Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Ameren Sabotaging Callaway Nuclear Plant and Their Ratepayers

Ameren is the parent company of Callaway. I'll bet Ameren is insular and certainly Callaway is insular being Ameren owns only a single nuclear plant. A single owner tends to be very expensive. Callaway's LER format looks like it comes out of the 1970s...it need updating. What else at the site needs updating.   
Ameren Missouri owns the Taum Sauk pumped storage plant,[20] which failed on December 14, 2005, causing extensive damage to the east fork of the Black River and to Johnson's Shut-Ins State Park. Consequently, FERC fined Ameren $15 million. The State of Missouri has sued Ameren for actual and punitive damages, alleging Ameren recklessly operated the plant and put financial considerations from sale of power to other companies over safety, maintenance and engineering. The plant was operated by remote control with no one onsite during pumping operations.
Sounds like this is applicable to Callaway...
"Entergy will need to consider “what’s the right value play as well as what’s the right allocation of resources. And does that free up cash that we could use elsewhere,” he said."
It seems like the special inspection begins from issues on the July shutdown. Why did it take so long for the NRC to call a special inspection? Did it allow Callaway to shred documents and to create phony new ones? It is highly unusable to call a special inspection so late in the game. 
Ameren says Illinois, transmission better places to invest than Missouri

St. Louis-based utility says Missouri regulations make it less attractive than other jurisdictions.
Sept 8, 2015 
Poor baby.

Poor Ameren Missouri. Every time Missouri’s biggest electric utility wants to raise electric rates, it has to hike down to Jefferson City and make its case to the five members of the Missouri Public Service Commission. They are so cruel that Ameren Missouri’s only been successful
six times in the last eight years, which means residential customers are getting away with paying only 50 percent more than they did in 2007.

Meanwhile,
median household income in Missouri, which was $50,685 in 2007, fell to $46,931 in 2013. The figure for 2014 will be released by the Census Bureau next week. One thing’s for sure: Median income won’t be up 50 percent over 2007.

But Ameren Missouri, poor baby, argues that it’s being squeezed by the PSC. Those regulators make things so tough that Ameren (the parent company) is going to take more of its discretionary investment money to Illinois, where it also owns electric and gas utilities. Also, Ameren is going to spend more of the money that it might have invested upgrading its Missouri infrastructure on federally regulated transmission lines.

It can make more money there than it can in Missouri, where the PSC only allows it a lousy 9.5 percent profit rate.

Something is wrong here. Ameren’s customers in Missouri are paying 50 percent more than they did in 2007. But Ameren’s $4.6 million-a-year chairman and CEO, Warner Baxter,
told the Post-Dispatch’s Jacob Barker that over the next five years, the company is planning to make $2.1 billion in new infrastructure investments in federally regulated power lines and $1.1 billion worth of upgrades in Illinois, where it has both electricity and natural gas operations. Missouri, where about half of Ameren’s 2.4 million customers live, would get $800 million worth of improvements. Instead of having two-thirds of Ameren’s assets, Missouri would fall to half or less. All of the investment will create more jobs in Illinois while the Missouri workforce has fallen by 300 workers.

Missouri pays more and gets less.

The reason, Mr. Baxter told Mr. Barker, is that unlike Missouri, Illinois allows utilities to recover the cost of infrastructure improvements before they’re completed. Missouri expects Ameren to actually shoulder the risk itself. It expects improvements to be complete before regulators will approve rate increases that cover their cost.

Back in 1976, while Ameren was building its Callaway County Nuclear Plant, Missouri voters passed a referendum prohibiting utilities from charging for
“construction work in progress.” Over the years, Ameren has made several attempts to get the Legislature to overturn the law.

In 2008, as Ameren was considering adding a second nuclear station at the plant near Fulton, there was serious discussion about repealing the anti-CWIP law so that customers could finance the $6 billion project. Just six weeks ago, with estimated costs for building new nuclear plants now upward of $10 billion, Ameren
officially withdrew its application to build Callaway II.

Still, that anti-CWIP law means Ameren can’t charge its customers even for less expensive infrastructure improvements — a new substation, for example — until it’s actually online. In 2013, it took a Senate filibuster to kill a bill that would have allowed electric utilities to add infrastructure
“surcharges” to their customers’ bills. Gas companies already can do that.

Mr. Baxter told Mr. Barker that Ameren will be “relentless” in seeking regulatory reform during the 2016 legislative session. That would be nothing new; the company is a major political contributor to both Democrats and Republicans. The company and its various operating units pay at least 40 lobbyists to work on its behalf in Jefferson City.


It’s easy to understand why. Ameren is competing for investment capital with all kinds of companies. If you can make 21 percent on Apple shares, why buy Ameren and be limited to 9.5 percent in Missouri? The stock market is not booming this year as it did for the past two years, but last year a guy could have gotten 2 percent more from a Standard & Poor Index fund than he did from Ameren.

On the other hand, Apple doesn’t charge for iPhones until the customer buys one. And Ameren is a monopoly. It doesn’t have to worry about the competition; traditionally, that fact, along with regular dividends approaching 5 percent, makes utility stocks attractive.

But that was the old days. Today being a conservative, reliable utility company is boring. Today Ameren can act like the NFL. If it doesn’t like your state’s regulatory climate, it can take money from your rate base and invest it elsewhere.

The regulatory climate here is anything but onerous; the Legislature has seen to that by gutting the budget of the Office of Public Counsel, which represents consumers before the PSC. The PSC’s staff, too, is regularly outnumbered by Ameren’s lawyers.

The Public Service Commission should see to it that Ameren meets the letter of law, which includes making electric service in Missouri as safe and reliable as possible with the money it takes from Missouri. Illinois can take care 

of it itself.

Monday, September 21, 2015

Callaway: Another Junk Nuclear plant

05000483

Update 9/22

As I have said often, it is highly suspicious to have a ongoing problems with a gasket, a main feed pump trip and all the issues with the steam generator Feed Reg Valves. Maintenance problems just over ran them.

I caught this pretty early as the organization being in tough shape and paperwork issues. It sure looks likes I am a prophet. I thought the Dec 2014 scram was a big deal with multiple equipment failures showing up. Can't be clearer with this July 23 message. There are a lot of recent scrams and equipment failure showing up in a concentrated amount of time.

Hmmm, Ameren... 

There is no question was a NRC failure:
This is the guy: "Motor Driven Auxiliary Feedwater Pump "B" to Steam Generator "D"".

Already looking like the Millstone's turbine driven feed pump and the SRV valves of Pilgrim?
At 00:22 hours on December 3, 2014, during normal power operations, A turbine and reactor trip occurred, when the main generator excitation transformer faulted to ground. The reactor trip was classified as "uncomplicated." Safety system performed as designed. During recovery the valve providing flow from Motor Driven Auxiliary Feedwater Pump "B" to Steam Generator "D" failed to throttle closed afterwards. Repair of the excitation transformer was completed and the plant returned to power operations on December 6, 2014.  
I am a little irked at the NRC, why can't they identify the technical name of the valves?
NRC to Begin Special Inspection at Callaway Nuclear Station 9/11 
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has begun a special inspection at the Callaway nuclear plant to review circumstances following a reactor shutdown involving the failure of three of four control valves that regulate water flow to the steam generators. The plant, operated by Ameren Missouri, is located near Fulton, Mo.
Following a reactor trip on Aug. 11, all systems performed as expected, including the automatic start of a system that controls water flow to the steam generators. However, when operators tried to switch to the motor-driven water pumps, a control valve failed to operate. Internal circuitry in the control valve system had been previously modified in late 2014, apparently introducing a flaw in the design that resulted in the failure.  
The NRC learned that another control valve in the system had been similarly modified and also experienced a failure in December 2014. The affected valves were repaired and tested prior to the plant being restarted on Aug. 12. Additionally, the NRC is aware of a third unrelated control valve failure in the same system earlier this year that had already been corrected.  
"The purpose of this special inspection is to better understand the circumstances surrounding the valve failures, determine if the licensee’s extent of condition review was sufficiently comprehensive, and review the licensee’s corrective actions to ensure that the causes of the failures have been effectively addressed," NRC Region IV Administrator Marc Dapas said. 
The NRC staff determined that a special inspection is warranted because the valves provide an important function in the mitigation of selected plant events. NRC inspectors will spend about a week on site looking into outstanding questions with respect to the licensee’s testing, maintenance, design change, and corrective action processes specific to these valves and the associated system. They will also evaluate the licensee’s root cause analysis and extent of condition review, and the adequacy of corrective actions. 
An inspection report documenting the team’s findings will be publicly available within 45 days of the end of the inspection.
Originally posted on Aug 11, 2015

Right, the grid problem in Pilgrim and Seabrook.

Why hasn't Callaway had a LER since March 2015?

We aren't doing the proper maintenance on the grid. Is the grid safe enough to support nuclear plant operations? Or people working on the grid aren't qualified to be working on the grid.
Facility: CALLAWAY
Region: 4 State: MO
Unit: [1] [ ] [ ]
RX Type: [1] W-4-LP
NRC Notified By: MARK COVEY
HQ OPS Officer: MARK ABRAMOVITZ
Notification Date: 08/11/2015
Notification Time: 05:19 [ET]
Event Date: 08/11/2015
Event Time: 01:39 [CDT]
Last Update Date: 08/11/2015
Emergency Class: NON EMERGENCY
10 CFR Section:
50.72(b)(2)(iv)(B) - RPS ACTUATION - CRITICAL
50.72(b)(3)(iv)(A) - VALID SPECIF SYS ACTUATION
Person (Organization):
BOB HAGAR (R4DO)

UnitSCRAM CodeRX CRITInitial PWRInitial RX ModeCurrent PWRCurrent RX Mode
1A/RY100Power Operation0Hot Standby
Event Text
AUTOMATIC REACTOR TRIP AFTER AN OFFSITE ELECTRICAL FAULT

"Reactor trip caused by turbine trip. Turbine tripped immediately following the trip of one of four 345KV offsite lines. The reason for protective relaying not preventing the grid disturbance from tripping the turbine generator is not known at this time. All normal offsite and onsite power sources are available.

"Auxiliary Feedwater actuated as expected on low steam generator level following the trip from 100% power. All systems functioned as expected in response to the trip.

"The NRC Senior Resident Inspector has been notified."

An electrical fault on a 345 kV line 2 miles from the site caused the bus to strip and reclose, which cleared the fault. All control rods fully inserted and the plant is in its normal shutdown electrical lineup.
Calvert Cliff NRC Special Inspection and another grid disturbance.  
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has begun a special inspection at the Calvert Cliffs nuclear power plant to review issues during the unplanned shutdown of both reactors on April 7. The plant, which is operated by Exelon, is located in Lusby, Md.
Calvert Cliffs, like all nuclear power plants, transmits power to the grid but also receives power back for operational purposes. A grid disturbance due the failure of a transmission line in Southern Maryland on April 7th caused both Calvert Cliffs reactors to automatically shut down as designed 
Callaway nuclear plant shut down after 'non-emergency' leak 
JIM SALTER, Associated Press
Originally published July 23, 2015 at 1:19 p.m., updated July 23, 2015 at 4:36 p.m.
The Ameren Corp. nuclear power plant in central Missouri was shut down for the second time in eight months Thursday after a "non-emergency" leak was found in the reaction control system. 
The shutdown occurred at 1:15 a.m. at the plant near Fulton. Jeff Trammel, a spokesman for St. Louis-based Ameren, called it a "minor steam leak." He said no one was hurt and there was no risk to the public. 
Ameren officials are investigating the cause. Trammel said it was unclear when the plant would restart. 
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission was advised of the leak and inspectors are at the plant, spokeswoman Lara Uselding said. 
"The plant is in a safe shutdown condition and there is no risk to public health and safety or the environment," Uselding said. 
The Callaway plant also shut down in December, due to an electrical equipment failure. That shutdown was the first in more than two years. No one was hurt and the public was not threatened in that leak, Ameren said. 
An NRC report on the latest incident classified it as a "non-emergency." The report said the shutdown was initiated after a reaction control system leak was detected at the plant that sits about 100 miles west of St. Louis. 
"A containment entry identified a steam plume; due to personnel safety the exact location of the leak inside the containment building could not be determined," the NRC report said. 
The NRC report said radiation levels were "slightly above normal," but stable inside the containment building, and there were no releases from the plant "above normal levels." 
Ed Smith of the Missouri Coalition for the Environment said the shutdown raises concerns for the plant, which turned 30 last year. 
"As the Callaway nuclear reactor ages, I think we're going to see more incidents like this," Smith said. 
Ameren, based in St. Louis, provides electrical power to customers in Missouri and Illinois. Trammel said customers will see no impact from the shutdown. The Callaway plant generates about 20 percent of electricity for Ameren's 1.2 million Missouri customers...
Another recent trip?
At 00:22 hours on December 3, 2014, during normal power operations, A turbine and reactor trip occurred, when the main generator excitation transformer faulted to ground. The reactor trip was classified as "uncomplicated." Safety system performed as designed. During recovery the valve providing flow from Motor Driven Auxiliary Feedwater Pump "B" to Steam Generator "D" failed to throttle closed afterwards. Repair of the excitation transformer was completed and the plant returned to power operations on December 6, 2014.  

Sunday, September 20, 2015

The Failed Diesel Generator I predicted at Pilgrim

The Failed Diesel Generator I predicted-anticipated At Pilgrim...  
 
I predicted a failed DG and it showed up few months later. I believe the defect was available in Juno and this guy would have failed in it mission time if the accident would have been worst.
 
It is really so sloppy safety wise...   

This is what Entergy is supposed to do at Pilgrim. They are supposed to anticipate problems based on the heavy duty use with the Diesel Generators. 


This is what I got a problem with…everyone only showing the most prettified version of self. Not the most completely accurate version of events. The selective release of information that only creates the most handsome profile of self. The Brain Williams in the nuclear industry?

(2015) “During winter storm Juno, operators observed that water level indicators at the plant water intake were non-functional.”

Why didn’t the NRC admit this was missed by Entergy in storm Nemo? Why didn’t the NRC catch it in 2013? If you had a special inspection in 2013, you would have caught it then and preventing its re-occurrence in 2015?

What are you guys going to do if another blizzard knocks Pilgrim into another LOOP in 2015? I am predicting one diesel generator failure this time due to the accumulation to all the fast start-ups creating excessive stress on these machines. How many fast start-ups are these machines designed for considering all the LOOPs at this site and the integrated eccs testing ? 

Don’t even get me talking about the broken meteorological tower I caught in Nemo…it being unreliable for a long period of time before this. This impaired a possible evacuation. I got it on the Pilgrim docket.



I do admit the water level is kind of insignificant in the big picture…but not knowing the limitation of your indications in a big event is bad.
They handled this like little leaguers. They didn't conservatively call the machine as inop just like the SRVs. I bet you this leakage was going on for a lot longer time...all through the winter.    

Description. On March 18, 2015, at 2:15 AM, operators entered TS 3.5.F, “Minimum Low Pressure Cooling and Diesel Generator Availability,” to perform pre-startup checks of the X-107B EDG in accordance with procedure 8.9.1, “Emergency Diesel Generator and Associated Emergency Bus Surveillance,” Revision 129. TS 3.5.F provides a 72 hour limiting condition for operation (LCO) that can be extended to 14 days provided that all low pressure core and containment cooling systems, and the SBO diesel generator are determined to be operable. When the engine was rolled over with air to verify that no fluid was present in any of the cylinders, engine coolant was instead observed to spray out of the open cylinder test cock on cylinder 9L. Entergy staff estimated that approximately six ounces of fluid was discharged. This issue was entered into the CAP as CR-2015-02109. Entergy staff determined that the X-107B EDG had been and remained operable because the volume of fluid that had been discharged would not have produced a hydraulic lock on cylinder 9L and therefore would not have prevented the engine from starting. Entergy staff exited TS 3.5.F at 2:30 AM.

The TS-required monthly surveillance test was satisfactorily completed on the X-107A EDG on April 2, 2015, approximately two weeks after the X-107B EDG 9L cylinder head coolant leakage eventWhile this did not eliminate the TS violation discussed above, it did demonstrate that, from a risk perspective, the X-107A EDG had been capable of performing its design safety function during that period.

Entergy staff stated that their EDGs were capable of operating with one cylinder removed from service; however, were unable to provide the inspectors with any design documents or engineering calculations showing that the EDGs would be capable of supplying design basis loads under such conditions.

NRC Blog: My Comment On Pilgrim, Storm Juno and SRVs

My comments here are a amazing body of work.
NRC Finalizes Violations for Arkansas Nuclear One
More proof below the staff is amazingly incompetent. The commonality of a lot of these things, they fake astonishing incompetence and never anticipated problems when it threatens plant operation, then once the operation threat disappears they admit the truth... 

Again, look at all the non related problems surrounding the degrading vacuum problem.


Saturday, September 19, 2015

Rearranging the deck chairs on the nuclear Titanic

by Jeff Kingston

Special To The Japan Times

Sep 19, 2015

The International Atomic Energy Agency’s recently released postmortem on the Fukushima nuclear accident of 2011 makes for grim reading and serves as a timely reminder of why the restart of the Sendai nuclear plant in Kyushu is a bad idea. 

When an atomic energy advocacy organization delivers multiple harsh assessments of Japan’s woeful nuclear safety culture and inadequate emergency countermeasures and disaster management protocols, it’s time to wonder how much has really changed in the past five years — and whether restarting any of the nation’s nuclear reactors is a good idea. 

In 2012, the government established a new nuclear safety watchdog agency called the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA) and it now contends that Japan has the strictest nuclear safety regulations in the world. But is that true? And does it matter? 

David Lochbaum, co-author of last year’s “Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disaster,” the best book on the meltdowns that I’ve read, likens recent reforms to “rearranging the deck chairs on the nuclear Titanic” He’s not buying Japan’s claim of having the world’s strictest guidelines. 

“I’d sooner buy the Brooklyn Bridge,” Lochbaum says. “What would Japan have said about its safety guidelines on March 10, 2011? Would they have conceded that their safety guidelines ranked 23rd worldwide, but that level of protection was good enough for the people of Japan? 

“It’s all valueless posturing. No regulator in any country would publicly confess to anything less than the best on the planet. 

Had the NRA existed pre-Fukushima, Lochbaum thinks the disaster would have shown that structure to be inadequate.

“The NRA would have been splintered and its roles relegated to various governmental agencies,” he says. 

At the time, however, responsibility and authority for nuclear safety was divided among various agencies, so the government moved to concentrate such powers under the NRA and calls that a solution. 

“Disasters are bad and require changes,” Lochbaum says. “That the changes fail to address the underlying problems gets lost.” 

However, Japan is not the only nation “rearranging the nuclear deck chairs” to conjure a simulacrum of enhanced safety, and Lochbaum points to an incident in 2008 in Pennsylvania as an example. 


“When contract security officers were discovered sleeping on the job at the Peach Bottom nuclear plant, its owner fired the contractor and brought the security officers in-house,” he says. “It was essentially the same group of individuals wearing different emblems on their uniforms. But somehow the different emblems ‘fixed’ the problem and all was well with the world.” 

A relevant story since most of the NRA’s employees used to work at the discredited Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, which was blamed for poor oversight and safety lapses due to regulatory capture and servile deference to the utilities. 

“It’s more convenient than truthful to blame Fukushima on regulatory capture,” Lochbaum says. “I am unaware of any reactor type operated by any company in any nation that would have survived the one-two punch that the earthquake and tsunami dealt that plant.” Yet, it is disconcerting to know that according to Lochbaum, “Fukushima’s design and operating procedures were not radically different than those deployed worldwide.” 

Both the IAEA report and Lochbaum emphasize the need for defense in depth, meaning multiple levels of safety infrastructure, equipment and redundancy to reduce the possibility of a nuclear accident. 

Defense in depth depends on manifold barriers that lessen risk, but Lochbaum points out all the barriers that failed at Fukushima: off-site power was lost, on-site power was lost, backup on-site power could not be deployed in time, the protective sea wall was insufficient, and more. 

“Had just one of these barriers worked, Fukushima would not have happened,” Lochbaum says. “There was simply not enough what-iffing going on” — what the IAEA describes as a “failure to challenge existing safety systems.” 

By not preparing for the worst and relying on probabilistic scenarios based on overly optimistic assumptions, the IAEA implies that Japan’s nuclear regulators and plant operators were derelict in their duties. There is a danger that the NRA, in touting its new safety regime, is yet again nurturing a myth of safety. 

“When our guesses are good, the ‘strictest regulations’ look real good,” Lochbaum says. “When our guesses are bad, it must be regulatory capture or centralized governance, or de-centralized governance, or whatever lame excuse wanders by.” 

The NRA will still rely extensively on plant operators reporting and self-inspections to ensure compliance with regulations. Given that all the utilities operating reactors admitted they faked their repair and maintenance data, why trust them now? 

Lochbaum also notes the huge discrepancies between safety assessments by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and plant operators. He likens safety goals to nuclear speed limits, but these are meaningless since the government’s radar gun and the utilities’ speedometers are way out of line. The closest match has a radar reading of a utility doing 110 miles per hour when it claimed it was following the 55 mile-per-hour speed limit. But at another nuclear plant at Watts Bar in Tennessee, when the “atomic speedometer showed 55 miles per hour, the NRC’s radar gun indicated a smokin’ fast 42,853 miles per hour!” 

He concludes that existing risk-assessment models “cannot be used for anything other than amusing storytelling and nonproductive time-wasting until their results have closer agreement. Differing by factors of 2 to 800 about risks doesn’t allow risk-informed decision-making. It supports risk-deformed decision-making.” 

And don’t bank on Japan’s reactor stress tests or other new measures such as taller sea walls, longer-duration batteries and other incremental upgrades. 

“Individually and collectively, (those things) hedge our guesses and make it less likely that a bad guess will trigger another nuclear disaster,” Lochbaum says. However, “As long as protective barriers are determined by guesswork without the ‘what if’ backups, nuclear disasters will continue to happen.” 

The IAEA says there is no room for complacency about nuclear safety, but it fails to call Japan out for a major flaw in its disaster emergency preparedness. It details the need for a proper emergency evacuation organization, training and drills, but under current rules this is the responsibility of local hosting towns, one that exceeds their limited capacity — especially now that the evacuation zones around nuclear plants have been expanded to 30 km. 
Simulations of evacuations under optimistic assumptions underscore that people living inside the evacuation zone will be exposed to significant radiation because transport networks will be jammed. And if we factor in a volcanic eruption depositing a thick layer of ash and a simultaneous tsunami wiping out coastal roads, the evacuation would be disastrous. 

The Titanic was also ill-prepared to evacuate its passengers because it failed to consider the unimaginable and thus mismanaged the risk. It seems the lessons of Fukushima are also being ignored in favor of wishing away risk, and hoping for inspired improvisation. There is thus good reason why citizens across Japan are filing lawsuits to block reactor restarts and some gutsy judges are resisting pressure from the nuclear village and siding with common sense.

Sending a Messages to Entergy's Corporate Headquarter ?

Basically this is Entergy territory.  New Orleans is the corporate home of Entergy and I imagine they have total control of Louisiana. We are in the heart of the wacko religious right wing Gov Jendal territory. Not doubt the petroleum industry and Entergy controls all the news outlets. What the hell, I was talking a shot at it. I bet you the newspapers notified them of the River Bend and Mike Mulligan issue. 

I was trying to remind Entergy they got more than Pilgrim problems. Playing River Bend against Pilgrim...the New England nukes off the Louisianan fleet? 

Check out the dates? I never got a response from either of these guys.

Did this play any role with Entergy announcing the possible shutdown of Pilgrim?       

New Orleans: "The Times-Picayune"
***From Mike Mulligan
To: mschleifstein@nola.com mschleifstein@nola.com 
Sep 11 at 8:41 PM 
Mark,

Here is a greater truth than the NRC's happyland truth.

I made a allegation/complaint about this trip...the special inspection was a result of my complaint. It took that to get the NRC off their lazy ass. I am one of a handful of outside people in the USA who ever initiated a special inspection at a nuclear plant, and the NRC admitted it. I am even a much rarer breed as this cascaded into two special inspections. I had help from River Bend insiders employees. The employees feel too intimidated to raise issues with the NRC or Entergy. There was a ton of broken or degraded equipment to show up in that trip. It occurred over and over again without correction.

River Bend and the Waterford nuclear plants are very troubled facilities.

I am a respected whistleblower and nuclear power plant safety advocate. I work closely with the NRC over many issues.

I write up everything on my blog: 
"NRC: Proof I Instigated The 2014 Christmas River Bend plant Scram Special Inspection"

Now you know the whole truth.

Sincerely,

Mike Mulligan
Hinsdale, NH


***From: Mike Mulligan
To mschleifstein@nola.com 
Sep 13 at 8:30 PM  
Mark, 
It speaks a lot when you asked for the simulator picture, they didn’t make back flips trying to schedule you for a trip into a simulator demonstration. Why are they so fixated on destructive secrecy? They should be proud to show the simulator it off. My guess is the simulator is obsolete and if they modeled the plant in detail it would slow down or freeze the scenario.
Remember the NRC dinged River Bend in 2005 about simulator fidelity issues. I talked the senior inspector about this 2005 violation within weeks after the Christmas trip. I told the inspector I thought there were simulator fidelity issues in the 2014 Christmas scam. The NRC inspectors were terrified and they knew employees were talking to me. I said the simulator was degraded in 2005, why didn’t the NRC completely clear this out in 2005? And keep it cleared out. Why doesn’t these big nuclear utilities tremble in absolute fear when the NRC says boo?  
The NTSB demands airplane cockpit videos and voice recording. It is a wonderful training opportunity. Increasingly the NTSB is requiring accident and full time video and voice recordings in all trains. Why isn’t it required in the control rooms of all nuclear power plants? The police departments throughout the nation are beginning to use small cameras and voice full time on all cops and in their police cars. Can you imagine if the NRC was forced by policy to release the video recording of the control room on their bungled Christmas scram? You would have been horrified by what you saw on and during the Christmas trip...you wouldn't have to be a expert to interpret it. It would have deeply transformed Entergy and the industry for the better. That is how powerful these guys are (transparency). Don’t go looking for that nuclear plant accident video recording…the industry agreed decades ago to never install video recorder in any US control room because it is such a powerful public tool

***From: Mike Mulligan
To mschleifstein@nola.com
Sep 13 at 8:45 PM  
You get what is going on here, we are overly dependent on the NRC’s and licensees interpretation of what went on in the control room or events in the plant. There is self-interest and protection going on here. An objective democratic video and voice recording of say the River Bend Christmas scram would allow the multitudes to make up their minds on the competence of the NRC and Entergy.    
This was written for you: 


Baton Rouge: "The Advocate"
***From: Michael Mulligan
To: awold@theadvocate.com 
Sep 15 at 9:23 AM 
Amy,   
I made a allegation/complaint about this trip...the special inspection was a result of my complaint.  I am one of a handful of outside people in the USA who ever initiated a special inspection at a nuclear plant, and the NRC admitted it. I am even a much rarer breed as this cascaded into two special inspections. I had help from River Bend insiders employees. The employees feel too intimidated to raise issues with the NRC or Entergy. There was a ton of broken or degraded equipment to show up in that trip. It occurred over and over again without correction.

River Bend and the Waterford nuclear plants are very troubled facilities.

I am a respected whistleblower and nuclear power plant safety advocate. I work closely with the NRC over many issues.

I write up everything on my blog:

"NRC: Proof I Instigated The 2014 Christmas River Bend plant Scram Special Inspection"


Now you know the whole truth.

Sincerely,

Mike Mulligan
Hinsdale, NH
1-603-209-420

***From Mike Mulligan
To awold@theadvocate.com 
Sep 15 at 9:52 PM  

The exact some problem I face when I first seen the River Bend Christmas scram. It stands way outside how much troubles Entergy is having with their nuclear Fleet. They are just not spending enough money on the fleet.
In the good old days the NRC used their rules and policies to control the bad actors in the industry. In the recent decades, all the new rules and policies are aimed at controlling and limiting the local NRC inspectors.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Entergy Talking Out Both Sides Of Their Mouth.

Everything is just a financial game with these guys: "(Denault) what’s the right value play"

"Entergy will need to consider “what’s the right value play as well as what’s the right allocation of resources. And does that free up cash that we could use elsewhere,” he said." 

Entergy's official Noyes on Possible shutdown of Pilgrim 
“If the corporation finds that the cost of making the improvements of the plant exceed the value of the plant, the corporation may decide to shut the plant down,” said David Noyes, the plant’s director of regulatory and performance improvement."



 

 

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Pilgrim nuclear plant says it may shut down

The article is on the front page right side.
The NRC has been talking to these High Officials for years...I bet Entergy warned them we will just pull the plug if you identify all our problems. So the NRC in recent years was pulling their punches?

Remember Fitzpatrick is in the same boat with Entergy threatening to close them also.   
Pilgrim mulls whether to spend millions on safety upgrades

By David Abel Globe Staff  September 17, 2015 
Officials at the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station are considering whether they can afford the multimillion-dollar safety improvements and other reforms required by federal officials. If not, they say, they might close the plant. 
After the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission downgraded the plant’s safety rating earlier this month, Pilgrim joined two reactors in Arkansas as the least safe in the country. Expensive repairs are needed to raise the safety rating of the 43-year-old plant, run by Entergy Corp. since 1999. 
“If the corporation finds that the cost of making the improvements of the plant exceed the value of the plant, the corporation may decide to shut the plant down,” said David Noyes, the plant’s director of regulatory and performance improvement. 
He added: “No business decision has been made about Pilgrim. We’re looking at specific conditions, and analyzing weaknesses associated with the plant. As of right now, we don’t know the costs.” 
The plant could also be shut down by the regulatory commission. A succession of unplanned shutdowns of its reactor in recent years, and inspections that revealed significant safety problems, resulted in its being moved to the next-to-lowest performance category two weeks ago. 
None of the nation’s 99 reactors are currently in the lowest category, but if Pilgrim fails to comply with federal requirements, the commission will move it there. Such action would require the plant to close, at least temporarily. 
The NRC is smoking dope with 142,857 years.

Part of the problem here is the risk calculations are set too low. If they came up with a chance of core damage say of once every 50 years, everyone would have been force to confront the Pilgrim issue much earlier. They would have never allowed them to get this bad. Just so you understand, core damage never takes out a plant (yet. We should have a computer model where events at the plant can estimate the political damage of a credibility meltdown leading to a plant shutdown. We are losing many plants to credibility meltdowns and none from core damage. Is the bad stories such as Fukushima, VY and Pilgrim cumulative...putting bad stories in the minds of the public?

So risk of shutdown constitutes the risk of core damage and a loss of credibility...the lost of credibility accident occurs much more frequently.

Again, will the Pilgrim saga force the hand of NY and entergy to prematurely pull the plug on Indian Point? It sure likes like when electric prices are heading up, the merchant model is the goose who laid a golden egg. When prices are going down, the merchants are the anchor chained to your leg that is going to drown you when you are the weakest?  
The commission said the plant’s level of risk is “low to moderate.” Entergy officials said that the odds of an event occurring that would damage its reactor core, before they made recent repairs, was one in every once every 142,857 years. 
Pilgrim, which provides an average of about 12.5 percent of the state’s electricity, is located 35 miles from Boston; about 5 million people live and work within a 50-mile radius of the plant. 
In a recent letter to Entergy officials, Governor Charlie Baker urged Entergy to “make certain that the plant meets the highest safety standards.” 
“We cannot risk the well-being of the residents of the commonwealth,” Baker wrote. 
Baker added that he was troubled that Entergy “has failed to take appropriate corrective actions to address the causes of several unplanned shutdowns dating back to 2013.”
Baker has said he sees Pilgrim as part of a “balanced approach” to the state’s energy needs, while other state lawmakers have long called for the plant to be closed. 
Entergy was awarded a 20-year operating license in 2012 to continue operating Pilgrim, but opponents are hoping to use the downgrade to pressure the company to shutter the plant now. 
On Wednesday, state Senator Dan Wolf, a Harwich Democrat, met with advocates from the Sierra Club, the Environmental League of Massachusetts, the Massachusetts Public Interest Research Group, and others. 
They discussed how to advance bills in the Legislature that require the company to pay fees to store its spent nuclear fuels at Pilgrim, and that would force Entergy to show that it has enough money to cover the costs of securing its spent fuel after the plant closes.
“These bills will get across to Entergy that they need to bake these costs into running the plant and think of its financial viability,” Wolf said. “They’re going to have to make financial decisions.” 
Entergy officials declined to provide information about the plant’s operating costs or revenue. Although the company’s stock price has plummeted this year by nearly 30 percent, nuclear regulatory officials have maintained that Entergy is solvent. 
In a letter sent this summer to an environmental group in New York, William Dean, director of nuclear reactor regulation at the commission, wrote that Entergy’s “current financial qualifications are adequate to continue safe operation at Pilgrim.” 
In response to questions from the Globe about the company’s finances, Lauren Burm, an Entergy spokeswoman, wrote: “Entergy does not disclose in our investor relations or Securities and Exchange Commission filings, individual plant profit, or operating cost information. It is considered proprietary business information.” 
Entergy officials have six months to present the Nuclear Regulatory Commission with a detailed improvement plan. Commission officials will then send teams of inspectors to the plant to review the causes of the unplanned shutdowns over the past three years and to determine whether equipment needs to be replaced and whether the plant’s management needs to improve safety. 
The commission bills Entergy for the inspections, which federal officials estimate will cost nearly $2 million. Entergy officials said they have already spent about $70 million to provide safety and security upgrades to the plant since the 2011 radiation leak at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear station, which has the same basic design as Pilgrim. 
“We have a number of actions already ongoing to address performance gaps identified,” Noyes said. “We have existing action plans and we plan to execute those.” 
State energy officials declined interview requests about how Massachusetts would make up for the lost power if Pilgrim closes. 
If a closure were to happen soon, it would come as the state has made drastic reductions to its reliance on coal. Last year, the Mt. Tom power plant in Holyoke became the last of the state’s three coal plants to schedule a permanent shutdown. The Salem Harbor Power Station closed last year, while Brayton Point in Somerset is scheduled to stop operating in 2017. 
The state now gets about 58 percent of its energy from natural gas, while oil supplies about 9 percent, coal about 3 percent, and renewable energy about 2 percent. The rest comes from hydroelectric power and other sources. 
The state would likely have to import more natural gas, which would have an impact on its carbon emissions. Nuclear power doesn’t emit carbon. 
“The administration continues to engage with the Legislature on Massachusetts’ energy needs and is committed to addressing the impact of power plant retirements on energy markets,” said Katie Gronendyke, a spokeswoman for the state Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, in a statement.