nuclear fuel plant under gun to improve safety in wake of uranium buildup, explosion concerns
Read more here: http://www.thestate.com/news/local/article95419907.html#storylink=cpy
Friday, August 12, 2016
Utah Utility Selects Idaho Site for NuScale SMR
Utah Utility Selects Idaho Site for NuScale SMR
The first customer for a small modular reactor (SMR) in the U.S. has selected a site located about 50 miles west of Idaho Falls, ID, for construction of a 50 MW unit.https://neutronbytes.com/2016/08/12/utah-utility-selects-idaho-site-for-nuscale-smr/
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Friday, August 12, 2016
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G.C.C. Military Spending in Era of Low Oil Prices
Trends in Gulf Arab military spending since the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the collapse of oil prices:
http://www.mei.edu/sites/ default/files/publications/ PF19_Jarzabek_GCCmilitary_web. pdf
http://www.mei.edu/sites/
Russia to build 11 new nuclear reactors by 2030
Russia to build 11 new nuclear reactors by 2030
10 August 2016
A Russian government decree published yesterday
indicates the country plans to construct 11 new nuclear power reactors
by 2030 - including two BN-1200 sodium-cooled fast neutron reactors. The
document, which covers "territorial planning for energy" for the
period, also identifies six points for radioactive waste disposal.http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/NP-Russia-to-build-11-new-nuclear-reactors-by-2030-10081602.html
How do you create energy from magnets and plasma hotter than the centre of the Sun?
How do you create energy from magnets and plasma hotter than the centre of the Sun?
Tokamak Energy says fusion energy could be powering UK homes in just 15 years.
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/how-do-you-create-energy-magnets-plasma-hotter-centre-sun-1575583
Thursday, August 11, 2016
Updates from ANS Nuclear Cafe Blog: Nuclear Innovation Bootcamp: Developing Our Next Generation in Business Leaders
Updates from ANS Nuclear Cafe Blog
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Did OPEC Just Issue A Warning For Oil Prices In 2017? August 11, 2016 by Oilprice.com
Did OPEC Just Issue A Warning For Oil Prices In 2017?
by Oilprice.comhttp://www.theenergycollective.com/staffjam/2385219/did-opec-just-issue-a-warning-for-oil-prices-in-2017
Exelon’s Most Infamous Nuclear Power Plant Is Stuck in Limbo
Exelon’s Most Infamous Nuclear Power Plant Is Stuck in Limbo
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/exelon-most-infamous-nuclear-power-201214554.htmlE.ON hit by Merkel’s nuclear power shutdown
E.ON hit by Merkel’s nuclear power shutdown
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/e-on-hit-by-merkels-nuclear-power-shutdown-m95b555x2
The dreams of nuclear power fading with Hinkley Point
The dreams of nuclear power fading with Hinkley Point
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/the-dreams-of-nuclear-power-fading-with-hinkley-point/article31339824/
India And Russia Partner To Build Nuclear Power Plants — Where’s The US?
India And Russia Partner To Build Nuclear Power Plants — Where’s The US?
http://dailycaller.com/2016/08/10/india-and-russia-partner-to-build-nuclear-power-plants-wheres-the-us/
Key part of India’s nuke programme is cooperation with Russia
Key part of India’s nuke programme is cooperation with Russia
11 August 2016
Yevgeny Pakhomov, TASS
The commissioning of
the first nuclear power plant (NPP) at Kudankulam, in South India, built
with Russia’s participation is an historic event. It indicates that the
work of the power generating unit meets all specified parameters and
opens up new possibilities for construction of most modern nuclear power
plants units in India based on the Russian technologies
http://in.rbth.com/economics/cooperation/2016/08/11/key-part-of-indias-nuke-programme-is-cooperation-with-russia_620167
The story of Kudankulam: From 1988 to 2016
The story of Kudankulam: From 1988 to 2016
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/the-story-of-kudankulam-from-1988-to-2016/article8969290.ece
Russia to develop India’s nuclear power industry
Russia to develop India’s nuclear power industry
https://www.rt.com/business/355411-india-russia-nuclear-reactors/
Climate Scientists & Environmentalists Urge Governor Brown to Move Diablo Closure Decision from PUC to Legislature
Climate Scientists & Environmentalists Urge Governor Brown to Move Diablo Closure Decision from PUC to Legislature |
California Governor Letter
The Honorable Edmund G. Brown, Jr., Governor of California
August 11, 2016
Dear Governor Brown,
Several months ago we wrote to you to raise our concerns about Diablo Canyon, California’s last nuclear plant. Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) has now agreed in a Joint Proposal with Friends of the Earth, the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Alliance for Nuclear Responsibility and other groups to close the plant in 2025.
We request that you ask the California Public Utility Commission (CPUC) to delay consideration of that and any other proposal to close Diablo until the legislature and the public, who will have to foot the bill, can openly debate how California can most quickly and cost-effectively stop the damage to the climate from our electrical system emissions. There are serious questions about whether this proposal is good for ratepayers, the environment and the climate.
Retirement of the plant will make a mockery of California’s decarbonization efforts. Diablo Canyon’s yearly output of 17,600 gigawatt-hours supplies 9 percent of California’s total in-state electricity generation and 21 percent of its low-carbon generation. If Diablo closes it will be replaced mainly by natural gas, and California’s carbon dioxide emissions will rise.
The Joint Proposal’s doesn’t come close to replacing this lost low-carbon power. It only mandates 4,000 gigawatt-hours per year of energy efficiency and, optionally, new renewable generation, to replace four times as much lost nuclear output. And much of the demand reduction PG&E forecasts to replace Diablo will come about simply from customers switching from PG&E to alternate electricity providers, with no guarantee that their new electricity supply will come from low-carbon sources.
The inevitable result would be the replacement of Diablo Canyon’s zero-emissions power with a mix of renewables and gas with dramatically higher greenhouse emissions. And even if the plant were nominally replaced by lower energy consumption or renewables, there would be no net reduction in emissions and a huge lost opportunity for further progress. Every kilowatt-hour of renewable energy used to replace lost Diablo electricity is a kilowatt-hour that is not available to displace fossil fuels from the grid.
The economic losses from Diablo Canyon’s premature closure will also be substantial. Electricity rates will rise from the replacement of cheap nuclear power with more expensive renewable power. According to the Joint Proposal, ratepayers will pay a “non-bypassable charge” to make good decommissioning costs that would have been funded had Diablo completed a typical 60-year service life. San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties will lose $27 million per year in local tax, 1,500 well-paying jobs at the plant and a yearly payroll of over $200 million that indirectly supports a further 2,800 local jobs.
These problems are all familiar from the closure of the San Onofre nuclear plant a few years ago.
Despite environmentalists’ hopes, San Onofre was replaced mainly by gas-fired generation. Greenhouse emissions and electricity rates increased. California’s share of gas-fired generation immediately rose from 45 percent to 61 percent; the loss of San Onofre thus increased the state’s dependency on natural gas and worsened this summer’s Aliso Canyon gas-storage crisis.
That gas dependency will increase further, to 70 percent or more, if Diablo Canyon closes. When natural gas prices rise again, higher dependency will mean economic vulnerability as well—and undermine California’s reputation as a leader on climate policy. Under your own administration, the percent of electricity generated in-state from clean sources declined, mostly because of San Onofre’s closure. If Diablo retires too in coming years, the state will make no progress on cleaning up its power supply, and may well continue going backwards.
Given the serious harm to the environment, the economy and ratepayer interests that will flow from Diablo’s closure, we are deeply troubled by the lack of democratic process surrounding the Joint Proposal. It was decided in secret negotiations between PG&E and unaccountable anti-nuclear groups, some with financial ties to the renewables sector. Sending this proposal to the CPUC, an institution that is struggling with its own crisis of credibility relating to improper relationships with regulated industries, would raise further doubts about the legitimacy of the proceedings.
The CPUC is not the right forum to decide on this important matter, nor is a back-room deal dictated by special interests an appropriate framework for that decision. The loss of one-fifth of California’s clean electricity is of such significance as to merit the direct attention of the state legislature. These questions deserve a broad, considered and transparent discussion by the public and their elected representatives. We ask you to support this position, and to help initiate the public debate that needs to happen.
The global share of clean energy is declining in part because nuclear plants are being driven off the grids of advanced nations by unfair policies based on hyperbole and myth. The scientific consensus recognizes nuclear power as the safest way to make reliable electricity. It would be a tragedy if we were to allow irrational fear to harm the climate and endanger the future our children and grandchildren. As California’s governor you have an opportunity to safeguard your environmental legacy by overcoming anti-nuclear prejudice that is jeopardizing our progress on clean energy.
We look forward to hearing from you.
Sincerely,
Scientists
Brand, Stewart, founder, Whole Earth Catalogue
Conca, James, Earth and Environmental Scientist
Ellis, Erle C., Ph.D, Professor, Geography & Environmental Systems
Hansen, James, Climate Science, Awareness, and Solutions Program, Columbia University, Earth Institute, Columbia University
Kharecha, Pushker, Climate Science, Awareness, and Solutions Program, Columbia University, Earth Institute, Columbia University
Scholars, Conservationists and Environmentalists
Carl, Jeremy, Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Noss, Reed, Provost's Distinguished Research Professor, Department of Biology, University of Central Florida
Rampal, Brett, American Nuclear Society (ANS) , Young Members Group (YMG) Chair
Robbins, Paul, Director, Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies
Shellenberger, Michael, President, Environmental Progress
Terry, Jeff, Professor of Physics, Illinois Institute of Technology
August 11, 2016
Dear Governor Brown,
Several months ago we wrote to you to raise our concerns about Diablo Canyon, California’s last nuclear plant. Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) has now agreed in a Joint Proposal with Friends of the Earth, the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Alliance for Nuclear Responsibility and other groups to close the plant in 2025.
We request that you ask the California Public Utility Commission (CPUC) to delay consideration of that and any other proposal to close Diablo until the legislature and the public, who will have to foot the bill, can openly debate how California can most quickly and cost-effectively stop the damage to the climate from our electrical system emissions. There are serious questions about whether this proposal is good for ratepayers, the environment and the climate.
Retirement of the plant will make a mockery of California’s decarbonization efforts. Diablo Canyon’s yearly output of 17,600 gigawatt-hours supplies 9 percent of California’s total in-state electricity generation and 21 percent of its low-carbon generation. If Diablo closes it will be replaced mainly by natural gas, and California’s carbon dioxide emissions will rise.
The Joint Proposal’s doesn’t come close to replacing this lost low-carbon power. It only mandates 4,000 gigawatt-hours per year of energy efficiency and, optionally, new renewable generation, to replace four times as much lost nuclear output. And much of the demand reduction PG&E forecasts to replace Diablo will come about simply from customers switching from PG&E to alternate electricity providers, with no guarantee that their new electricity supply will come from low-carbon sources.
The inevitable result would be the replacement of Diablo Canyon’s zero-emissions power with a mix of renewables and gas with dramatically higher greenhouse emissions. And even if the plant were nominally replaced by lower energy consumption or renewables, there would be no net reduction in emissions and a huge lost opportunity for further progress. Every kilowatt-hour of renewable energy used to replace lost Diablo electricity is a kilowatt-hour that is not available to displace fossil fuels from the grid.
The economic losses from Diablo Canyon’s premature closure will also be substantial. Electricity rates will rise from the replacement of cheap nuclear power with more expensive renewable power. According to the Joint Proposal, ratepayers will pay a “non-bypassable charge” to make good decommissioning costs that would have been funded had Diablo completed a typical 60-year service life. San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties will lose $27 million per year in local tax, 1,500 well-paying jobs at the plant and a yearly payroll of over $200 million that indirectly supports a further 2,800 local jobs.
These problems are all familiar from the closure of the San Onofre nuclear plant a few years ago.
Despite environmentalists’ hopes, San Onofre was replaced mainly by gas-fired generation. Greenhouse emissions and electricity rates increased. California’s share of gas-fired generation immediately rose from 45 percent to 61 percent; the loss of San Onofre thus increased the state’s dependency on natural gas and worsened this summer’s Aliso Canyon gas-storage crisis.
That gas dependency will increase further, to 70 percent or more, if Diablo Canyon closes. When natural gas prices rise again, higher dependency will mean economic vulnerability as well—and undermine California’s reputation as a leader on climate policy. Under your own administration, the percent of electricity generated in-state from clean sources declined, mostly because of San Onofre’s closure. If Diablo retires too in coming years, the state will make no progress on cleaning up its power supply, and may well continue going backwards.
Given the serious harm to the environment, the economy and ratepayer interests that will flow from Diablo’s closure, we are deeply troubled by the lack of democratic process surrounding the Joint Proposal. It was decided in secret negotiations between PG&E and unaccountable anti-nuclear groups, some with financial ties to the renewables sector. Sending this proposal to the CPUC, an institution that is struggling with its own crisis of credibility relating to improper relationships with regulated industries, would raise further doubts about the legitimacy of the proceedings.
The CPUC is not the right forum to decide on this important matter, nor is a back-room deal dictated by special interests an appropriate framework for that decision. The loss of one-fifth of California’s clean electricity is of such significance as to merit the direct attention of the state legislature. These questions deserve a broad, considered and transparent discussion by the public and their elected representatives. We ask you to support this position, and to help initiate the public debate that needs to happen.
The global share of clean energy is declining in part because nuclear plants are being driven off the grids of advanced nations by unfair policies based on hyperbole and myth. The scientific consensus recognizes nuclear power as the safest way to make reliable electricity. It would be a tragedy if we were to allow irrational fear to harm the climate and endanger the future our children and grandchildren. As California’s governor you have an opportunity to safeguard your environmental legacy by overcoming anti-nuclear prejudice that is jeopardizing our progress on clean energy.
We look forward to hearing from you.
Sincerely,
Scientists
Brand, Stewart, founder, Whole Earth Catalogue
Conca, James, Earth and Environmental Scientist
Ellis, Erle C., Ph.D, Professor, Geography & Environmental Systems
Hansen, James, Climate Science, Awareness, and Solutions Program, Columbia University, Earth Institute, Columbia University
Kharecha, Pushker, Climate Science, Awareness, and Solutions Program, Columbia University, Earth Institute, Columbia University
Scholars, Conservationists and Environmentalists
Carl, Jeremy, Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Noss, Reed, Provost's Distinguished Research Professor, Department of Biology, University of Central Florida
Rampal, Brett, American Nuclear Society (ANS) , Young Members Group (YMG) Chair
Robbins, Paul, Director, Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies
Shellenberger, Michael, President, Environmental Progress
Terry, Jeff, Professor of Physics, Illinois Institute of Technology
Companies move forward on nuclear waste storage in Carlsbad
Companies move forward on nuclear waste storage in Carlsbad
Read more at http://www.wral.com/companies-move-forward-on-nuclear-waste-storage-in-carlsbad/15920449/#MOWiQ3YpuZyFvPOq.99
Read more at http://www.wral.com/companies-move-forward-on-nuclear-waste-storage-in-carlsbad/15920449/#MOWiQ3YpuZyFvPOq.99
http://www.wral.com/companies-move-forward-on-nuclear-waste-storage-in-carlsbad/15920449/
Entergy signs two-year deal to pay for emergency planning
Entergy signs two-year deal to pay for emergency planning
https://vtdigger.org/2016/08/10/entergy-signs-two-year-deal-to-pay-for-emergency-planning/
State Lands Commission faces lawsuit over Diablo Canyon lease
State Lands Commission faces lawsuit over Diablo Canyon lease
A Santa Barbara-based public interest group, the World Business Academy, has sued the State Lands Commission for
its decision to allow Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant to operate
through 2025 without first studying the environmental consequences of
allowing the plant to continue running.
The suit filed earlier this month in Los Angeles Superior Court contends that the state agency did not have the authority to exempt the PG&E-owned plant from preparing an environmental impact report and that attempting to do so was arbitrary and capricious.
The suit filed earlier this month in Los Angeles Superior Court contends that the state agency did not have the authority to exempt the PG&E-owned plant from preparing an environmental impact report and that attempting to do so was arbitrary and capricious.
Read more here: http://www.sanluisobispo.com/news/local/article94942952.html#storylink=cpy
Support for Oswego's nuclear plants will trickle down to utility bills
Support for Oswego's nuclear plants will trickle down to utility bills
The PSC estimates a $2 increase for the average monthly residential rate payer
http://www.localsyr.com/news/local-news/support-for-oswegos-nuclear-plants-will-trickle-down-to-utility-bills
ClearPath Foundation Adds Former NRC Commissioner Jeff Merrifield as Adviser
ClearPath Foundation Adds Former NRC Commissioner Jeff Merrifield as Adviser
Will help effort to expedite advanced nuclear energy power, maintain current fleet
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/clearpath-foundation-adds-former-nrc-commissioner-jeff-merrifield-as-adviser-300312566.html
New York Nuclear Plant Restarts, Environmentalists Object
New York Nuclear Plant Restarts, Environmentalists Object
https://www.heartland.org/news-opinion/news/new-york-nuclear-plant-restarts-environmentalists-objectFukushima Update 8/11/16
Fukushima Update 8/11/16
A Tokyo court rules against Tepco over a dementia patient’s disappearance.
http://www.hiroshimasyndrome. com/fukushima-accident- updates.html
A Tokyo court rules against Tepco over a dementia patient’s disappearance.
http://www.hiroshimasyndrome.
US NRC Blog Update: Throwback Thursday – A TMI Presidential Briefing
Throwback Thursday – A TMI Presidential Briefing
NRC
officials Harold Denton (left) and Victor Stello brief President Jimmy
Carter and Pennsylvania Governor Thornburgh on the Three Mile Island
accident back on April 1, 1979. According to the Presidential diary for
that day, available here,
the President first attended Sunday services before flying from the
White House to the Air National Guard Facility in Middletown, Pa., by
Marine helicopter.
After a tour of TMI, then-President Carter gave some remarks to reporters and local residents, and returned to the White House by 3:54 p.m., in time to get to St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church to watch his daughter, Amy’s, violin recital.
After a tour of TMI, then-President Carter gave some remarks to reporters and local residents, and returned to the White House by 3:54 p.m., in time to get to St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church to watch his daughter, Amy’s, violin recital.
Exelon Buys Fitzpatrick Nuclear Plant, Setting The Standard for US Carbon Goals
Exelon
Buys Fitzpatrick Nuclear Plant, Setting The Standard for US Carbon Goals
With New York’s
passing of a true Clean Energy Standard this week that supports both renewables
and nuclear, Exelon Generation has agreed to assume ownership and operations of
Entergy Corporation's James A. FitzPatrick nuclear power plant in Scriba, New
York. This will save 7 billion kWhs of carbon-free
electricity a year, $500 million for the local economy, 600 high-paying
direct jobs and over 1,500 indirect jobs. It should serve as
a guide to other states, especially Illinois, that are facing similar
conundrums of warped markets closing carbon-free nuclear plants and threatening
each state’s carbon goals and local economies.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/Eskom suspends managers over alledged leak of nuclear documents
Eskom suspends managers over alledged leak of nuclear documents
http://www.africanbusinessreview.co.za/leadership/2479/Eskom-suspends-managers-over-alledged-leak-of-nuclear-documents
http://www.africanbusinessreview.co.za/leadership/2479/Eskom-suspends-managers-over-alledged-leak-of-nuclear-documents
Sulzer Wins Contract With French Nuclear Leader EDF for the Delivery of 28 Pumping Units
Sulzer Wins Contract With French Nuclear Leader EDF for the Delivery of 28 Pumping Units
http://www.sulzer.com/br/Newsroom/Group-News/2016/160708-Sulzer-Wins-Contract-With-French-Nuclear-Leader-EDF-for-the-Delivery-of-28-Pumping-Units
Groups drop legal challenge over Utah nuclear plant, insist it is floundering
Groups drop legal challenge over Utah nuclear plant, insist it is floundering
http://www.topix.com/state/ut/2016/08/groups-drop-legal-challenge-over-utah-nuclear-plant-insist-it-is-floundering?fromrss=1
GAO Urges NNSA to Specify Los Alamos Plutonium Analysis Project Parameters
GAO Urges NNSA to Specify Los Alamos Plutonium Analysis Project Parameters
http://www.executivegov.com/2016/08/gao-urges-nnsa-to-specify-los-alamos-plutonium-analysis-project-parameters/
GENTLE: Understanding Nuclear Energy
GENTLE: Understanding Nuclear Energy
https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/event/training-course/gentle-understanding-nuclear-energy
EDF Energy's Heysham 2 Nuclear Power Station Breaks World Record
EDF Energy's Heysham 2 Nuclear Power Station Breaks World Record
http://www.electricenergyonline.com/detail_news.php?ID=591792&cat=;52
International cooperation to enhance a worldwide nuclear security culture by the EU Contribution to the Nuclear Security Summit 2014
International cooperation to enhance a worldwide nuclear security culture by the EU Contribution to the Nuclear Security Summit 2014
https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/event/contribution-nuclear-security-summit-2014-28296
https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/event/contribution-nuclear-security-summit-2014-28296
First Unit Of Kudankulam Dedicated To Nation
First Unit Of Kudankulam Dedicated To Nation
PM Modi and Russian President Vladimir Putin call the nuclear project a fine example of Indo-Russian strategic partnership
http://www.businessworld.in/article/First-Unit-Of-Kudankulam-Dedicated-To-Nation/11-08-2016-104314/
Chinese energy firm linked to Hinkley Point facing charges of nuclear espionage
Chinese energy firm linked to Hinkley Point facing charges of nuclear espionage
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/08/11/chinese-energy-firm-linked-to-hinkley-point-facing-charges-of-nu/
Holy Grail of energy policy in sight as battery technology smashes the old order Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Holy Grail of energy policy in sight as battery technology smashes the old order
Ambrose Evans-Pritchardhttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2016/08/10/holy-grail-of-energy-policy-in-sight-as-battery-technology-smash/
Wednesday, August 10, 2016
Nuclear Matters Statement on Announcement that Exelon will Assume Ownership and Operation of Entergy's James A. Fitzpatrick Nuclear Power Plant
Nuclear Matters Statement on Announcement that Exelon will Assume Ownership and Operation of Entergy's James A. Fitzpatrick Nuclear Power Plant
http://www.nuclearmatters.com/blog/press-releases/nuclear-matters-statement-on-announcement-that-exelon-will-assume-ownership-and-operation-of-entergys-james-a-fitzpatrick-nuclear-power-plant
US NRC Blog Update: Ten Things You May Not Know — About Nuclear Power and the NRC
Ten Things You May Not Know — About Nuclear Power and the NRC
Stephanie West
Public Affairs Specialist
It’s summer and you might be reading this blog while relaxing in the sun or otherwise taking it easy. So, just for fun, we’ve listed 10 nuclear-related facts you might find interesting, albeit light, reading:
1. Nothing lasts forever. Every year or two, reactor operators spend about a month, removing and replacing about one-third of a reactor’s fuel and performing various maintenance activities during plant outages to make sure reactors perform efficiently. Source: NRC Information Digest
2. No bowling leagues. In order to preserve their objectivity, NRC resident inspectors are discouraged from attending social events where nuclear plant employees are involved. They also may not serve at any nuclear plant longer than seven years.
3. Who at the NRC must train to escape a sinking helicopter? Health physicists in NRC’s Region IV office of course. A handful of them must fly to inspect offshore oil rigs in federal waters. They must be prepared not only to escape a helicopter, but to survive a fire on an oil platform by jumping into the sea and fighting off sharks by kicking them in the snout.
4. Quick question: Where is the largest research reactor in the U.S.? Check below for the answer. But you should know that Research and Test Reactors operating at levels of 2 megawatts thermal (MWt) or greater receive a full NRC inspection every year. The largest U.S. research reactor, which produces 20 MWt, is 75 times smaller than the smallest U.S. commercial power reactor.
5. Once the explosive ingredient in Soviet nuclear warheads, highly enriched uranium was diluted to become the stuff that powered our homes and businesses in the U.S. The Megatons to Megawatts program was born from a 1993 agreement between the U.S. and Russia to reduce the stockpile of Soviet-era highly enriched uranium.
6. Everyone loves this story. The most all-time viewed post on this NRC blog is “Putting the Axe to the Scram Myth” with more than 18,000 views since it was originally posted in 2011.
7. It’s just not easy being a spent nuclear fuel transportation cask. Each must be designed to survive a 30-foot drop onto an unyielding surface, a puncture test, a fully engulfing fire at 1,425 degrees Fahrenheit for 30 minutes and immersion under water.
8. The Watts Bar nuclear plant makes its mark both on this century and the last. Unit 1 was the last U.S. reactor to come online in the 20th century and Unit 2 is expected to be the first to come online in the 21st. Read more about the history of the Watts Bar Nuclear Plant in our blog post: Watts Bar – Making History In Yet Another Century.
9. Months of planning, thorough inspections, dozens of law enforcement officials, a specially equipped truck – and a S.W.A.T. team. It sounds like a checklist for an action movie. Instead it was used to move a mini refrigerator-sized irradiator in Anchorage about 2.5 miles. These small irradiators are used to sterilize medical equipment and products, and contain a sealed source of radioactive material. They are protected to keep the public and environment safe from exposure, but also to keep it out of the hands of terrorists.
10. It’s no “easy A.” In addition to years of related experience, NRC-licensed nuclear plant operators must receive extensive classroom, simulator and on-the-job training. But they also must be certified as physically and mentally fit to be an operator. Source: NRC Information Digest
Answer: National Institute of Standards & Technology, Gaithersburg, Md.
Public Affairs Specialist
It’s summer and you might be reading this blog while relaxing in the sun or otherwise taking it easy. So, just for fun, we’ve listed 10 nuclear-related facts you might find interesting, albeit light, reading:
1. Nothing lasts forever. Every year or two, reactor operators spend about a month, removing and replacing about one-third of a reactor’s fuel and performing various maintenance activities during plant outages to make sure reactors perform efficiently. Source: NRC Information Digest
2. No bowling leagues. In order to preserve their objectivity, NRC resident inspectors are discouraged from attending social events where nuclear plant employees are involved. They also may not serve at any nuclear plant longer than seven years.
3. Who at the NRC must train to escape a sinking helicopter? Health physicists in NRC’s Region IV office of course. A handful of them must fly to inspect offshore oil rigs in federal waters. They must be prepared not only to escape a helicopter, but to survive a fire on an oil platform by jumping into the sea and fighting off sharks by kicking them in the snout.
4. Quick question: Where is the largest research reactor in the U.S.? Check below for the answer. But you should know that Research and Test Reactors operating at levels of 2 megawatts thermal (MWt) or greater receive a full NRC inspection every year. The largest U.S. research reactor, which produces 20 MWt, is 75 times smaller than the smallest U.S. commercial power reactor.
5. Once the explosive ingredient in Soviet nuclear warheads, highly enriched uranium was diluted to become the stuff that powered our homes and businesses in the U.S. The Megatons to Megawatts program was born from a 1993 agreement between the U.S. and Russia to reduce the stockpile of Soviet-era highly enriched uranium.
6. Everyone loves this story. The most all-time viewed post on this NRC blog is “Putting the Axe to the Scram Myth” with more than 18,000 views since it was originally posted in 2011.
7. It’s just not easy being a spent nuclear fuel transportation cask. Each must be designed to survive a 30-foot drop onto an unyielding surface, a puncture test, a fully engulfing fire at 1,425 degrees Fahrenheit for 30 minutes and immersion under water.
8. The Watts Bar nuclear plant makes its mark both on this century and the last. Unit 1 was the last U.S. reactor to come online in the 20th century and Unit 2 is expected to be the first to come online in the 21st. Read more about the history of the Watts Bar Nuclear Plant in our blog post: Watts Bar – Making History In Yet Another Century.
9. Months of planning, thorough inspections, dozens of law enforcement officials, a specially equipped truck – and a S.W.A.T. team. It sounds like a checklist for an action movie. Instead it was used to move a mini refrigerator-sized irradiator in Anchorage about 2.5 miles. These small irradiators are used to sterilize medical equipment and products, and contain a sealed source of radioactive material. They are protected to keep the public and environment safe from exposure, but also to keep it out of the hands of terrorists.
10. It’s no “easy A.” In addition to years of related experience, NRC-licensed nuclear plant operators must receive extensive classroom, simulator and on-the-job training. But they also must be certified as physically and mentally fit to be an operator. Source: NRC Information Digest
Answer: National Institute of Standards & Technology, Gaithersburg, Md.
Carnival of Nuclear Energy 319
Carnival of Nuclear Energy 319
http://www.nextbigfuture.com/2016/08/carnival-of-nuclear-energy-319.html
Fukushima Commentary 7/30/16 – It’s Official: F. Daiichi Unit #2 was not a Melt-Through
Fukushima Commentary 7/30/16 –
It’s Official: F. Daiichi Unit #2 was not a Melt-Through
The Fukushima Daiichi Unit #2 muon tomography
shows there was no compromise in the lower RPV head. It is likely that none of
the corium, while still molten, escaped the Reactor Pressure Vessel. To
conclude otherwise makes no sense.
Renewable energy law sets Massachusetts on path away from coal, nuclear power
Renewable energy law sets Massachusetts on path away from coal, nuclear power
The bill promotes the development of energy storage technology
http://wwlp.com/2016/08/08/renewable-energy-law-sets-massachusetts-on-path-away-from-coal-nuclear-power/
Russian Gov't Approves Plans to Build 11 New Nuclear Power Units by 2030
Russian Gov't Approves Plans to Build 11 New Nuclear Power Units by 2030
http://sputniknews.com/russia/20160809/1044101163/npp-russia-construction.html
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