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Nuclear Plant Taken Down In Anticipation of Snowstorm

mdsolar writes Pilgrim Power Plant in Plymouth was taken offline in anticipation of the weekend snowstorm. According to a statement from Entergy, the owner of Pilgrim, the plant was taken off line in preparation of "a potential loss of offsite power or the grid's inability to accept the power Pilgrim generates." This is the second time this season the plant has been shut down due to storm conditions. On January 27 the facility was taken offline after the two main power transmission lines were knocked out by blizzard conditions. Although the transmission lines were restored within a few days, the plant remained offline until February 7 at which time it was reconnected to the grid.

7 of 311 comments (clear)

  1. Re:The U.S.A. is now a third world country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    If such a thing happened in Canada you can be sure we wouldn't take over a week to repair the government-owned power lines.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    Right...

  2. Re:strange circumstance. by peon_a-z,A-Z,0-9$_+! · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nuclear plants of the design mentioned in the article must legally have offsite power to continue operation. As soon as offsite power is lost, the plant is required to shutdown. An emergency shutdown is more paperwork than a planned shutdown such as this.

    The reason for this is that in an accident scenario, you would like to rely on offsite power to run your emergency coolant pumps for this particular design.

    Newer reactor designs don't have this issue, but this is a pretty economic decision considering an emergency shutdown if/when the offsite power does eventually trip. The grid seems pretty unreliable based on past experience, as the article even notes.

  3. Re:mdsolar strikes again by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nothing that mdsolar wrote was untrue, and it didn't even sound judgemental.

    To be fair, the title was changed by samzenpus. mdsolar's submittal title said something like "unreliable nuclear plant shut down....". An attempt to mislead on the reason for the shutdown.

  4. Re:A precaution when done ahead of time. by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 4, Informative

    True.

    Loss of offsite power is an analyzed condition and the plant's license requires it to shut down when offsite power is lost. The safety analysis shows that the plant is in a higher risk level as it becomes reliant on its emergency diesels should another severe accident occur at that time. (Even though in those situations, the plant is designed to still be able to cope with all design basis accidents)

    There is no license requirement to shut down in anticipation of a loss of offsite power, and the plant is designed to handle it safely.

    Plants keep running through major storms all the time. This is particular to the local grid.

  5. Re:mdsolar strikes again by Tailhook · · Score: 5, Informative

    You are attempting to discredit this story by maligning the submitter.

    The story is FUD. That's mdsolar's MO; post transparently stupid, fear mongering stories about nuclear power. He deserves to be maligned; he's earned it.

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  6. Re:A precaution when done ahead of time. by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Informative

    Pilgrim is a reliable station still going strong after many years.

    Lol @ reliable. Pilgrim has been on the NRC's worst-ten shit list for a few years now.

    The same day the storm hit, the NRC sent Pilgrim a letter.
    http://pbadupws.nrc.gov/docs/ML1502/ML15026A069.pdf

    Overall, the NRC has determined that your act ions have not provided the assurance level to fully meet all of the inspection objectives and have correspondingly determined that Pilgrim will remain in the Degraded Cornerstone of the Action Matrix by the assignment of two parallel White PI inspection findings. [Green, White, Yellow, Red, in increasing order of severity] [...] . Additionally, for one of the
    root cause evaluations, inspectors determined that Entergy failed to investigate a deficient condition in accordance with corrective action program (CAP) requirements to ensure they fully understood all of the causes of one of the [four unplanned] scram events [that happened in 2013].

    Reliable != multiple unplanned SCRAMs per year.

    Anyways, on January 27, while the reactor was SCRAMing, these three things happened:

    The High Pressure Coolant Injection System had to be secured due to failure of the gland seal motor.
    The station diesel air compressor failed to start.
    One of the four safety relief valves could not be operated manually from the control room.

    Those safety relief valves are the ones that get used to vent pressure after the coolant injection system fails.

    Pilgrim has problems. On top of all those problems, locals are spitting mad because the disaster plans fail to include scenarios like "giant blizzard shuts down all the roads and nobody can evacuate."

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  7. Re:A precaution when done ahead of time. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually the earthquake damaged part of the emergency cooling system and thus prevented effective cooling that would have averted a meltdown. This did not become apparent until months after the disaster when it was possible to examine the pipes and valves that make up the system. They were pumping water in with fire engines, but it was being syphoned off by a broken valve and never made it to the reactor. Even if the valve had been okay, pipes further down were leaking anyway.

    Search YouTube for NHK documentaries on the subject. NHK is like the Japanese version of the BBC, pretty reliable and they have done a lot of work examining what went wrong at Fukushima. Their documentaries are available in English.

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