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U.S. Nuclear Regulator Lets Industry Write Rules

ProPublica    
First Posted: 04/14/11 01:39 AM ET Updated: 06/13/11 06:12 AM ET

ProPublica's John Sullivan reports:

In the fall of 2001, inspectors with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission were so concerned about possible corrosion at Ohio’s Davis Besse Nuclear Power Station [1] that they prepared an emergency order to shut it down for inspection. But, according to a report [2] from the NRC inspector general, senior officials at the agency held off – in part because they did not want to hurt the plant’s bottom line.

When workers finally checked the reactor in February of 2002, they made an astonishing finding: Corrosive fluid from overhead pipes had eaten a football-sized hole in the reactor vessel’s steel side. The only thing preventing a leak of radioactive coolant was a pencil-thin layer of stainless steel.

The Davis Besse incident has resurfaced in the wake of the ongoing nuclear crisis at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi plant. Stories recounting close ties [3] between Japanese nuclear regulators and utilities there have reinvigorated critics who say the NRC has not been an aggressive enough U.S. watchdog.

The NRC says that is not the case, and commission Chairman Gregory Jaczko defended the agency’s independence and professionalism. “I have a great staff who are dedicated to public health and safety, and people who interact with this agency, they know that and they see that,” he said in an interview.

Critics of the NRC say the problem at Davis Besse, 20 miles southeast of Toledo, is a prime example of the agency’s deference to industry. The inspector general concluded that a conflict between the NRC’s twin goals of inspecting the plant to protect public safety and a desire to “reduce unnecessary regulatory burden” on the owner led to the delay in finding the gaping hole.

In 2003, then NRC’s Chairman Richard Meserve disputed the inspector general’s report [4], which found that the agency’s decision on Davis Besse “was driven in large part by a desire to lessen the financial impact” the plant’s owner. Meserve said the NRC had adequate technical grounds for the delay.

The agency insists that it vigilantly watches operations at 104 commercial reactors and frequently issues violations to nuclear companies that step out of line. Since 2001, the agency has averaged about 120 significant enforcement actions a year at power plants and other nuclear facilities it oversees.

While the Davis Besse case focuses on singular allegations of influence, critics say the industry routinely exercises its muscle in a more pervasive way: through contributions to NRC regulatory guides [5] that advise nuclear companies about how to best follow the agency’s rules.

Large parts of the guides, issued by NRC, incorporate or endorse material written by the industry’s trade group, the Nuclear Energy Institute [6]. The guides – containing detailed technical procedures and reference materials – are a key part of NRC’s oversight. They provide the nuts and bolts advice that nuclear operators follow to stay in compliance but often refer to even more detailed industry guides.

The NRC’s guide on fatigue [7], for example, details how many hours employees in key jobs can work, how to respond when a worker is too tired, and how many days off employees in certain jobs need. It officially incorporates, with a few exceptions, another 60-page guide compiled by the industry group.

In an e-mail, Thomas Kauffman, a spokesman for NEI, passed along responses to ProPublica’s questions from the trade group’s director of engineering, John Butler. “NRC endorsement, with or without exceptions, of industry guidance is a common practice,” Butler said.

Some examples from a list the trade group provided to ProPublica:

  • How to apply for an operating license extension. Many aging plants are seeking to extend their original 40-year licenses. The 10-page NRC document endorses a 245-page NEI guide [8] that tells applicants how to identify critical equipment and inspect it to be sure it meets relicensing standards.
  • How to protect plants from fires [9]. The NRC’s regulatory guide cites an NEI document that “provides the majority of the guidance applicable” for analyzing fire risk at plants, with some specific exceptions.
  • How to upgrade plant control rooms [10]. The NRC regulatory guide says that “when possible, this guide has incorporated (NEI’s) ‘Control Room Habitability Guide,’ ” again with some limits.

The NEI said its role in contributing to NRC’s guides does not mean the nuclear industry has too much influence. Kauffman said the NRC has final say on what NEI adds and frequently makes changes.

“They review them completely,” Kauffman said. “It is one thing to draft something and put it out there; it is quite another for the NRC to decide to accept it.”

NRC spokesman Eliot Brenner said in an e-mail that the NEI is not the sole source of information in agency regulatory guides and that NRC accepts comment from a broad array of sources.

“If any stakeholder – company, industry organization, individual or public group – backs up a request with appropriate information, the NRC will consider it,” Brenner said. “The NRC regularly denies industry requests that lack proper support, and we’ve taken properly supported rulemaking requests from non-industry sources on many occasions.”

“The NRC is the final arbiter of what becomes a regulation,” he said, “with safety the total focus of our effort.”

But others said the reliance on the industry creates a potential conflict of interest.

Jim Riccio, who follows nuclear issues for Greenpeace, said that allowing the NEI to play such a large role means the industry can shape much of what nuclear companies are required to do.

Riccio said NRC’s precursor agency, the Atomic Energy Commission, was disbanded after Congress concluded it had become too concerned with promoting nuclear power instead of regulating safety.

In a 1974 overhaul [11], development of nuclear energy was transferred elsewhere and protection of the public was given to the NRC, a five-member body whose members are appointed by the president.

Riccio asserted that over the years, NRC has become more accommodating to the industry.

“The problem with inviting the industry in is that they tend to dominate the process,” he said. “The NRC has a problem distinguishing between the public they serve and the industry they regulate. “

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ProPublica's John Sullivan reports:In the fall of 2001, inspectors with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission were so concerned about possible corrosion at Ohio’s Davis Besse Nuclear Power Station [1] t...
ProPublica's John Sullivan reports:In the fall of 2001, inspectors with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission were so concerned about possible corrosion at Ohio’s Davis Besse Nuclear Power Station [1] t...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
09:23 AM on 04/17/2011
The NRC has regulated the nuclear industry pretty well, it is the safest industry in the USA for workers (OSHA) and has not injured a member of the public since it's formation. That is pretty safe, but you would rather use innuendo and conspiracy theories. They are very tough regulators, the "gold standard" of the world. Many of my peers blame over-regulation of the NRC for the stagnation of nuclear power in the USA. The chairman of the NRC is an anti-nuke in the employ of senator Reid to ensure Yucca mountain is never opened, but the rank and file are dedicated professionals who take their duty to ensure safety very seriously.
11:18 AM on 04/16/2011
The NRC is viewed as a classic case of "regulatory capture" -- which occurs when an industry begins to dominate the agency that has been established to regulate it. Examples abound.
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mcnary
Seeing is believing
05:21 PM on 04/15/2011
Golden rule # 1 : Money trumps safety.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
12:57 AM on 04/18/2011
The NRC is funded from fees and fines levied on the licensees, it would seem incentive to levy more fines which should increase safety - follow the money.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:20 AM on 04/15/2011
I wouldn't want to live anywhere near San Diego, as nice as that place is. San Onofre is a ticking time _bomb. The plant is cooled with seawater and they keep their waste on site. If there is an earthquake (and the San Andreas fault right under it) it would be disastrous. The area has overexpanded; all you have to do is drive down Hwy 405/5 and see all the homes on the hilltops that once were empty. If it wasn't for the military base, there would be no gap between LA and San Diego.
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ShamsT
The door has opened, so there's no escape...
08:35 AM on 04/15/2011
Every regulated industry participates in rulemaking but the regulatory authority has the final word.

There's not enough regulatory professionals with the necessary specialized expertise to be able to put out workable regulations in a timely manner without the help of experts in the regulated industry.

For those who don't like the way it's done, what's the alternative?
01:13 PM on 04/15/2011
That's what I was thinking.

Where are the people with with most up to date technical knowledge and expertise about any majory industry?

They are working in that industry.

Should they be the only ones making rules? Absolutely not, but they can certainly help.
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ShamsT
The door has opened, so there's no escape...
02:11 PM on 04/15/2011
Thanks. You've made the point much better than I did.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
I DO NOT pity the fool
11:38 AM on 04/16/2011
Shut down the nuclear plants and install clean disaster free and fuel free electric generation. That will provide for better economic outlook in the long term and lower costs on health care and pollution clean ups.
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ShamsT
The door has opened, so there's no escape...
12:38 PM on 04/16/2011
You really haven't either thought out your position very well or done any research outside of listening to anti-nuke rhetoric, have you?

Here's some of the short and long term ramifications of shutting down nuclear power as you suggest:

1) Drive the price of fossil fuels up to a level where they would be out of reach by poorer countries. Agriculture and industry would come to a standstill in countries that could no longer afford the high price of fossil fuels.

2) A loss of nuclear power would cause an acute shortage of power throughout the world that could not be avoided. This would certainly lead to widespread unemployment, famines, international tensions and social unrest.

3) A loss of nuclear power would make it difficult to add additional power beyond the essential base-load power, making it unlikely to have fully electric vehicles.

4) Rolling blackouts would be the norm in many areas.

5) Electricity prices would skyrocket. Natural gas and coal could not make up for the loss of nuclear for base load generation. Renewables would be increased but are expensive, intermittent and not base load. The addition of renewables could not make up for the shortfall from the loss of nuclear.

6) CO2 levels and other toxic air, water and land pollutants would certainly increase from a greater reliance on burning fossil fuels. This would lead to accelerated global warming and a degradation of air and water quality.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
09:31 AM on 04/17/2011
Shutting down the nuclear power plants would almost certainly lead to many more deaths due to respitory problems and power shortages. Your benign alternatives aren't exactly benign or ready to replace the power from nuclear power plants. Nuclear power plants are still the safest, cleanest, most reliable electrical generators in the USA.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
I DO NOT pity the fool
06:05 AM on 04/15/2011
The author has failed to make his case. Accusations need evidence or they are not convincing. The head of the NRC also make statements about safety and independence as if that is the last word. The public needs to see an atmosphere of transparency in order to believe safety is being given the attention that is needed. The results of radiation accidents are too devastating to be glazed over and dismissed.
08:03 AM on 04/15/2011
If the public doesn't believe there's transparency in the NRC, then the public needs to learn how to google. Or better yet, look at the NRC website and get the info straight from the source. They report events daily. This took me all of two minutes to locate.

http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/event-status/event/en.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
I DO NOT pity the fool
11:39 AM on 04/16/2011
Or better yet look at independent oversight from  www.ucsusa.org
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zelda777
transcend the B. S.
11:21 PM on 04/14/2011
Isn't that Homer Simpson's job?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adam Story
Engineer
12:41 AM on 04/15/2011
If you had actually ever worked at a chemical or nuclear plant like I have...

You know that the above joke is scarily true. When I was a process engineer, my goal was always to make the system worked well enough that is was able to run on naps and donuts. 75% of operators are brilliant and more knowledgeable than the foreman, superintendents, and engineers. The other 25% make Homer seem like a genius. I always felt that the best complement for my work was when I'd walk into a control room at 3:00 AM and I saw a process running perfectly while half the operators were asleep.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
09:43 AM on 04/17/2011
Nuclear control room operators are generally a different breed, the ratio is much better, they train continuously and since the incident several years ago would never be caught sleeping at the panel. Each control room operator is required to maintain a license from the NRC and can be held responsible (arrested) for safety violations, several are on duty at any one time.
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Lunamoth
Already against the next man-made disaster
10:32 PM on 04/14/2011
"But others said the reliance on the industry creates a potential conflict of interest."

'Ya think?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adam Story
Engineer
11:11 PM on 04/17/2011
www.usw7-669.com I'm not these guys biggest fan, but the website is about 75% true and it shows how the NRC is probably the only government agency that puts production over safety.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adam Story
Engineer
11:25 PM on 04/17/2011
As a disclaimer for my other post. My company had the pleasure of doing work with both The Employer and the Steelworkers for over a decade. We are saddened by the current labor situation, but we have no animosity to the owner. We are hoping that there will be an amicable solution to the labor dispute that will result in all of the families in the western KY, and Southern Illinois area being able to return to work and provide for their families. We also hope that after the settlement all of the union contractors, who have been treated fairly over there, like us can return and continue the environmental, civil, and mechanical services that we have provided. I wish nothing but the best for all of the good men that we have had the pleasure of working with on both sides of the dispute.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alvdh1
08:34 PM on 04/14/2011
Australian Aborigines move to block uranium mining, one of the world's largest uranium depsosits, on their land. The Ranger mine, also on their land, has left a toxic mess.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/aborigines-to-block-uranium-mining-after-japan-disaster-2267467.html
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Lunamoth
Already against the next man-made disaster
10:35 PM on 04/14/2011
And the plot thickens...And we are all connected...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adam Story
Engineer
11:33 PM on 04/17/2011
Nuclear Energy is only clean after the dirty stuff has been done first like leaching and enrichment.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alvdh1
08:05 PM on 04/14/2011
Photos of The Fukushima Daini Plant six miles from the Fukushima Daiichi Plant being engulfed by Tsunami - also see smoke billowing from one of the reactor buildings.

http://www.japannewstoday.com/?p=3021
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PoloniumMan
"It worked." J. Robert Oppenheimer
12:00 AM on 04/22/2011
Nice job finding this. I think the smoke was from a transformer.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alvdh1
07:07 PM on 04/14/2011
Great Mother Jones Article on how the food chain is getting contaminated of the coast of the crippled Fukushima reactor and spent fuel complex.

http://motherjones.com/blue-marble/2011/04/japans-radioactive-ocean

http://www.eoearth.org/article/Kuroshio_Current_large_marine_ecosystem

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42085149/ns/health-food_safety/

http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110329f1.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adam Story
Engineer
11:48 PM on 04/17/2011
I hope they didn't fly over there to research it. If they did they were exposed to more radiation than the food supply. I don't want to trivialize the situation, because I'm also a nuclear skeptic, but for different reasons. Fear mongering makes us no better than the right wingers, and robs us of our intellectual high ground.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alvdh1
07:29 AM on 04/18/2011
I only deal in facts. Bio-accumulation of radionuclides in food chains is a fact. Eating radioactively concentrated sea food is a health hazard and is a fact. Minimizing or denying the hazard exists is worse than fear mongering.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alvdh1
05:51 PM on 04/14/2011
If you are opposed to nuclear power and support clean, renewable energy, take action by signing the attached petition. It will go directly to Obama's Change.Org. Pass it around to your friends, family members and post it at other sites you visit. Thanks for your support!!!

http://www.change.org/petitions/urge-the-obamas-to-build-a-nuclear-free-future-for-our-children-now#?opt_new=f&opt_fb=t
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alvdh1
11:53 PM on 04/14/2011
Over 2,000 people signed the above petition today. Thanks for your support.
05:06 PM on 04/14/2011
Safety needs to become the number one priority - not profits. The crisis in Japan is a warning which needs to be heeded.
AllAmericanAmericanBoy
Fate is a cruel snake with bitter herbs and spices
03:49 PM on 04/14/2011
"The economics of atomic power are not attractive at present, nor are they likely to be for a long time in the future. This is expensive power, not cheap power as the public has been led to believe." C. G. Suits, Director of Research, General Electric, 1951
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laymancanuck
Left of centre, because it works for everyone.
03:12 PM on 04/14/2011
Lobbyists, regulators, bureaucrats,politicians all serve corporations, in all industries.They are rewarded for it. Big money has corrupted the system.