“Unplanned”
shut-down and an NRC special inspection
By
Will Collette
Only
20 miles to the west of Charlestown, well within the danger zone in the event
of a major accident, sits the Millstone nuclear power plant owned by
Virginia-based Dominion Energy.
On
January 31, Unit
2 had to be manually shut down after an electrical short in the power supply
for the heaters for its water pressurization system. The emergency diesel
back-up was out of service at the time.
Unit 2 is the older of the two
operating reactors at Millstone. It was built in 1975 and has been the source
of many of the safety issues I have reported to you.
More
troubling is the decision by the Region 1 office of the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission to conduct a special inspection at Millstone to
examine the operations of Millstone’s back-up pumping system for Unit 3, the
newer of the two reactors.
In
the NRC’s news
release, the NRC’s regional administrator Bill Dean said “We have witnessed problems involving this
safety-related component stretching back to last May. The fact that these
issues occurred on multiple occasions despite repeated efforts to repair this
component has prompted us to take a closer look at the situation.”
The
NRC issued a notice of violation to Millstone last November because of problems
with this pumping system.
From Millstone's Safety Planning Guide: note the evacuation routes all point north or west based on the assumption that winds will blow from west to east (that is, in Charlestown's direction) |
The
release says the inspection will focus on “Dominion’s
responses to the issues, including the adequacy and completeness of testing on
the pump and root-cause evaluations of the problems. For example, the
third-quarter integrated inspection report for the plant includes a finding for
an inadequate operability determination by the company related to the
performance of the speed-controller for the pump.”
The
NRC’s follow-up report using the findings of this special inspection should be
issued within 45 days.