Summer 1998

Director's Page

Flashes in the Night

Cicadas are Buzzing

Catesby's Natural History of America

Oconee Nuclear Station

The Threat of Climate Change

Solar Energy Emerging

Legislative "Riders of the Night"

Watershed Update

 

 


 

Listening to the car radio while driving home from the office, I heard that on July 7th the Duke Energy Corporation had applied to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for a forty-year extension of their license to operate the Oconee Nuclear Station. The reactors are located in Oconee County, South Carolina—just 20 miles from the Chattooga River. The local newsman on the radio continued to read from the press release: “Duke’s application for the extension is only the second such request from the nuclear industry in the United States”. The report brought back memories of all the excitement and bustle over the concerns for public safety when the fledgling nuclear industry entered the public utility markets in the 1950’s. I couldn’t help but wonder about the implications of the NRC giving the nod for Duke to continue their operations at Oconee, given that it is old and and some would say—obsolete.

Duke Energy Corporation (Duke) began operating nuclear power plants in South Carolina in the 1970’s, and met very little resistance from the state. But activism against the nuclear industry here and across the nation was growing. Incidents at Three Mile Island and later at Chernobyl prompted public scrutiny of the industry. Specific concerns included the potential effects of exposure to radiation from nuclear plants, both from normal operations and in case of an accident, emergency planning, disposal of spent fuel, aging of the containment vessel, and the public’s “right to know”.

Duke Energy’s recent re-licensing application resurrected my concerns about Duke’s ability to operate safely at Oconee, and prompted me to conduct some research into the matter. To a large degree, I was curious about the potential precedent that is about to be decided in our own “front yard”. The following is a brief account of what I found.

Duke Energy Corporation is based in Charlotte, North Carolina, and is one of the largest nuclear power producers in the Southeast. In the early years, the nuclear industry targeted the Piedmont of the Carolinas and the Midwest as good locations to build nuclear power plants. The Carolinas offered abundant, cheap, non-union labor and a favorable political climate. In South Carolina, people were already familiar with the “nuke” industry. The Savannah River Site at Barnwell was established by the federal government in 1950 to produce special radioactive isotopes for “national security” (plutonium-239 and tritium). South Carolina politicians including Solomon Blatt, the “grand old” Speaker of the SC State House, wielded great influence in paving the way for the nuclear industry in the state. Blatt and other powerful political figures were able to sell the nuclear industry, invoking the argument of jobs and tax revenue.

In 1974, Duke Energy Corporation finished construction of the Oconee Nuclear Station on the Keowee River in Oconee County, at the foot of the remote Blue Ridge Escarpment. The construction project included two man-made lakes. The largest is Lake Keowee, covering 18,500 acres and which was built at the station site. Lake Jocassee was built at a higher elevation to serve as a pump storage lake for hydroelectric power generation and covers 7,656 acres, impounding the waters of the Whitewater, Thompson, Horsepasture and Toxaway Rivers. Lake Keowee’s function was for conventional hydroelectric power production, and to supply water for the cooling system of the three nuclear power reactors that lie near the Lake Keowee dam site.

Local officials welcomed Duke with open arms, in anticipation of an economic boom and millions of dollars in tax revenue. Inspired by the arrival of Duke, Oconee County created a logo to display their civic pride. The image was of a Native American Indian, with a background of the whirling atom symbol and captioned “Oconee—Arrowheads to Atoms”. In fact, Duke initially invested approximately 600 million dollars to build the Oconee Nuclear Station, which in turn by 1992 had boosted the tax base of the Oconee County school system to approximately $225 million, one of the best-funded in the state. From the perspective of cash flow, Duke had delivered on their promise of economic prosperity. Duke also gained a reputation for running a shrewd and efficient operation.

Then, in 1979 the tragedy at Three Mile Island made national news. The unthinkable occurred: the reactor’s cooling system failed, which caused a partial exposure of the core. This accident narrowly avoided a “meltdown” of the system. The reactor type at Three Mile Island is a nuclear steam supply system manufactured by Babcock & Wilcox, which is the same type of reactor as those at Oconee. Consequently, after the accident at Three Mile Island one of the first to arrive on the scene were top executives of Duke Energy Corporation. It is believed that Duke had a lot to do with negotiating a retrofitted design for the pressurized water reactor at Three Mile Island, which smoothed over further questions concerning this type of nuclear reactor.

Nevertheless, questions do remain about the potential for “breaching” in pressurized water reactors. A breach in a pressure vessel is the worst case scenario because the pressure vessel is the last line of defense to prevent the core, which houses the nuclear fuel, from “spewing its guts”—and setting off a meltdown. A meltdown would produce a cloud of potentially lethal radioactive gas that is released into the atmosphere. According to NRC officials, one of the most likely causes of breaching is “embrittlement” of the pressure vessel as a result of continued bombardment of the vessel walls by neutrons radiated from the reactor core. Embrittlement is more likely to be a factor in breaching at low temperatures. Under normal conditions, these 8-inch thick metal vessel walls can stand temperatures as low as 0- 40 degrees Fahrenheit, but with age and routine neutron bombardment the vessels become more vulnerable, especially when subjected to “sudden” cooling.

Nuclear reactor core temperatures under pressure reach as high as 560 degrees Fahrenheit. When the hot vessel walls are cooled from within, the inner face of the wall tries to contract. However, the outer wall cools more slowly and prevents this contraction. One expert described the process: “If the core remains highly pressurized, the vessel experiences tensile stresses superimposed on thermal stresses that result from the thermal gradient across the vessel wall.” Cracks in the wall may then form. If a pressure vessel is accidentally over-cooled in an event the NRC calls “pressurized thermal shock”, the result is disaster.

According to the records in the Oconee County Public Library, on June 22 of this year NRC held a “pre-decisional enforcement conference” with Duke Energy Corporation in Atlanta. The meeting’s purpose was to discuss certain regulatory concerns associated with the Oconee Nuclear Station’s borated water storage tanks and reactor building emergency sumps at all three of the station’s units. These concerns are directly related to the cooling systems at Oconee and according to the NRC, “...could have led to problems in certain accident situations.”

The NRC is the primary watchdog agency for the nation’s 140 nuclear reactors. In a statement this spring by the NRC to the Senate Appropriations Committee, NRC Chairman Shirley Jackson expressed concerns for recent proposed budget cuts for the agency in which she said, “Every member of the Commission believes that a full reduction of the magnitude proposed would limit the NRC’s ability to adequately protect public health and safety.” Therefore, the pending budget cuts for the NRC could become an important factor in ensuring the safety of the aging Oconee Nuclear Station, especially in light of the very recent safety hearings.

In case of an accident at Oconee, there is bad news and good news concerning other significant safety and environmental issues. First, regarding removal of spent fuel: so far all spent fuel has been kept on site due to the controversy over potential repositories, such as the Yucca Mountain site in Utah where questions of ground water contamination have delayed the opening of this facility. At some point, questions concerning the adequacy of Duke’s spent fuel containment facility will most certainly become a factor in this re-licensing decision.

The good news is the Oconee County Emergency Preparedness Office has a detailed plan for handling an accident at the nuclear site. This strategy features a four-tiered plan that is geared to the degree of the accident and potential dosages of radiation to surrounding areas due to the quantity of the radioactive release as well as atmospheric conditions at the time. This plan also encompasses a protocol for a chain of command, and includes well thought out evacuation routes. Yet, these plans also raise other, not so often thought of concerns such as the potential for a breach of the reactor due to an earthquake (the Brevard Fault runs within 10 miles of Oconee Nuclear Station), tornado, terrorist or missile attack, and operator (human) error.

Nonetheless, Duke Energy Corporation and advocates of the nuclear industry staunchly defend the position that catastrophes such as Three Mile Island or Chernobyl are remote. I tend to agree. I would, however, wonder about the odds that Oconee might be a likely candidate “if” a major accident did happen. To date, Duke is pushing forward with their request to extend the life of its Oconee Nuclear Station. NRC seems content to wait and see how much risk a community is willing to accept in return for jobs and taxes. It remains unclear how much input the public will have in the ultimate decision whether or not to re-license this nuclear power plant.

In the Soviet Union where people once had little opportunity to speak out, nuclear power plants were built with extremely lax safeguards. Of the 135,000 people who were evacuated from a 18.6 mile radius around Chernobyl at 8:00 a.m. on that April morning, 36 hours after the reactor “blew”, the majority had an estimated exposure “within the established limits” according to the official report. The response to the disaster was reported to be “exemplary”.

The question of re-licensing the Oconee Nuclear Station is very complex. There are some things we know. For example, we know that the odds of something happening at Oconee that might result in a catastrophe are much less than the odds were at Chernobyl. However, there are many questions still unanswered by the NRC and Duke Energy concerning the long term safety of the facility at Oconee. These questions are much too broad and important to address in one short article. There is one question, though, which is easy to answer. This question is about public education and the right to participate in the decision to re-license or not. In the coming months, the Chattooga River Watershed Coalition will be watching the process of Duke’s request to re-license the Oconee Nuclear Station. Stay tuned.

Ancient History Beneath the Lakes

Beneath the lakes of Keowee and Jocassee lay some of the most ancient and significant Native American and early European archaeological sites in the Southeast. The sites include Fort Prince George, an early British military outpost, and the Cherokee village site at Keowee, which during the eighteenth century served as the capital of the Lowerhill Cherokee.

Construction of these two lakes required harvesting the wild timberlands in the lake basins, including some of the last stands of native old growth forest in the southern Blue Ridge Mountains. These lakes also inundated some of the best bottomland in upstate South Carolina. When Crescent Land and Timber Company, a subsidiary of Duke Energy, finished the clearing operation in the fall of 1969, they had harvested 17.5 million board feet of pine sawtimber, 15 million board feet of hardwood sawtimber and 51,800 cords of pulpwood. Duke boasted about the timber harvest in a brochure, and said that this was enough sawtimber to build 2,350 six-room houses and that the pulpwood would load 2,250 railroad cars. Some of the Yellow poplar trees that were harvested in the ancient forest of Jocassee were reported to be 200 feet tall, seven feet in diameter and over 200 years old.

 

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