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Nuclear Safety Probe Demanded By Senators Following AP Investigation

JEFF DONN   06/23/11 08:13 PM ET   AP

Three U.S. senators, alarmed by findings of an Associated Press investigation about aging problems at the nation's nuclear power plants, asked Thursday for a congressional investigation of safety standards and federal oversight at the facilities.

The request by Democrats Barbara Boxer of California and Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island and independent Bernard Sanders of Vermont builds on increased public concern about nuclear safety in recent months – an outcry unlike anything since the Chernobyl nuclear accident in 1986.

Public interest first spiked after the March accident at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Japan. Concern has been heightened this week as the AP began releasing the results of a yearlong investigation into aging related safety problems at the 104 reactors operating in the United States.

That's led activists, politicians, critics and safety watchdogs to say they hope to turn the public focus more sharply onto the industry in America and broader regulatory problems at the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. One after another, they said they hope the result will be tougher relicensing and safety standards, safer storage of spent fuel and better disaster planning.

Janet Tauro, of Brick, N.J., co-founder of Grandmothers, Mothers, and More for Energy Safety who lives near the Oyster Creek nuclear plant, said the latest developments have led her to conclude "the light is really starting to shine on a very closed regulatory agency."

Senators Boxer, Whitehouse and Sanders asked for the oversight investigation by the Government Accountability Office. Boxer chairs the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.

New Jersey's two Democratic senators, Frank R. Lautenberg and Robert Menendez, made a similar request of the GAO earlier this week.

In recent months, public anxiety over nuclear power has "peaked incredibly," said engineer Paul Blanch, an industry whistleblower who later returned to work on improving safety. He is now fighting relicensing applications at four sites.

"I was fighting the world, and now I'm only fighting half the world," Blanch said.

Visits to the website of Fairewinds Associates, a nuclear safety consultant in Burlington, Vt., have exploded from about 80 a day to 7,000 since the Japanese accident, according to chief engineer, Arnie Gundersen. Site visits rose about another 10 percent when the AP series started on Monday.

The AP's four-part investigative series shows that government and industry have been working in tandem to weaken safety standards to keep aging reactors within the rules. The series also found that there have been leaks of radioactive tritium, often from corroded underground piping, at three-quarters of U.S. commercial nuclear power sites.

In a GAO report released Tuesday by Democratic Reps. Edward J. Markey of Massachusetts and Peter Welch of Vermont, the watchdog agency concluded that nuclear power plant operators haven't figured out how to quickly find the underground leaks, which often go undetected for years.

The AP series, which continues next week with an examination of explosive population growth around the 65 sites that house the reactors, comes three months after a tsunami born from an earthquake caused a nuclear crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex in Japan. The March 11 natural disaster swamped backup generators, disabled cooling systems, caused fuel melts and explosions, and released vast amounts of radiation into the grounds and sea.

The NRC has said it disagrees with AP's conclusions, but welcomes the attention the stories have generated to nuclear plant safety. The agency defended its standards and approach to safety.

The industry's Nuclear Energy Institute criticized AP's overall findings and "selective, misleading reporting" on U.S. nuclear power plant safety.

Public concern about nuclear safety reached a zenith after the Three Mile Island accident in 1979 and Chernobyl.

However, public interest has slipped since initial rounds of safety improvements after those accidents. Originally licensed for 40 years, 66 of U.S. 104 reactors have been relicensed for another two decades. Safety regulators at the NRC have never denied a request. Few requests have met much opposition. And 16 relicensing applications are pending.

Randy Voller, mayor of the small town of Pittsboro, N.C., said people are now more focused both on existing plants and where new ones might be located. His town lies just beyond the 10-mile zone where evacuation plans have been made for an accident at the Shearon Harris nuclear plant.

"The plants weren't made to last forever," he said. "We are more aware of the risks than we were before."

Steven Kerekes, a spokesman for the Nuclear Energy Institute, said heightened public concern is "understandable," given the Japanese accident and heavy news coverage.

But he said the relicensing process, which can take years, is "properly focused," that fire requirements are already strict, and the industry has been moving spent fuel into dry storage since the mid-1980s.

Despite such assurances, safety activists are laying plans to mobilize the public.

The website of Beyond Nuclear, an anti-nuclear group, has been bombarded with tens of thousands of additional visitors in recent months, according to Paul Gunter, the group's director of reactor oversight.

He said nuclear safety has primarily concerned specialists in recent years. "Now it's mothers and housewives who are concerned about fallout from Fukushima and from reactors in their own neighborhood," Gunter said.

Tauro said an independent safety assessment – beyond that of the NRC – should be carried out before any other reactors are relicensed. She said no federal loan guarantees should be offered to new reactors.

Bernard Weinstein, associate director of the Maguire Energy Institute at Southern Methodist University, predicted an eventual tightening of regulations as a result of the public pressure.

Bill Corcoran, president of Nuclear Safety Review Concepts Corp. in Windsor, Conn., and other safety analysts have argued that plants need better designs for fire protection, more spent fuel stored inside dry casks instead of cooling pools, and planning that anticipates more severe fires, earthquakes, tsunamis, tornados and extended power outages – and combinations of them.

Alarmed by the AP findings on tritium, Annette Quijano, a member of the New Jersey state Assembly, said she's drafting a legislative resolution asked for stronger federal oversight of the state's four commercial nuclear reactors.

"Our reactors are obviously not aging well and it would seem that it is only a matter of time until the public is put at serious risk due to a structural failure, a natural disaster or, God forbid, an act of terror," she said.

Relicensing requests are pending at the Hope Creek and Salem plants in New Jersey. Joe Delmar, spokesman for owner PSE&G Nuclear, said the NRC is already "a very strict regulator." He said the agency has extensively reviewed the company's plan to maintain aging systems.

NRC chairman Gregory Jaczko has defended his agency as an effective regulator but also hinted at improvements. The commission expects to issue a report in July on a broad review of safety undertaken in the wake of the Japanese accident.

Speaking Tuesday in Vienna, Jaczko said plants are safe but added: "I believe there is a likelihood that the agency will need to make some changes." He cited several problem areas that fed the disaster in Japan: extended power outages, spent fuel pools and emergency planning.

___

The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate(at)ap.org

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

Three U.S. senators, alarmed by findings of an Associated Press investigation about aging problems at the nation's nuclear power plants, asked Thursday for a congressional investigation of safety stan...
Three U.S. senators, alarmed by findings of an Associated Press investigation about aging problems at the nation's nuclear power plants, asked Thursday for a congressional investigation of safety stan...
Three U.S. senators, alarmed by findings of an Associated Press investigation about aging problems at the nation's nuclear power plants, asked Thursday for a congressional investigation of safety stan...
Three U.S. senators, alarmed by findings of an Associated Press investigation about aging problems at the nation's nuclear power plants, asked Thursday for a congressional investigation of safety stan...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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CaptD 01:34 PM on 06/23/2011
It has been almost 100 days and what has been done?
... More not less Radioactive leakage into the water table.
... More not nuclear pollution spreading toward S. Japan.
... More not less coverups exposed.
... More not less children put in harms way.
... More not less back peddling by TEPCO.
... More not less secrecy on just what is now happening!
... More not less  Read More...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
04:02 AM on 06/30/2011
The AP "investigation" seems to consist of reading information publicly available on the internet at the NRC reading room and spinning a story to scare people, lazy one sided story, the editors should be ashamed of themselves. Nuclear power plants in the USA use probabilistic risk assessment tools to ensure plants are safe, nuclear safety is everyone's job at any nuclear facility. Every task is evaluated to ensure nuclear safety is maintained, no other industry's standards are higher than the nuclear industry, the impeccable safety record uf the nuclear generating community is not an accident it is our culture.
09:07 AM on 06/30/2011
No, wrong, first graders might believe it, Nuclear Educator or is that satire?
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
12:16 PM on 06/25/2011
What more do you need to know? Nuke power break , spread deadly junk all over planet. Nuke power not a good idea.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:11 AM on 06/25/2011
Great News
If the Nuclear Industry has nothing to hide then they should welcome these additional inspections with open arms!e
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
10:41 AM on 06/25/2011
This is a supreme waste of taxpayer money since everything in the AP report has already been identified and corrected. As long as competent people do the investigation it can only help the nuclear industry, it cannot be a witch hunt, improvements are always being made, our aging nuclear power plants are safer today than when they were first built. The money would be better spent inspecting the fossil fuel industry where I have serious doubts about safety.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:15 AM on 06/25/2011
No witch hunt you say,
No team of hand picked insiders I say!

Put at least one "civilian" chosen at random like Jurors are selected, together with someone from NRDC and someone from GreenPeace on the review team; then we would get a real review not yet another Nuclear Industry PA$$.
01:12 PM on 06/25/2011
NRDC and Greenpeace are actively involved with testifying before Congress about their beilefs on nuclear power and the NRC.

One just has to look at the number of white papers listed on their websites to see that.

Also it is a slippery slope to allow any NGO to begin to dictate US policy. You allow Greenpeace to decide nuclear policy at the US government level then a Koch funded NGO will have every legal right to do the same thing.

In other words careful what you ask for because you might get it.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
12:17 PM on 06/25/2011
Ah the true believer.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Craig Meyer
Independent and proud of it!
05:08 PM on 06/24/2011
Well I demand these so called representatives of the people, especially do nothing Boxer get busy and do the job they were elected to do. Boxer is on her 4th term so far she sponsored rebuilding the immigration barracks on Angel Island as her claim to fame. Best of all she has made the top 10 most corrupt politicians list and even better she supports illegals taking over California!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alvdh1
09:50 PM on 06/24/2011
Did get this off of the drudge report or did you just make it up?

Here is here legislative and voting record which is vastly different than the lies you wrote. A few key strokes would have enabled you to find the same information, but lying is obviously easier for you. Pathetic!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Barbara_Boxer's_Legislative_Record
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
11:02 AM on 06/25/2011
Faved
Thanks for the reality check...
Liars are not welcome on HP
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
12:18 PM on 06/25/2011
Did Beck do a rant on Boxer? You actually believed it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Craig Meyer
Independent and proud of it!
09:48 PM on 06/26/2011
I don't believe one iota of anything Beck says. I go by voting record and performance as well as credible third party non political folks like Judicial Watch. They post the most corrupt politicians in Washington. Babs made the list. http://www.judicialwatch.org/news/2010/dec/judicial-watch-announces-list-washingtons-ten-most-wanted-corrupt-politicians-2010. Sad. Barbara has a good voting record, some of which I agree with except when it comes to her support of illegals. She just has not sponsored any meaningful bills during her terms, that's what I don't like. This whole nuclear safety is a smoke screen waste of money. Granted there needs to be some oversite but most certainly not the senate or congress for that matter.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan Crabtree
02:28 PM on 06/24/2011
Hummm all democrats and yes including the one so called independent simply a democrat in independents hat..stop this evil nuclear power from killing millions..just as it did in ahhh. ahhh.. well you remember all who died from that killer gamma radiation years ago at ahhhh..uhh.. And then we must shut down all coal generated power plants also they have murdered over 1 million or so with there deadly mercury poisining in the air..and ahh..mine collasps..Mr sunshine shall generate all our power needs from this day forward..
03:43 PM on 06/24/2011
You want to live in your garbage and filth in your own little space in the world, you go right ahead. Maybe the rest of us want a cleaner place to live which you, oddly enough, seem to have a problem with.
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aligatorhardt
I DO NOT pity the fool
05:50 PM on 06/25/2011
Marked as favorite
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alvdh1
04:24 PM on 06/24/2011
Shut the nukes and coal fired power plants down now. Take that crabbytree.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
I DO NOT pity the fool
05:51 PM on 06/25/2011
Marked as favorite
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Spike5
Let's go forward, not back to an imaginary past
12:18 PM on 06/24/2011
Are any of the Senators asking for an investigation conservative Republicans? I thought all conservatives were opposed to government regulations and limitations on capitalist corporations.

Surely the conservatives don't think the government has a role in making sure the public is protected against disasters at nuclear facilities. That should be left to free enterprise. After all, companies that don't ensure safety will lose money when they have explosions while those that do a good job will prosper. Right? The people whose lives and property are lost - well, buyer beware. They shouldn't have been living within 500 miles of a nuclear plant. It was their choice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roy Rudy
new Coelacanthforms exist
11:11 AM on 06/24/2011
One of the most concerning developments of a hazard or a potential hazard is the unexpected occurrence serving disaster by an unexpected development passing by that trips and involves a nuclear facility that is innocently about to develop foreseen possibilities. Known hazards have a way of becoming a disaster sooner than eventually and pose a ticking threat. Plans should begin to determine what course(s) of prescribed advisement's should be determined and schedule determined advisement's that remove the facilities from the list of known hazards. Safety also includes the stockpiles of contaminated nuclear waist and how to process the waist to the finite levels of recycled waist with safeguards that the hazardous waist is no-longer hazardous. This does not mean that a salt mine is acceptable for nuclear waist. Scientists developed the components and scientists may condense and recycle the hazardous waist. The answers are defined as out think the problem rather than being controlled by the problem.
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RahSolar
Clean, Renewable energy. One roof at a time.
11:04 PM on 06/24/2011
Kind of like the 2 in Nebraska?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roy Rudy
new Coelacanthforms exist
04:37 AM on 06/25/2011
Yes, and the Department of Energy's concerns of many along fault lines that may suffer similar disasters as did Fukushima Japan's disaster. Ageing Nuclear power plants in upper New England do not meet present day standards with concerns that they are becoming hazards. Nebraska is close enough, while there are several hundred "Nuclear facilities" in the US that do not meet safety standards.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Mann
Nuclear Educator
10:48 AM on 06/25/2011
What about the "two in Nebraska" can you elaborate? Has anyone been injured from those two?
10:51 AM on 06/24/2011
In the days of slide rule architecture, it was common practice to "over engineer" major structures, that is to add an extra margin for unanticipated stress and burden. A classic example is the Brooklin Bridge which was tauted by its designer as being designed to last a 100 years back in the days of horse and buggy traffic. The bridge is well over a century old, carries tons more traffic than ever dreamed on its deck as well as trains on its lower level. Safety standards for nuclear reactors built decades ago incorporated very high safety margins reflective of the many unknowns associated with the then infant technology. Operating experience over the years has shown that some of the concerns behind those standards were overblown, resulting in decisions to waive or slacken them. The danger is that a culture of complacency may have developed which promotes pushing the envelope ever further in an attempt to squeeze out every kilowatt from the enormous investment. I am sure there have been many close calls in this industry and they have led to improved management, but each bullet dodged also tends to inflate the belief that disaster can be avoided. The risks of miscalculation are too high in this case to allow that sort of thinking to take root. However, the fact there is little excess capacity in our power grid to compensate for summarily pulling these plants off line also contributes to the problem.
11:11 AM on 06/25/2011
I agree with the intent of your post and as a pro-nuclear person, I definitely agree that we can never become too complacent or over confident in nuclear technology.

That is the purpose and the success of the NRC, unlike the federal organizations that monitor off-shore drilling.

As one who has had to undergo a several normal, legally required audits run by professional and competent NRC audit teams, I can say they did not go easy on the team I was a member of nor should they. They did their jobs professionally by making sure our designs and operations met every required safety standard. Those teams always had the goal of ensuring public safety above all else in my viewpoint.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roy Rudy
new Coelacanthforms exist
10:49 AM on 06/24/2011
Safety concerns of nuclear energy should be a world wide awareness and an interest of all nuclear components for any use. Localized back-up systems that are independently available for nuclear safeguards should be exemplified by what occurred at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex in Japan and the associated failures. Older facilities that lack such needed support systems and are out-dated are hazards of unknown maximum effectual concerns that should not be given a stopwatch for perilous disasters. The Wind Of The World: - weatheronline.com and a recent study of ancient perils of the Mideast. In Proverbs 27:24 is mention of the sirocco wind. Sirocco: siroco (Scirocco) from the African Sahara and into the Mideast that brings rains to Europe and England. A major importance is the Iranian threat on Israel. Iran has deployed Scud and Ballistic missiles equipped with explosive warheads, of which some are chemical WMDs and suspected biological WMDs with a rage of 450 Kilometers. These missiles along with Iran's intention to develop nuclear warheads has a fallout path that threatens Europe and depending on the season also would include Eastern Russia. The concerns are that the US must not abandon the crises presently taking place in the Mideast region and do what is necessary to force Iran to dismantle the war machine presently deployed in Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan. Libya is on its way to democracy and needs the ongoing effort to force Gadhafi out. Now back to Nuclear power facilities in the US.
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NoMoreNukes2012
Fukushima Opened My Eyes
10:39 AM on 06/24/2011
June 24th
Anne Landman/CommonDreams: What Happened to Media Coverage of Fukushima
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/06/24-0#comment-1859718
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rick Fallin
Splitting through the clutter
11:08 AM on 06/24/2011
love the new avatar..
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NoMoreNukes2012
Fukushima Opened My Eyes
11:12 AM on 06/24/2011
I like it better. Good to see ya RF. New thread no mod either. Coming in fast and furious now...to confuse us Japan Irregulars.

UN Nuclear Safety Meeting Ends With Ambitious Plans, But Enforcement Still Voluntary
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harrison Meeske
10:18 AM on 06/24/2011
senators? let us have a count by party of those in favor and against. Long time coming but it will turn out a whitewash or result in zero
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NoMoreNukes2012
Fukushima Opened My Eyes
10:27 AM on 06/24/2011
Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards (ACRS) Meeting of the ACRS Subcommittee on Fukushima; Notice of Meeting Thursday, June 23, 2011—1 p.m. until 5 p.m.
Lucas Whitefield attended and we expect a report probably today on it.
http://news.lucaswhitefieldhixson.com/
I'm VERY curious what was discussed....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Howell
James Madison...a pretty bright fellow.
10:06 AM on 06/24/2011
Safety inspections of nuclear plants are fine, but I demand a safety inspection of the United States Senate (house and presidency too.) What they're doing is far more dangerous than any nuclear plant.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rick Fallin
Splitting through the clutter
11:07 AM on 06/24/2011
nicely said.. poignant in political commentary.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Spike5
Let's go forward, not back to an imaginary past
12:24 PM on 06/24/2011
You mean everything they are doing is harmful to the public? Really?
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NoMoreNukes2012
Fukushima Opened My Eyes
10:04 AM on 06/24/2011
Japan’s toxic trials
“Their Faustian explanation: to avoid releasing water of even higher levels of radiation into the ocean, we must first dump water with lower radioactivity.”
“The sad truth that has emerged in my research of the role of cesium-137 in Chernobyl, however, is the fact that daily industrial toxins play a far greater role than radiation in the contamination of nonhuman and human bodies and environments.”
http://www.chinadialogue.net/article/show/single/en/4370
Long read but worth it.
12:23 PM on 06/25/2011
". Chisso Corporation – a chemical company whose dumping of methylmercury in waters off the island of Kyushu from the 1930s to late 1960s caused Minamata disease, as the painful neurological ailment later came to be known – agreed to make a lump-sum payment of 2.1 million yen (US$26,000) to some 90% of the plaintiffs,...."

Good article; I can't believe Chisso Corp. got off so cheaply.
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NoMoreNukes2012
Fukushima Opened My Eyes
09:48 AM on 06/24/2011
Doctors: 3,000+ microsieverts of internal radiation for residents in town 40 km from Fukushima plant
http://enenews.com/3000-microsieverts-internal-radiation-foraverage-resident-town-40-km-fukushima-plant