NRC Sponsored Report: “Potential Impacts of Accelerated Climate Change”
These examples below effected massive amounts of power plants. I lived about four miles from Lake Lanier during this drought. The great southern drought created a state of war between the community water users, agricultural barge users, agriculture water withdrawal users, the dam operators, nuclear power plants and oyster interest in the gulf of Florida . It was a mess. Surprisingly Atlanta had massive abnormal clouds of pollen as a response to the drought. We need a detained report on the changes to the grid on the Southern 2007 drought and the great Illinios drought of 2012Overall, surface temperature is projected to increase as greenhouse gas emissions continue in the future. This is accompanied by increases in heat wave intensity and frequency and reductions in cold extremes. As the atmospheric water vapor holding capacity increases with temperature, global precipitation is expected to increase, with regional differences. Extreme precipitation is projected to increase more than the mean precipitation, and extreme snowfall is expected to increase, despite a general reduction of mean snowfall in a warmer climate. In the western United States, atmospheric rivers, which are the dominant flood producers, are projected to increase in frequency by 50 to 600 percent due primarily to the increase in atmospheric moisture. In regions where heavy precipitation originates primarily from summer convective storms (e.g., the Great Plains), observation data suggest a 7 percent increase in convective extreme precipitation per degree of warming. At the same time, aridity will generally increase due to the increasing saturation deficit over land, with robust drought risks projected for the southwestern and central United States. Increases in ocean heat content in a warmer climate will generally increase hurricane intensity, but climate models do not project robust Atlantic tropical cyclone frequency changes. In a warmer and moister atmosphere under global warming, hazardous convective weather that generates strong, damaging winds is generally projected to increase, though a reduction in wind shear due to polar amplification may offset some of the changes. Projections of sea level rise in the 21st century show the largest increase in the Gulf Coast, followed by the eastern United States, where uncertainty is the largest. Selected regional climate changes are highlighted in the table below for each conterminous U.S. region.
Great 2007 Southern Drought
Feds OK drought deal letting Georgia keep more water
- Story Highlights
- Fish and Wildlife Service: Plan has limited effect on mussels, sturgeon downstream
- Plan gradually cuts amount of water released from dam in Chattahoochee, Florida
- Plan is only temporary, until the Southeast gets some much-needed rain
- U.S. official: Georgia, Florida, Alabama governors also want long-term solution
ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- Federal biologists said Friday they had signed off on a plan aimed at providing relief to the drought-parched Southeast, under which more water will be retained in Georgia instead of being released into Florida.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service expedited its study of an interim drought plan submitted two weeks ago by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and concluded that freshwater mussels and sturgeon -- kept alive by water from Georgia's Chattahoochee watershed under federal law -- will not be placed in jeopardy under the plan.
However, there will be some effects, and some members of the species probably will die, Sam Hamilton, Southeast regional director for the Fish and Wildlife Service, told reporters.
Under the plan, the amount of water released from the Jim Woodruff Dam in Chattahoochee, Florida, will be gradually decreased. That process had already begun Friday, said Brig. Gen. Joseph Schroedel, South Atlantic Division commander for the Corps of Engineers. A similar plan will be put into effect on the Alabama River, at a point south of Montgomery, Alabama, officials said.
Last month, Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue declared a water supply emergency in north Georgia, and asked a court to require the Corps of Engineers to restrict water flows from Lake Lanier -- the main source of Atlanta's water -- and other reservoirs. He blasted what he said were "silly rules," noting that even if Georgia gets rain, it cannot conserve water because it must release 3.2 billion gallons a day downstream.
Alabama, Georgia and Florida have been wrangling over water usage from two river basins -- the Alabama-Coosa-Tallapoosa (ACT) and the Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint (ACF) -- for years. Meanwhile, the population of metropolitan Atlanta has doubled to more than 5 million since 1980. Lake Lanier is at the headwaters of the ACF system, so cutting the flow of water from the Woodruff Dam will mean less water will need to be released from Lake Lanier. See why the three states are struggling over the water »
Rainfall in north Georgia, including the Atlanta metropolitan area, is more than a foot below normal levels for this time of year, following a series of drier-than-normal years. Georgia has imposed a mandatory ban on outdoor water use by homeowners in the region.Don't Miss
Two weeks ago, Perdue met with federal officials, Alabama Gov. Bob Riley and Florida Gov. Charlie Crist to discuss a drought plan, and the plan approved Friday by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service was announced. In light of the negotiations, Perdue has dropped his lawsuit against the corps.
Florida's governor has voiced some concerns about the recommendations from the November 1 meeting. Jim Connaughton, chairman of the U.S. Council on Environmental Quality, told reporters Friday that negotiations continue to work through some of the issues facing Florida, but some concerns, "at least with respect to the near term," have been addressed.
Asked whether he thinks Crist would sue over the matter, Connaughton said governors of the three states have committed to finding a solution for future years if the drought persists.
The governors will meet December 11 and 12 in Tallahassee, Florida, to continue negotiations, U.S. Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne said Friday. "We're in an extreme situation ... but you see, at this point, some two weeks after sitting down and going through a number of these things, some real progress has been made."
The plan also provides for increasing water storage, officials said. "If the corps does not hold back some water now, and if extreme drought conditions continue, it is possible there may not be enough water in storage next summer to meet the needs of users," the corps said in a statement.
In signing off on the drought plan, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service only examined possible effects on species listed on the federal endangered list, Hamilton said, so the revised plan's effect on oysters, shrimp and other species in Florida's Apalachicola Bay is unknown, although it will be studied. Connaughton, however, noted that the plan is only temporary, until the Southeast receives some much-needed rain.
Crist, for his part, said in a written statement Friday that the state "will continue to focus on the needs of the people who depend on a healthy Apalachicola Bay." He said that while he is "disappointed" that Georgia's initial request to reduce releases from Woodruff Dam was extended, the corps has promised Florida it will regularly evaluate the environmental effects on the bay. Schroedel disputed reports that have said Lake Lanier only has a finite number of days left for Atlanta's water supply, saying the lake has not reached its record low. "It doesn't look that pretty, but there's still a lot of water there," he said.2012: Extreme Heat, Drought Show Vulnerability of Nuclear Power Plants
Reactor shutdown in Connecticut is latest sign that nuclear energy would face challenges from climate change.
Will 2012 go down as the year that left the idea of nuclear energy expansion in the hot, dry dust?
Nuclear energy might be an important weapon in the battle against climate change, some scientists have argued, because it doesn't emit greenhouse gases. But separate of all the other issues with nuclear, that big plus would be moot if the plants couldn't operate, or became too inefficient, because of global warming.
In June, InsideClimate News reported on the findings of Dennis Lettenmaier, a researcher at the University of Washington. His study found that nuclear and other power plants will see a 4 to 16 percent drop in production between 2031 and 2060 due to climate change-induced drought and heat.
The U.S. is getting plenty of both this year. Just Sunday, the Millstone nuclear plant in Waterford, Conn., had to shut down one of its two reactors because seawater was too warm to cool it. It was the first time in the plant's 37-year history that the water pulled from the Long Island Sound was too warm to use.
So the question becomes, is the future already here?
Heat records have been falling by the thousands since spring, and on Aug. 9 the U.S. Drought Monitor map showed that 62.46 percent of the nation is under moderate to exceptional drought conditions. That's down slightly from the peak of 63.86 percent last month, the highest percentage since the Drought Mitigation Center began producing the map in 2000. But the percentage of the country that is experiencing extreme to exceptional drought continued to rise and is now at 24.14 percent, almost a fourth of the country.
Much of the drought and unusual heat has been in areas that rely in part on nuclear plants: the upper Midwest, the Southeast and parts of New England.
When all of the nation's 104 nuclear plants are fully operational, they supply about 20 percent of the energy generated in the United States. Those plants need water to operate, and in most cases, they need fresh water. There's not a lot of fresh water to go around in much of the nation this summer, and that is putting nuclear energy to the test.
It's also raising questions about how freshwater supplies should be managed in a world further taxed by climate change. Inevitably, there will be increased competition for water from a growing population, agriculture and the energy sector.
(Plants that use saltwater for cooling generally don't have the same issues, because they never have a shortage of water. But the shutdown at Millstone shows they can still be vulnerable to heat waves.)
About 40 percent of the nation's fresh water use goes toward energy generation, with nuclear energy considered a very water-intensive energy source.
Depending on whom you talk to, this simmering summer has highlighted a major drawback to nuclear energy, or it has demonstrated there's not too much to worry about.
"In terms of weather conditions, [the drought and heat] is not something that affects the operation of plants any more than we would normally see in a hot summer," Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman Scott Burnell said.
"In designing and building plants, they take into account the possibility of extreme drought. They can reasonably expect to take water in, even in extreme drought.
"The nut graph is, the plants continue operating."
Nuclear energy opponents say that's an oversimplification that glosses over this year's problems and the long-term vulnerabilities of the nuclear industry. They say this year is not the first, and won't be the last, that drought and heat waves force tough choices between environmental degradation and power shortages or expensive, stop-gap solutions.
"This has happened many times in the past, which makes us worry a lot," said David Kraft, director of the Nuclear Energy Information Service, a Chicago-based nonprofit committed to ending nuclear power. "In a climate-disrupted world, nuclear power plants are not reliable partners."
In late July, power generation from the nation's nuclear plants fell to 93 percent of capacity, the lowest level since 2003. Not all of the drop was due to weather-related issues, but some of it was:
— The Vermont Yankee plant near Brattleboro had to limit output four times in July because of low river flow and heat. At one point, production was reduced to 83 percent of capacity.— FristEnergy Corp's Perry 1 reactor in Ohio dropped production in late July to 95 percent of capacity because of above-average temperatures.— Operators of the Braidwood, Ill., nuclear plant 60 miles southwest of Chicago sought and were granted a waiver from the Environmental Protection Agency to raise the temperature of a cooling pond to 102 degrees—2 degrees above the established limit. The pond holds water cycled through the plant for cooling and then discharged. If the plant had not received the waiver, it would have had to scale back production in the middle of an intense heat wave.Kraft said the nuclear plants' operating difficulties are part of a recurring pattern. In the summer of 1988, drought, high temperatures and low river volumes forced Commonwealth Edison to reduce power by 30 percent or shut down, in some cases, at the Dresden and Quad Cities plants in Illinois.
"That was the first wake-up call that plants would be vulnerable in a climate-disrupted world," Kraft said.
There have been many more instances since:
— Europe, summer of 2003. During the heat wave that killed more than 30,000 people, France, Germany and Spain had to choose between allowing reactors to exceed design standards and thermal discharge limits and shutting down reactors. Spain shut down its reactors, while France and Germany allowed some to operate and shut down others.— Illinois, summer of 2005. EPA and state officials considered easing thermal discharge standards because of drought, but a break in the weather made it unnecessary.— Illinois, Minn., July 29 to Aug. 2, 2006. The Prairie Island (Minn.) plant had to reduce output by 54 percent. The Quad Cities, Dresden and Monticello plants in Illinois also cut power to moderate water discharge temperatures.— Michigan, July 30, 2006. The Donald C. Cook reactors in Michigan were shut down during a severe heat wave because temperatures in a containment building exceeded the regulatory limit of 120 degrees.— Southeast U.S, Aug. 5-12, 2008. The Tennessee Valley Authority lost a third of nuclear capacity due to drought conditions. All three Browns Ferry reactors in Alabama were idled to prevent overheating of the Tennessee River.— France, July 2009. France had to purchase power from England because almost a third of its nuclear generating capacity was lost when it had to cut production to avoid exceeding thermal discharge limits.— Southeast U.S., July, August 2011. The TVA reduced power at Browns Ferry to stay within discharge limits. At one point, all three of the reactors cut output to about 50 percent. Had the plant been operating at full capacity, the downstream temperature on the Tennessee River would have exceeded the 90-degree limit.NRC spokesman Burnell said plants have had to dial back production at times, but he wasn't aware of rolling blackouts in any of those instances.
Why the Water Matters
Drought and heat affect the water needed to cool nuclear plants in three main ways.
Most plants are built along lakes or rivers because of the ready supply of water to cool the plant. But if water levels drop below the plants' intake pipes, they can't suck in the water. In some cases, the pipes can be lowered, but that is often expensive and also risks pulling in sediment that could damage the plant.
Lake or river water can also be unusable if it's too warm to cool the plant. Other times, the warm water can be used, but the plants operate far more efficiently with cooler water.
The third problem that crops up in heat waves is with the outflow from the plant. If the water body is already warm because of low levels or hot days, the outflow could raise the downstream temperature above accepted levels. That has happened repeatedly in the U.S. and in Europe. If a plant isn't shut down in those situations, the hot discharge can cause algae blooms, reduce dissolved oxygen in the water and threaten aquatic life.
"From our perspective, this has been a problem for years, and it's only getting worse," said Wendy Wilson, director of rivers, energy and climate for the River Network, which aims to protect the nation's freshwater resources. "It gets worse every time we have a drought like this."We have terrible thermal pollution problems in this country, and the result is dead and dying rivers. Nobody's managing the system. We're all just praying for rain."Besides the Tennessee River in Alabama, Wilson said, energy-related overheating problems have cropped up on the Oconee River in Georgia, the Rio Grande River in Texas, and in Lake Erie.Burnell said Browns Ferry in Alabama is looking at modifying its cooling mechanisms so it can return discharged water without raising the temperature of the Tennessee River.
But Kraft, with the Nuclear Energy Information Service, said similar modifications have been tried for decades at other plants, and that consumers always end up paying for them. If adding a new technology involves a shut down, a plant can lose $1 million a day in revenue. And if the utility is forced to buy energy from another source, it is usually at much higher rates.
"Every time you go to the newest adaptation, you're adding costs," Kraft said. "Every new trick like this costs hundreds of millions of dollars. That's got to end up on somebody's balance sheet."
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