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
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.