Nuclear spent fuel fire could force millions of people to relocate
Princeton University, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and
International Affairs
This image captures the spread of radioactivity from a hypothetical fire in a high-density spent-fuel pool at the Peach Bottom Nuclear Power Plant in Pennsylvania. Based on the guidance from the US Environmental Protection Agency and the experience from the Chernobyl and Fukushima accidents, populations in the red and orange areas would have to be relocated for many years, and many in the yellow area would relocate voluntarily. In this scenario, which is based on real weather patterns that occurred in July 2015, four major cities would be contaminated (New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington, D.C.), resulting in the displacement of millions of people.
Credit: Photo courtesy of Michael Schoeppner, Princeton University, Program on Science and Global Security
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EDITOR'S NOTE: This issue is of particular concern to Charlestown because we are only 20 miles downwind of the Millstone nuclear power plant near New London, CT. There are hundreds of tons of high-level nuclear waste stored on site at Millstone, prone to the accidents described in this article.
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) relied on faulty
analysis to justify its refusal to adopt a critical measure for protecting
Americans from the occurrence of a catastrophic nuclear-waste fire at any one
of dozens of reactor sites around the country, according to an article in the
May 26 issue of Science magazine.
Fallout from such a fire
could be considerably larger than the radioactive emissions from the 2011
Fukushima accident in Japan.
Published by researchers from Princeton University and the Union
of Concerned Scientists, the article argues that NRC inaction leaves the public
at high risk from fires in spent-nuclear-fuel cooling pools at reactor sites.
The pools -- water-filled basins that store and cool used radioactive fuel rods
-- are so densely packed with nuclear waste that a fire could release enough
radioactive material to contaminate an area twice the size of New Jersey.
On
average, radioactivity from such an accident could force approximately 8
million people to relocate and result in $2 trillion in damages.
These catastrophic consequences, which could be triggered by a
large earthquake or a terrorist attack, could be largely avoided by regulatory
measures that the NRC refuses to implement.
Using a biased regulatory analysis,
the agency excluded the possibility of an act of terrorism as well as the
potential for damage from a fire beyond 50 miles of a plant.
Failing to account
for these and other factors led the NRC to significantly underestimate the
destruction such a disaster could cause.
"The NRC has been pressured by the nuclear industry, directly
and through Congress, to low-ball the potential consequences of a fire because
of concerns that increased costs could result in shutting down more nuclear
power plants," said paper co-author Frank von Hippel, a senior research
physicist at Princeton's Program on Science and Global Security (SGS), based at
the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.
"Unfortunately, if there is no public outcry about this dangerous
situation, the NRC will continue to bend to the industry's wishes."
Von Hippel's co-authors are Michael Schoeppner, a former
postdoctoral researcher at Princeton's SGS, and Edwin Lyman, a senior scientist
at the Union of Concerned Scientists.
Spent-fuel pools were brought into the spotlight following the
March 2011 nuclear disaster in Fukushima, Japan. A 9.0-magnitude earthquake
caused a tsunami that struck the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant,
disabling the electrical systems necessary for cooling the reactor cores.
This
led to core meltdowns at three of the six reactors at the facility, hydrogen
explosions, and a release of radioactive material.
"The Fukushima accident could have been a hundred times
worse had there been a loss of the water covering the spent fuel in pools
associated with each reactor," von Hippel said. "That almost happened
at Fukushima in Unit 4."
In the aftermath of the Fukushima disaster, the NRC considered
proposals for new safety requirements at U.S. plants.
One was a measure
prohibiting plant owners from densely packing spent-fuel pools, requiring them
to expedite transfer of all spent fuel that has cooled in pools for at least
five years to dry storage casks, which are inherently safer.
Densely packed
pools are highly vulnerable to catching fire and releasing huge amounts of
radioactive material into the atmosphere.
The NRC analysis found that a fire in a spent-fuel pool at an
average nuclear reactor site would cause $125 billion in damages, while
expedited transfer of spent fuel to dry casks could reduce radioactive releases
from pool fires by 99 percent.
However, the agency decided the possibility of
such a fire is so unlikely that it could not justify requiring plant owners to
pay the estimated cost of $50 million per pool.
The NRC cost-benefit analysis assumed there would be no
consequences from radioactive contamination beyond 50 miles from a fire.
It
also assumed that all contaminated areas could be effectively cleaned up within
a year.
Both of these assumptions are inconsistent with experience after the
Chernobyl and Fukushima accidents.
In two previous articles, von Hippel and Schoeppner released
figures that correct for these and other errors and omissions.
They found that
millions of residents in surrounding communities would have to relocate for
years, resulting in total damages of $2 trillion -- nearly 20 times the NRC's
result.
Considering the nuclear industry is only legally liable for $13.6
billion, thanks to the Price Anderson Act of 1957, U.S. taxpayers would have to
cover the remaining costs.
The authors point out that if the NRC does not take action to
reduce this danger, Congress has the authority to fix the problem.
Moreover,
the authors suggest that states that provide subsidies to uneconomical nuclear
reactors within their borders could also play a constructive role by making
those subsidies available only for plants that agreed to carry out expedited
transfer of spent fuel.
"In far too many instances, the NRC has used flawed
analysis to justify inaction, leaving millions of Americans at risk of a
radiological release that could contaminate their homes and destroy their
livelihoods," said Lyman. "It is time for the NRC to employ sound
science and common-sense policy judgments in its decision-making process."