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North Anna Nuclear Plant: East Coast Earthquake Shake Exceeded Design, Officials Say

North Anna Nuclear Plant

By MATTHEW DALY   09/ 8/11 06:47 PM ET   AP

ROCKVILLE, Md. -- A 5.8-magnitude earthquake in the eastern U.S. caused the ground to shake much more than a Virginia nuclear plant was designed to withstand, federal officials said Thursday.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission said preliminary data from the U.S. Geological Survey shows the Aug. 23 earthquake caused peak ground movement about twice the level for which the North Anna nuclear plant northwest of Richmond was designed. The plant is located about 11 miles from the quake's epicenter in Mineral, Va., and has been shut since the earthquake.

NRC officials and the plant's operator, Dominion Resources, said it did not appear to sustain serious damage.

Dominion officials told the NRC that ground movement under the plant exceeded its "design basis" – the first time that has occurred at an operating U.S. nuclear plant. But Dominion said its seismic data from the site showed shaking at much lower levels than those reported by the USGS.

Inspections conducted after the earthquake show there is a safety margin that exceeds the design basis, Dominion said. With few exceptions, safety components evaluated at the plant could withstand shaking even greater than that recorded by the Virginia earthquake, said Eric Hendrixson, Dominion's director of nuclear engineering.

NRC spokesman Scott Burnell said nuclear plants include a safety margin in their design.

"That margin was certainly enough for North Anna this time," he said.

Edwin Lyman, a senior scientist for the Union of Concerned Scientists, said regulators and the nuclear industry should not count on being so fortunate in a future earthquake.

"We think the earthquake should be a wake-up call to the NRC and the industry that they need to reassess the level of risk at every nuclear plant from earthquakes and other natural phenomena and make sure the plants will adequately protect the public," he said.

"The size of the North Anna earthquake was a surprise, and nuclear regulations should not be based on surprises," Lyman said.

The NRC has said it plans to order all U.S. plants later this year to update their earthquake risk analyses, a complex exercise that could take two years for some plants to complete.

The NRC review, launched well before the East Coast quake and the Japan nuclear disaster in March, marks the first complete update to seismic risk in years for the nation's 104 existing reactors, despite research showing greater hazards.

The two North Anna reactors are among 27 in the eastern and central U.S. that may need upgrades, according to a preliminary NRC review. The plants are more likely to get hit with an earthquake larger than they were designed to handle, the NRC says.

The NRC, using preliminary data from the USGS, said the earthquake caused peak ground movement of about 0.26 g, which is a unit of gravity that measures the impact of shaking on buildings. The North Anna plant was designed to withstand ground movement ranging from 0.12 g to 0.18 g. Tests conducted by Dominion indicate the plant could withstand movement of 0.3 g or higher.

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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
11:46 AM on 09/10/2011
NO NUKES! Clean Green Energy is the future and the Future is Now ☮

Why Nuclear Power Will Never Be Safe
http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/04/25/why-nuclear-power-will-never-be-safe/

Chernobyl 25 Years Later
http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/03/04/chernobyl-25-years-later/

Fukushima to scrap nuclear plants; Prefecture vows to shift from atomic to renewable energy
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110716a4.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SLS11
Its all there, if we just open our eyes...
11:33 AM on 09/10/2011
There appears to be some glitch with HP again. I am not getting notifications of replies from other HP users. Is anyone else experiencing this problem?

Well, those of you waiting for a reply from me, please be patient. :)
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
HLL
Women, their rights & nothing less ~ SusanBAnthony
11:40 AM on 09/10/2011
Me neither. There's a glitch in the matrix!! ;-) ☮
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
04:25 PM on 09/11/2011
Oh yeah, replies sidebar gone, drop down menu non- functional, torturous navigation.
Beta=doesn't work.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
termgirl
terminate nuclear power
09:45 AM on 09/10/2011
NRC rejects quick re-start at Virginia nuclear plant

Dominion officials said it now appears the reactors shut when the earthquake caused a problem inside the cores at both units rather than from the loss of outside power to the plant as initially reported.
"It looks like the (fuel) rods were going into the core prior to the transformer opening," possibly from a relay problem, a Dominion executive said.
Dominion is still working to understand the "root cause" of the plant shutdown as multiple automatic trip signals from various indicators were received within seconds of the quake.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/09/09/utilities-operations-dominion-northanna-idUSN1E78724S20110909
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
01:34 AM on 09/10/2011
Nuclear is an industry that can't begin to pay for its liability. An industry that in no manner, size, shape of form can handle its own waste stream. An industry - that when there is a serious problem - throws its host country in to recession, renders the adjacent countryside uninhabitable, and blows the roofs off its containment structures. Regulate it for sure. But the only sensible approach is to begin the process of shutting it down.
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PoloniumMan
"It worked." J. Robert Oppenheimer
09:08 AM on 09/10/2011
The waste from nuclear power production is handled well by the industry in specific shape and form. The industry can't move forward because of limitations on reprocessing and delays with Yucca Mt. I think you've confused nuclear with burning coal, which dumps a majority of its waste into our shared atmosphere.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
termgirl
terminate nuclear power
10:24 AM on 09/10/2011
Agreed.
â– Hazardous radioactive wastes are generated at every stage of the nuclear fuel cycle.
â– No country has established a repository for high level nuclear waste from nuclear power.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bergen2
11:15 PM on 09/09/2011
Don't know how anyone can trust in the rhetoric or competence of Dominion Resources. Their ability to deliver reliable power is on par with or inferior to that of 3rd world countries. Seems like every time a bird passes wind the power goes out. There is no excuse to have most of the power lines above ground in 21st century America. It's a blight on the landscape and a maintenance nightmare. Entrusting them to run nuclear power plants is a disaster waiting to happen.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
09:31 AM on 09/09/2011
Safe Nuclear is like Clean Coal ... limited to the slogans.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
09:51 AM on 09/09/2011
Except that the latter kills tens of thousands every year, and the former....well...doesn't.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
12:56 PM on 09/09/2011
We know how Coal kills
We also know what happens in Nuke problems, 3 mile island, Chernobyl, Fukushima
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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03:32 PM on 09/09/2011
I haven't read anyone denying the health issues with coal. But your continual denial of the risks inherent in nuclear power don't make sense.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
01:29 AM on 09/10/2011
Spot on.
frank1946
Tell the Truth
08:57 AM on 09/09/2011
I am Proud of this Story, a complement to designers..................would it survive a Tsunami such
as Japan experienced ?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
William J Unverferth Sr
Snark attack.
09:09 AM on 09/09/2011
Doubtful but it's like 100 miles inland with a lot of hills between it and the ocean so If a tsunami of Fukashima proportions hits it I think we have a few other things to worry about first.
08:17 AM on 09/09/2011
It only takes ONE nuclear accident to k i l l and sicken thousands of people and make an entire region uninhabitable for decades.  Clean renewable energy has none of these risks.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
William J Unverferth Sr
Snark attack.
09:10 AM on 09/09/2011
You're so right it just takes billions of taxpayer dollars and goes bankrupt.
09:43 AM on 09/09/2011
And yet renewable energy is the fastest growing segment of the energy market worldwide, with 87 countries now using it, with the Danes aiming for 50% wind power by (IIRC) 2030, and with the Germans having just clocked the first ever quarter with renewables providing 20% of actual generation.

Then there's China, whose burgeoning use of coal-fired electrical generation was being cited five years ago as the reason that transitioning to renewables in the developed world was a waste of time CO2-wise. Since then, China has become the leading user of wind-power, with something like 50 gigawatts of nameplate capacity installed. They've also becoming a leading exporter of wind and solar technology, even as the US fumbles away our advantages. At least the Europeans are keeping up.

If only all these folks were as smart as Mr. Unverferth! Then we could be happily prosperous--until climate change makes it too hot to efficiently grow corn, rice and soybeans, at least.
10:07 AM on 09/09/2011
That's your response to the world going solar and one US company going bankrupt?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:07 AM on 09/09/2011
So they are NOT
'safe beyond all possible events',
as was stated recently.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
09:44 AM on 09/09/2011
Nothing is safe against all possible events. Single quotation marks not withstanding, I rather doubt anyone actually stated that.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:29 PM on 09/09/2011
It was actually said about the West Coast plants
in the wake of Fukushima.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eddy joe
welcome to the machine
04:54 AM on 09/09/2011
Someone was overly optimistic with their plans, eh?
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
09:46 AM on 09/09/2011
More like overly robust. Good on 'em.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Yota Daga
10:53 PM on 09/08/2011
Another Fukushima is just waiting to happen, Wonder how much it will cost to clean up a Fukushima size disaster $200 billion minimum!, Penny wise Pound foolish if you ask me!
12:16 PM on 09/09/2011
Yup should replace all those old nukes with the new models.
08:41 PM on 09/08/2011
Technology and people do FAIL. Nuclear energy is too costly and too dangerous.

It is time to transition to safe, clean alternative energy. Wind, solar, wave energy, geothermal and second generation biofuels made from algae, cellulose and waste are the future. The world produces a lot of trash every day. Let's turn that trash into both fuel and energy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eddy joe
welcome to the machine
04:57 AM on 09/09/2011
A huge compost would produce heat, and methane.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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undsoweiter
but I know where to look it up
08:46 AM on 09/09/2011
...and flies.
07:40 PM on 09/08/2011
So the owner indicates that their equipment showed less ground shake than the USGS estimated. I suppose like the BP estimates of level of oil going into ocean. Sure,
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
02:00 AM on 09/09/2011
The earthquake must have broken the accelerometer that they don't have.

And yet remarkably they've just got a study which shows the plant which is certified to 0.18g is good all the way to 0.3g after experiencing 0.26g. Isn't it lucky that the earthquake was a 5.8 rather than a 6.2?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joffan
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so.
10:57 AM on 09/09/2011
I've seen this claim a few times, of no seismographs...

I think it originates here http://www.dmme.virginia.gov/DMR3/earthquakes.shtml
, where the independent monitoring by Virginia Tech was cut back in the 1990s removing most (not all) seismographs from that area.
"Some of these instruments were stationed around the North Anna Nuclear Power plant, but in the 1990’s, due to budget cuts, most of the North Anna sensors were taken off line."
(This morphs into "all" here http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2011/08/23/virginia-nuclear-plant-had-quake-sensors-removed-due-to-budget-cuts/ for example)

It doesn't say anything about what monitoring equipment the power plant itself operates.
07:25 PM on 09/08/2011
Does anyone know how to accurately detect the radio-active particles blown from the rod-cooling-pools in Fukushima to the US?
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PoloniumMan
"It worked." J. Robert Oppenheimer
09:51 PM on 09/08/2011
Yes I do.
11:58 PM on 09/08/2011
Me too.
07:01 PM on 09/09/2011
How would you do it?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
02:00 AM on 09/09/2011
Careful dissection of air filters.
07:20 PM on 09/08/2011
The fact that we have a greater frequency and magnitude of earth quakes in places where they are normally infrequent is, the elephant in the room.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
02:01 AM on 09/09/2011
No we don't. Don't bet on religious fundamentalists, mayan or otherwise.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eddy joe
welcome to the machine
04:59 AM on 09/09/2011
I said that a few months ago, and a few weeks ago, and everyone called me a neanderthal.