Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Palisades PCP Impeller Inspection

As a note, I continuously update this entry and revise it.

May 28:
Democrat Paul Clements says Congressman Fred Upton is no longer a moderate Republican
Who he won't take money from
Clements did not rule out taking money from interests outside Michigan, but he said there are certain groups from whom he would not accept campaign contributions. 
"I wouldn't take money from the Koch brothers, but I doubt they would want to give it to me," he said. 
He also said he wouldn't take money from Entergy Corp., the owners of Palisades Nuclear Power Plant in Covert Township. 
Palisades is "one of the most fragile, most accident-prone nuclear plants in the country," he said. "We need to be confident it is providing safe nuclear power or that it is moving toward a reasoned phase-out. We don't see that today – I think it represents a threat to us today and so I would not be comfortable accepting contributions from the company that owns it."


May 28:
May 26: Yep...the the extremist pro nukies ganged up on me and got me kicked off. I won't participate being moderated.

Note: It sure looks like Madalina has shifted me to a approving comment mode or worst. Or it could be issues with my computer or with Linkedin itself slowing down. But this has been going on for days so I find that unlikely.
"Your group posting status: Linkedin
Your posts across groups are being moderated temporarily because one of your recent contributions was marked as spam or flagged for not being relevant. Learn more."

May 27
Senator Markey is watching Mike Mulligan...
Transcipts of 2.206
May 21, 2014: Addendum to Palisades Broken Impeller 2.206



Today at 2:11 PM

Salem

“Sheehan said the bolts are about 4 inches long and about 1 inch wide.

Sheehan said one of the main concerns was having the bolt heads damage or stop the impeller at the bottom of the pump which spins and draws the water into the pump in then sends it into the reactor vessel. Also, Sheehan said, there could be the possibility of the impeller, moving at such a high rate of speed, striking and disintegrating a bolt head and sending tiny pieces of metal circulating throughout the cooling system and possibly causing damage.”

Think of the speeds and power he is talking about there: “impeller, moving at such a high rate of speed, striking and disintegrating a bolt head”. There is a lot more weight and metal in the Palisades blade that the bolts and nuts.
Palisades

So the worst Palisades broken impeller blade is 5 inches wide by 12 inches long...by one inch thick.

Despite the application of approximately 3,000 pounds per square inch (psi) of force, the piece did not move. You know the velocity of the water caused that.

Though both IR 2012-03 and the current IR there has been no mention of an equivalent evaluation by Palisades as in Salem's PCP event. The operability of the PCP is a untouchable.

I request the NRC enforce a similar evaluation on the Palisades and I request a OIG inspection on why there is different analysis criteria for similar PCP events between the NRC regions.

Again, I request the Palisades plant be shut down until they replace their PCP with a safer design.

1) How many times did that large Palisades blade spin around in the pump casing before it was spit out? The size of the large broken blade found in Palisades challenges a sheared or frozen impeller accident that severely threatens fuel damage from reduced cooling as mention in Salem and IN 85-03.

2) Certainly the speed of the remaining impellers could shatter a broken blade or pieces and spew small metallic pieces throughout the coolant.

3) Palisades over the years should have carefully documented all the damage to the impellers and evaluated the size of the missing pieces. I am certain many small metallic pieces did get past the flow skirt impeller blade filter, indeed entered the fuel channel and circulated endlessly in the coolant. Why has there been no analysis on this?

4) There is a worry about all these blades pieces found at the bottom of the core upon inspection...there could have been eddies before entering the fuel channel and much erosion throughout the area in all the structures as the material was spinning around in in the under the core flow.

5) The metal blade particles in circulation could have cause erosion of the coolant piping walls throughout the system and also cause flaws in the coolant piping.

6) It certainly looks like larger and larger pieces of blades over time are breaking off the impeller. Has there been an internal evaluation on this?

7) Let’s face facts, in a 30 foot high 4000 hp motor and pump, with a large blade breaking off or more, it could shatter the impeller itself and also the pump casing.

If possible, I would like another chance to speak to the board.  


Sincerely,
Mike Mulligan
Hinsdale, NH

I initiated a NRC process called a 2.206 process on March 17, 2014 over Palisades.
Here is my 2.206 on it.
 
Back in ‘2011” I got on the docket, I predicted, we are going to be shocked with the magnitude of mind blowing Palisades problems in the next few years. I have unnerved many people over the years with my ability to predict future organizational events.
Remember recirculation damage is the explosive collapse of vapor bubbles…it blasts off microscopic metal particles of the impeller and the blades.
May 15:
(It was shortly after the latest turbine trip w/i a day. I don’t know why I can’t come up with the right date. I have talked to numerous inspectors in the last month)
So around May 8 I called up the Salem NRC senior inspector and left a message. He shortly called me back. We talked about the problems with the recent plant trips. He reminded me he knew me from the Vermont Yankee issues. It was like we was old buddies. He was a NRC facilitator at a few of VY contentious community meetings. It was a few meetings past, just after the antis threw cow manure at the NRC inspectors.The NRC had a army of Brattleboro police officers in the meetings and surrounding the high school. There was talk about bringing in the tanks! I talked to this senior resident about the Palisades problems; spoke at length about the meaning of defective PCP impellers. Asked him can you believe the inspectors, said it was safe with the throwing impeller blades all over the place. He didn’t respond. We talked about their brackish service water piping problems...he reminded me they did a rather big piping replacement project.
I just wanted you to know we spent a lot of time talking about Palisades PCP pump problems and I am certain he memorialized the discussion to higher ups.
May 15:
PSEG Nuclear has extended a refueling shutdown of its Salem Unit 2 reactor after discovery of unexplained broken bolt heads in part of the coolant system.
Company spokesman Joe Delmar said Wednesday afternoon that "a conservative decision was made to extend the refueling outage to conduct additional internal inspections of the reactor coolant pumps and make any repairs as needed."
Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman Neil Sheehan said the bolt tops are likely from a part of the coolant pump system.
"The concern is that if bolts holding the turning vane failed, the vane could drop and impact the rotating pump internals," Sheehan said.
PSEG operates three reactors at its Artificial Island site along the Delaware River in New Jersey southeast of Port Penn. The company's Salem Unit 1 plant has reported three unplanned shutdowns this year, potentially subjecting the operation to increased oversight.
Why aren't we showing a picture of the actually palisades damaged impeller. They say it only happens in startups and shutdowns. It just  takes a very little amount of time to create this kind of damage.

1) what if two huge chunks of blades come off right next to each other...a seriously unbalanced impeller. Big loca.

2) The blades winging down the piping system with dinging and gouging out piece of the pipe. They are sand blasting the the big primary coolant piping.

3) It is easy design change to fix the impeller in our modern world today.
Cavitation

4) The issue could end up being equal to a locked rotor accident, which has never happened. A locked rotor accident challenges the peak clad temperatures more than any one accident.
Note on the three below pictures, especially with the damaged pump on the floor:
The below picture represents the kind of cavitation damage you might see at the Palisades...these aren't actual Palisades pictures.
Impeller damaged by caviatation

You notice it doesn't happened to one blade...it happens to all of the blades at same time.

Pump Cavitation Damage

The results of a damaged or misbalanced impeller.

Cavitation is a significant cause of wear in some engineering contexts. Collapsing voids that implode near to a metal surface cause cyclic stress through repeated implosion. This results in surface fatigue of the metal causing a type of wear also called "cavitation". The most common examples of this kind of wear are to pump impellers, and bends where a sudden change in the direction of liquid occurs. Cavitation is usually divided into two classes of behavior: inertial (or transient) cavitation and non-inertial cavitation. 
Inertial cavitation is the process where a void or bubble in a liquid rapidly collapses, producing a shock wave. Inertial cavitation occurs in nature in the strikes of mantis shrimps and pistol shrimps, as well as in the vascular tissues of plants. In man-made objects, it can occur in control valves, pumps, propellers and impellers.
This report indicates a very seriously degraded and dangerous nuclear plant. A big event could pop of of the ether at any moment. They had a heavy lift near miss with the reactor head over "not following procedures" just like ANO.The NRC is also worried about the deteriorating service water system. The NRC documented three failures to follow procedures this period, the SG dam, the bladder getting sucked twice into the suction of the service water system and heavy lift on the reactor head.



05000255/2014002
 

1R20 Outage Activities (71111.20)
a. Inspection Scope
The inspectors evaluated outage activities for a scheduled refueling outage that began on January 19, 2014, and continued through March 18, 2014. The inspectors reviewed activities to ensure that the licensee considered risk in developing, planning, and implementing the outage schedule.
The inspectors observed or reviewed the reactor shutdown and cooldown, outage equipment configuration and risk management, electrical lineups, selected clearances, control and monitoring of decay heat removal, control of containment activities, personnel fatigue management, startup and heatup activities, and identification and resolution of problems associated with the outage.
One of the planned refueling outage activities of particular NRC interest was a foreign object search and retrieval (FOSAR) activity in the reactor vessel. While licensee routinely inspect for foreign material in plant systems and implement controls to prevent the introduction of debris into plant systems, the licensee has in the past identified broken pieces of primary coolant pump (PCP) impellers in the reactor vessel. As a result of a PCP-C vibration transient on October 29, 2011, the licensee suspected a piece of impeller might have broken off and entered the reactor vessel.
Issues with PCP impellers at Palisades date back to 1971 when the impeller for PCP-A was weld-repaired and reinstalled due to damage from foreign material. Below is a timeline of continued issues with PCP impellers.
1983: The licensee identified and removed a piece of broken impeller from under the reactor core barrel during core-offload as part of refueling outage activities. The licensee inspected all of the PCPs and noted the piece originated from PCP-C. The damaged PCP-C impeller was replaced with a new impeller in early 1984.
1984: The newly installed PCP-C impeller failed due to improper assembly and required replacement. The licensee acquired an impeller from another plant, trimmed theimpeller diameter to the proper size, and installed the new impeller.
1999: The site commenced a project to refurbish or replace the four PCPs. The PCP-A impeller was removed for replacement with a spare unused impeller. The removed impeller had cracking on two of the five vanes that was attributed to inadequate post-weld heat treatment in 1971, and the impeller was weld-repaired for future use.
2001: The weld-repaired impeller from PCP-A was installed in PCP-B. This was the first impeller replacement for PCP-B and the removed impeller had cracking in three of the five vanes. The removed impeller was weld-repaired for future use.

2003: The licensee removed the trimmed impeller from PCP-C for replacement and noted extensive damage such that repair was not viable. The impeller was replaced with the refurbished impeller that had been removed from PCP-B.

2007: The licensee identified and removed two impeller pieces from the reactor vessel.

2009: The original impeller in PCP-D was removed and replaced with a newly manufactured impeller. The original impeller was subsequently inspected and found to have recirculation damage, but no cracking.

2014: The licensee removed the impeller from PCP-C and replaced it with a newly manufactured impeller. The removed impeller had missing portions in two impeller vanes.

The 2014 refueling outage included the removal of the core barrel to support more comprehensive reactor vessel inspections than can typically be conducted. This activity was pre-planned for reasons not related to the pump impeller concern, but coincidentally allowed for a more thorough inspection for foreign material in the reactor vessel. The licensee anticipated finding the suspected broken piece from the PCP-C vibration event in October 2011 in the vessel. The reactor vessel FOSAR activities identified two pieces of broken impeller; one piece was removed from the vessel and the other piece was lodged between the reactor vessel and the bottom corner of the flow skirt. The licensee attempted to remove the lodged piece using several methodologies, including pulling using vice grips and pushing using hydraulic tools. Despite the application of approximately 3,000 pounds per square inch (psi) of force, the piece did not move.
The reactor vessel is shown in the figures below. Four PCPs circulate water through the PCS. After the water has passed through the steam generators and transferred heat to the secondary system, the water is pumped by the PCPs through the PCS cold legs and into the reactor vessel. In the included figures that depict the Palisades PCS, one cold leg (inlet nozzle) and one hot leg (outlet nozzle) are shown for the purpose of simplicity. In actuality, there are four cold legs and two hot legs. Water enters the reactor vessel via the cold legs and flows down between the reactor vessel wall and the core support barrel. Near the bottom of the vessel is a flow skirt that contains many small holes that most of the water flows through. Some water also passes below the flow skirt into the bottom of the vessel. After flowing through or under the flow skirt, the water then flows up into the active fuel region to remove heat from the nuclear fuel. After flowing through the fuel region, the water exits the vessel through the hot legs and into the steam generators.


Since the licensee could not remove the impeller piece from the vessel, Operability Evaluation CR-PLP-2014-01510 was developed to evaluate the operability of the reactor vessel. The piece was tapered in thickness from 3/16 inches to roughly one inch wide, and the gap between the vessel wall and flow skirt where the piece was wedged was up to ½ inch wide. The piece was not blocking any of the flow holes through the flow skirt. Plant history has shown that prior broken impeller pieces that passed through the gap were found at the bottom of the vessel. The licensee performed a fluid dynamics analysis to determine the forces that would act on the piece during plant operation, which concluded that the maximum force would be a 350 pound lift force. The site then performed a structural analysis to determine the effects of the piece and hydraulic forces on the reactor vessel and flow skirt. Heatup and cooldown effects were considered and the flow skirt and vessel were determined to move together such that the gap size would remain constant. A fracture analysis was performed to determine if the piece would break up into smaller pieces during the operating cycle. The analysis assumed several initiating crack sizes in the piece, all of which determined that the crack growth rate would reduce and essentially stop once the crack depth approached 75 percent of the thickness of the piece. Based on the results of the analyses, the licensee concluded that the piece would not move, would not break up, would not impede PCS flow, and would not affect the pressure-retaining capability of the reactor vessel. The analyses were performed as a joint effort between the licensee and equipment vendors. The licensee’s Operability Evaluation concluded the reactor vessel was operable with the impeller piece wedged between the reactor vessel and the flow skirt.
The licensee concluded that the cause of the repeated impeller failures was fatigue-related effects from the operation of the PCPs in conditions beyond the maximum flow rate and below the minimum net positive suction head recommendations as described in design documentation. These conditions are present when operating only one or two PCPs (one on each loop) during reduced temperatures and pressures (i.e., during startup and shutdown activities). Cyclic pressure pulses and stresses are created under these reduced pressure conditions that act on the leading edges of the impellers, which can ultimately lead to impeller vane cracking and the break-off of small impeller pieces. The licensee determined, based on metallurgical examination of a previous impeller piece that broke off and the mechanism by which the cracks propagated, that weld refurbished impellers were particularly susceptible to degradation. At normal operating temperature and pressure, there is adequate net positive suction head on all PCPs, so these additional stresses are not present.
The inspectors and NRC staff from headquarters conducted an in-depth independent review of the analyses forming the basis for the licensee’s conclusions. The independent review included:
• The licensee’s analytical basis for why the wedged impeller fragment was expected to remain in place;
• The licensee’s determination that the impact of the impeller fragment wedged between the reactor vessel and the flow skirt did not exceed the structural integrity of the vessel wall or the flow skirt support welds;
• The licensee’s analysis for why the wedged impeller fragment was not expected to break into smaller pieces and in the unlikely scenario that it did, the impact of the pieces on fuel cooling, fuel cladding, and the reactor vessel structure;
• The licensee’s assessment of the potential for corrosion at the interface of the wedged impeller fragment, reactor vessel, and flow skirt; and
• The licensee’s assessment of a worst case scenario accident that could result in the impeller piece impacting the reactor vessel or affecting fuel integrity

Pilgrim Still Going Crazy On Us.




May 15

Told you it was a recirc pump...
Neil Sheehan, a spokesman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, said the work includes installation of a new recirculation pump seal, repairs to valves in the feedwater system, and replacement of a leaking component in the system that takes water from the bay and uses it for plant cooling.
Crap service water piping needing a total replacement.
Leak in SSW piping downstream from RBCCW Heat Exchanger ‘B’ on February 24 
Junk new CRD pump?

Control rod drive ‘A’ pump oil leak on February.

B’ control rod drive (CRD) prior to ‘A’ CRD pump replacement on December 2

ATTACHMENT 3

TO ENTERGY LETTER 2.14.032

PILGRIM RELIEF REQUEST PRR-25, Re

Calculation Cover Page EC # 49514

Pilgrim Salt Service Water Discharge Piping Elbow (JF29-8-4) Wall Thinning Stress

AnalysisStructural Integrity Associates Calculation No. 1400287.301, Rev. 0
(22 Pages)
Remember shutdowns damages safety equipment. Barely six months from the last shutdown and they have all these problems. Nobody knows how long these things were simmering and are they really safety related.

My bet it is the recirc pump seals...
Maintenance will be done on piping, valves, pump seals and electrical equipment
 Pilgrim Coalition
Summary of Shutdowns & Glitches in 2013:

·         January 10-17: Both recirculation pumps tripped, followed by a head drain valve leak.
·         January 20-24: Leaking safety valve.
·         February 8-16: Winter storm causes offsite power loss and main generator load reject; 169 hours down.
·         April 18 – June 3: Scheduled refueling.
·         August 22-26: Electrical problems cause all three main water pumps shut down.
(Plant restarts on August 26, but does not reach full power before…)
·         September 8-17: Steam pipe leak.
·         Oct. 14-21: Off-site power to plant unavailable because of NStar problem, which caused initial shutdown. Plant remained closed for two days after power restored because of faulty mechanical pressure regulator, which caused water levels in the nuclear reactor to become too high.
·         December 4: Leaky steam valve. Reactor still down.
Pilgrim powering down for planned repairs

By CHRISTINE LEGERE

clegere@capecodonline.com

May 13, 2014
PLYMOUTH – Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station officials are powering down the reactor to do some repairs, a spokesman for the plant announced tonight.
“After careful consideration we made the conservative decision to take Pilgrim off-line to perform necessary maintenance to address low-level equipment needs that could potentially challenge reliability for the remainder of the operating cycle,” spokeswoman Joyce McMahon said in an email. The timing of the outage had been planned in advance after a discussion with grid operator ISO-New England.
 “Pilgrim’s power is vital to the grid,” McMahon said. “ISO-NE asked us to schedule maintenance at this time so Pilgrim can provide power during other power plants’ scheduled maintenance outages as well as during the coming peak summer demand.”
Maintenance will be done on piping, valves, pump seals and electrical equipment. “This maintenance will directly support increased reliability for the rest of our operating cycle, which ends with the next scheduled refueling in mid-2015,” McMahon said

 

 

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

ANO: Least They didn't Kill Anyone This Time

ARKANSAS NUCLEAR ONE – NRC INTEGRATED INSPECTION REPORT 05000313/2014002 AND 05000368/2014002

Green. Inspectors documented a self-revealing finding for the licensee’s failure to correctly install the flexible link bolted connection on phase C of the 6.9 kV non-segregated bus of the Unit 2 auxiliary transformer, which contributed to the explosion of the Unit 2 auxiliary transformer. The licensee documented the issue in Condition Report CR-ANO-2-2013-02242. The licensee aligned startup transformer 3 (preferred offsite power source) to carry the plant loads during normal power operations and restarted the plant on January 10, 2014. The transformer is scheduled to be replaced during the upcoming refueling outage starting in May.

• Green. Inspectors documented a self-revealing finding for the licensee’s failure to correctly land the signal wire from the Unit 2 auxiliary transformer differential relay output contacts to the main generator lockout relay, which contributed to the explosion of the Unit 2 auxiliary transformer. The licensee documented the issue in Condition Report CR-ANO-2-2013-02242. The licensee correctly landed the wire and aligned startup transformer 3 (preferred offsite power source) to carry the

• Green. The inspectors reviewed a self-revealing non-cited violation of 10 CFR 50.63, “Loss of all alternating current power,” for the licensee’s failure to maintain the alternate ac diesel generator as a power source available to withstand and recover from a station blackout. Specifically, the licensee failed to perform preventive maintenance on the governors of the diesel in accordance with the recommended vendor maintenance, which resulted in an overspeed trip of the engine during testing. The licensee repaired the governors

Monday, May 12, 2014

Pilgrim’s Junk Safety Valves


Pilgrim’s Junk Safety Valves

PILGRIM NUCLEAR POWER STATION - NRC INTEGRATED INSPECTION

REPORT 05000293/2014002


Closed) LER 05000293/2013-002-00 and LER 05000293/2013-002-01: SRV-3B Safety
Relief Valve Inoperable Due to Leakage and Setpoint Drift

The inspectors reviewed Entergy’s actions and reportability criteria associated with LERs
05000293/2013-002-00 and 05000293/2013-002-01, which is addressed in CR-PNP-
2013-0378. On January 20, 3013, with the reactor at 100 percent power, Pilgrim
operators declared safety relief valve (SRV)-3B inoperable and entered TS 3.6.D.2
requiring an orderly reactor shutdown. SRV-3B had been declared inoperable in
occordance with PNPS procedures which state an SRV is inoperable if the first stage
pilot thermocouple temperature is 35 degrees Fahrenheit below its baseline
temperature. The cause of the SRV leakage was that the natural frequency of the pilot
assembly was close to the resonant frequency of the valve assembly when installed on
the PNPS main steam line, as well as wear and looseness of parts in the main stage of
SRV-3B. Corrective actions that have been completed include the replacement of the
SRV-3B pilot with a refurbished and tested pilot, and to revise station procedures to
reduce reactor power and pressure to stop leakage if it were to occur. Additional
planned corrective actions are to adjust pilot setpoints within the allowed band to
minimize leakage potential, to replace pilots that contain bellows springs of the same
material and heat treatment, and to order new pilot assemblies that have been designed
to raise the natural frequency of the pilot. The inspectors did not identify any new issues
during the review of these LERs. These LERs are closed.



Sunday, May 11, 2014

Re-regulation is back in? Merchants bad!


CMS considers new needs after coal plant retirement, possible Michigan project revival

Louisville, Kentucky (Platts)--24Apr2014/458 pm EDT/2058 GMT

CMS Energy expects to need at least 1,000 MW and, possibly as much as 2,500 MW, of new capacity over the next decade to replace retiring coal-fired generation and expiring power purchase agreements, company officials said Thursday in a conference call to discuss first-quarter results.

These needs most likely will result in the revival of plans for the dormant Thetford natural gas-fired project in Michigan.

John Russell, president and CEO of CMS -- the parent company of Consumers Energy, the state's second-largest electric utility behind DTE Electric -- told analysts during a conference call that he believes the legislature may eliminate Michigan's controversial retail-open-access program while expanding the renewable portfolio standard in 2015.

In 2008, lawmakers passed P.A. 295, comprehensive energy legislation that rolled back electric choice. It imposed a 10% shopping cap on the total load of CMS and DTE, while ushering in a 10% by 2015 renewable energy requirement.

CMS and DTE opposed the choice proposal then, and continue to do so six years later.

"In 2015, we see the possibility of an increase in the RPS, continuation of energy efficiency goals, regulatory improvements and the potential elimination of retail open access," Russell said.

New capacity will be needed, both he and CFO Tom Webb said, to offset the retirement of older coal plants and replace existing PPAs with Entergy's Palisades nuclear plant and Midland Cogeneration Venture that are scheduled to expire early next decade. Both Palisades and MCV are located in Michigan.

If electric choice goes away, CMS' capacity needs may increase. "With the possibility of customers returning to bundled service, the capacity needs may be even larger," Webb said. "If we build 1,000 MW of new capacity, we likely will need to build or secure 2,500 MW just to replace EPA-related plant closures," he added.

Webb was referring to US Environmental Protection Agency pollution rules that are causing many utilities to retire at least some of their older coal generation. Consumers would gain about 780 MW of demand if its roughly 400 shopping customers returned to the fold.

CMS already has announced plans to shut more than 900 MW at its "classic seven" coal units in April 2016. Altogether, the company has about 8,000 MW of generation capacity, mostly coal fired.

While Jackson-based CMS has started to think about possible capacity moves, no firm additions are in its overall business plan yet, Webb said. But Russell, in response to a question from analyst Dan Eggers of Credit Suisse, suggested reviving the 700-MW Thetford combined-cycle project in the Flint area is a strong possibility.

"The Thetford site is ready to go," he noted. "We do have expandability. We have gas and electric transmission. We have older units on site."

Earlier this year, CMS placed the $700 million project on hold after it agreed to buy a 540-MW gas-fired generator in Jackson for $155 million. AlphaGen currently owns the combined-cycle/peaker and is operating it on a merchant basis.

Russell added that, over the next few years, CMS probably will rely on market purchases of perhaps 400 MW to meet growing load requirements.

Consumers Energy's electric sales rose 1.7% in first-quarter 2014, with the utility taking advantage of an expanding economy in Michigan. According to Webb, building permits rose 25% in Michigan, and a whopping 39% in Grand Rapids, for the 12-month period through February.

CMS anticipates similar growth rate in terms of electric sales for the remainder of the year. CMS, which prefers to take a conservative approach in forecasts, foresees sales growth of slightly over a half-percent annually over the next several years.

Changes in the choice cap are expected to garner fierce debate in the state legislature next year as pro-competition groups say they will push to raise or eliminate the cap altogether, pointing to the more than 10,000 customers currently in the queue for both CMS and DTE.

But Russell argues that competition's day is done and the tide is clearly turning in favor of re-regulation. "There are some people who believe that competition is the right thing to do. The message we'll continue to tell them is we're a pretty unique industry. We make electricity. It moves at the speed of light. You can't store it. Therefore, it is the most volatile commodity in the world," Russell said.

During the recent bitterly cold winter, "people found out how volatile that commodity can be," he added. "Our large customers, in particular, want to have competitive rates and predictability. They don't want volatility."

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Hinsdale-to-Brattleboro Bridges: The Feds Are Here?

Originally published on May 10

(Oh dear god, I love you so much!!!)

This seems to be the new shoots of spring green growth in this miserable slog. I kinda was wondering why he was calling me...I bet you he got word the feds were going to fund the bridge. All the rest was filler.
 
Did Senior Shaheen and president Obama come though? That is the message of this, the feds are coming.
Well, my ultimate goal would also be to to refurbish Island Park. Make it uninhabitable to all the transients and homeless encampments. Basically, cut a lot of the trees down and remove all the brush. Smooth out all the embankments, plant a lot shrubs and an assortment of flowers...flatten out and raise some of the flat areas. Then sod this area and make it a picnic area. Remember, part of the “F” plan is to make a boat landing area.  
It would set up the entrance to NH and Hinsdale as good feeling experience. Hey, wouldn’t Hinsdale be a nice place to live and make a business. It would jack up our property values. I wonder what is going in at the dog track area?  
Waiting for the official notification!!! Guess who is holding up infrastructure funding in Washington?
"The project will reportedly be funded by the Federal Highway Administration."

By DOMENIC POLI / Reformer Staff
Posted: 05/10/2014 03:00:00 AM EDT1 Comment


The newly replaced sidewalk on the Anna Hunt Marsh bridge connecting Hinsdale, N.H., and Brattleboro. (Kayla Rice/Reformer)
The newly replaced sidewalk on the Anna Hunt Marsh bridge connecting Hinsdale, N.H., and Brattleboro. (Kayla Rice/Reformer)

HINSDALE, N.H. -- The New Hampshire Department of Transportation has replaced the sidewalks of the two bridges linking Brattleboro, Vt., to Hinsdale.
It has been 261 days from my arrest to the reboarding of the bridge walkway.

NHDOT Public Information Officer Bill Boynton told the Reformer his department's bridge maintenance crews inspect the wooden sidewalk planks on an annual basis and replace the ones that are in poor condition. He said the sidewalks on the Hinsdale bridges have not been completely rehabilitated since 1987 and wooden sidewalks typically have much shorter lifespans than the ones replaced. Boynton said the work was completed on May and the estimated cost is $24,000.

The renovation did not go unnoticed by Hinsdale resident Mike Mulligan, who is known for his public demonstrations aimed at drawing attention to the bridges and their deterioration.

"Isn't that kind of amazing?" he said Friday about the new sidewalks, though he still thinks it will still be a long time before the new bridge becomes a reality. He said he hopes the refurbishment will have a ripple effect and speed up the bridges' replacement.

Mulligan was arrested during the summer for allegedly pulling up the wooden planks of the sidewalk on the Charles Dana Bridge. Mulligan said he did so because some of the boards were loose. On Feb. 26, he reached a plea deal and agreed to pay a $1,000 fine, plus a $240 penalty assessment, if he cannot pay $1,253.76 in restitution within a year for damage he caused to the portion of the Charles Dana Bridge designated for pedestrians. In exchange for pleading guilty to one misdemeanor charge of criminal mischief, he must also avoid going within 100 feet of that structure or the Anna Hunt Marsh Bridge, except for routine travel without stopping, or risk the fine and penalty assessment.

He was originally charged with reckless conduct, disorderly conduct, and two counts of criminal mischief. He also received a ticket for littering.

The two structures that connected Brattleboro to Hinsdale are Pennsylvania truss bridges built in 1920. The Anna Hunt Marsh Bridge connects Brattleboro to Hinsdale Island, which is connected to Hinsdale by the Charles Dana Bridge. JB Mack, the principal planner for the Southwest Region Planning Commission, has told the Reformer federal highway standards dictate the bridges are too narrow and have insufficient weight limits and vertical clearances. They are considered "functionally obsolete." Currently, all ambulances and other emergency services exiting Hinsdale must cross both existing bridges and risk being stopped by the railroad tracks on the Vermont side. There is now a plan to replace the structures with one that will begin near the stop light at the former Walmart location in Hinsdale, span the Connecticut River, the southern portion of Hinsdale Island and the Merrill Gas Company tank farm on Vernon Road and before touching down near Brattleboro's "malfunction junction." Under the current plan, referred to as Alternative F, the Anna Hunt Marsh and Charles Dana bridges will be rehabilitated and preserved for pedestrian and bicycle traffic. The new bridge would result in minimal changes to existing land uses, according to a draft environmental assessment, and the potential for indirect growth impact and project-related growth impacts is also minimal. The assessment also says no agricultural lands would be affected by construction of Alternative F, which was chosen as the best plan.

The project will reportedly be funded by the Federal Highway Administration.

Wednesday, May 07, 2014

Back to the Chairman Jackson years...House blackmailing the NRC into safety cuts.

On linkedin:

Utilities Professional
Top Contributor
                        
About May 4 I wrote it down...the conversation occurred about three weeks ago.
"It is interesting, in my recent discussions with a NRC branch chief he began discussing the old history of the industry. He talked about Millstone, I reminded him I got fired from the industry for raising safety issued just before Millstone. Well, we came to a agreement and exchanged money. It was deregulation coming and the influence of the big power user that frightened everyone. This guy sums it up pretty good:http://steamshovel2002.blogspot.com/2014/04/how-we-got-here-with-our-electric-system.html

The Chief brought up the 31% budget cut threat to NRC during the Clinton years and Chairman Jackson. Those mad dog House republicans! I reminded him about Illinois ComEd and their debacle with prolonged fleet wide nuclear plants problems that ricocheted into issues with their transmission and distribution system. Right, we are talking about pressures on chairman Jackson- a weakening Clinton in the opening stages of the nuclear renaissance. This is how we drastically overhauled the ROP and jumped into the deep end of the pool with risk respective. This is why plants have big accidents and we discovered sitting hidden under the plant a mountain of non conformance with licensing and regulation going back for years and decades. I was shocked a branch chief would be talking these issues with me…after all, we were supposed to be focused on Palisades. Usually its me that draws outside the lines…he has to genteelly pull me back to my senses. He was pulling a mike mulligan thing with discussing decades of NRC history.

I am convinced he was warning me sections of the NRC thinks we are heading back to 30% or more budget cut blackmail and chasing off another women NRC chairman. In other words, the Industry would take revenge over any liberalization of safety like they did in the 1990s. Will Obama cave like Clinton?

If that isn’t an example of regulatory capture, I don’t know what else is…"
   


 US House subcommittee blasts NRC's proposed $1.06 billion budget
Washington (Platts)--7May2014/640 pm EDT/2240 GMT

The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission's proposed $1.06 billion budget for fiscal 2015 was under attack at a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing Wednesday as lawmakers questioned how agency expenses could increase by $434 million in 10 years, while roughly 600 fewer licensing actions were slated for review.

"The NRC budget for fiscal year 2015 [which begins October 1] shows an increase in resources and staffing despite a shrinking fleet of reactors," Representative Fred Upton, a Michigan Republican and Energy and Commerce Committee chairman, said at the panel's Energy and Power Subcommittee hearing.

Standing in for subcommittee chairman Ed Whitfield, a Kentucky Republican who was not at the hearing, was Representative John Shimkus, an Illinois Republican, who repeatedly criticized the agency's proposed budget for next fiscal year.

Ten years ago the NRC's budget was $626 million, the agency had 3,040 staff and planned to review 1,500 licensing actions, Shimkus said in his opening statement. Shimkus, who chairs the committee's Environment and the Economy Subcommittee, noted that NRC's proposed $1.06 billion budget for fiscal 2015 would involve 3,881 staff members and the review of 900 licensing actions.

The agency's request is $3.6 million more than its enacted 2014 budget.

By law NRC must recover 90% of its costs from licensees. The US now has 100 licensed, operating power reactors, down from 104 in 2013. And Entergy announced last year that Vermont Yankee would shut at the end of this year because it was no longer economical due to competition from low-cost, natural gas-fired generating plants.

Meanwhile, five power reactors are under construction in the US, NRC Chairwoman Allison Macfarlane noted.

"As the size of our nuclear industry shrinks, the NRC cannot pretend that it needs more regulators to oversee fewer plants," Shimkus said. "This is another pattern that is not sustainable."

Reactors have shut in the US but that does not mean there are fewer licensees, Macfarlane told the subcommittee. The agency also is busy with other activities, she said, noting that it is working with the nuclear industry and reactor vendors and manufacturers to ensure they will understand the guidance NRC is developing for small modular reactors. Also big on the agency's agenda, and which will continue to be, are post-Fukushima items, requiring licensees to take certain actions to ensure their reactor's safety.

Shimkus, who has been a vocal supporter of the US Department of Energy repository project at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, also criticized NRC's response to a court mandate requiring the agency to restart its review of the Yucca Mountain repository license application.

NRC, under then-Chairman Gregory Jaczko, began an "orderly shutdown" of its Yucca Mountain licensing activities in 2010, the same year that DOE dismantled the Yucca Mountain project without having a replacement program in place. In 2011 NRC terminated all work associated with the congressionally mandated Yucca Mountain project.

Shimkus questioned whether NRC would seek funds to complete its review of the Yucca Mountain license application and how much completing that proceeding would cost. Macfarlane did not voice support for NRC filing a supplemental budget request to complete the licensing review and noted that agency staff is assessing how much the Yucca licensing proceeding would cost.

In response to questions from Shimkus, Commissioners Kristine Svinicki and William Ostendorff said they would support filing a supplemental budget request for the Yucca Mountain licensing review. Commissioner William Magwood noted that the commission has asked staff to perform an analysis to determine how much money would be needed.

Shimkus pressed Magwood again, asking the commissioner that if he knew how much money was needed, would he make a budget supplemental request.

"I would consider it," Magwood replied.

Shimkus did not ask Commissioner George Apostolakis that question. Apostolakis earlier recused himself from all Yucca Mountain decisions because of repository-related work he did before joining the commission in April 2010.

NRC is now using Nuclear Waste Fund carryover allocations from previous fiscal years to complete staff's multi-volume safety evaluation report, which assesses the ability of the proposed Yucca Mountain repository to meet regulatory requirements. In its March monthly status report to the committee, the agency said it had roughly $11.3 million for that work and that staff had estimated about $8.3 million would be needed to complete the SER.

Staff expects to complete and release the safety evaluation report in January, Macfarlane said.