Friday, November 2, 2012

US nuclear plant exits 'alert' after storm waters recede

Nuclear Daily via AFP: A US nuclear plant exited "alert" status Wednesday after the storm surge from Hurricane Sandy receded, ending the flood threat at New Jersey's Oyster Creek plant, though it remained offline. Three other reactors were still shut down in the wake of the storm, which damaged transmission lines and other power infrastructure in the US northeast, officials said.

And one of the halted units, the New Jersey power company PSEG's Salem 1 reactor, reported having had to vent an amount of steam that possibly had small amounts of radioactive tritium. "When there is a steam dump (non radioactive) there are possibly trace amounts of tritium," PSEG spokesman Joseph Delmar told AFP via email. "It is closely monitored and well below any permit limitations," he said.

Officials ended the alert at the 43-year-old Oyster Creek reactor in Lacey Township, New Jersey, the country's oldest nuclear power plant, early Wednesday, saying the danger to the plant from rising waters had ended. The 636-megawatt plant, operated by power company Exelon, had already been shut down for maintenance ahead of the huge storm on Monday.

But an alert situation -- the second lowest of four emergency classifications -- was declared as the storm knocked out the 636-megawatt plant's main power supply, forcing it to rely on generators, and surging waters caused by the storm threatened to top the banks of canals used to supply cooling water. The alert was cancelled after waters fell to normal levels early Wednesday and power supplies from the main electricity grid resumed, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said....

Oyster Creek nuclear power plant, shot by KyleAndMelissa22, public domain

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