PDA

View Full Version : Reactor shuts down, releases steam at Illinois nuclear plant after losing outside pow



MNeagle
30th January 2012, 05:06 PM
Reactor shuts down, releases steam at Illinois nuclear plant after losing outside power


BYRON, Ill. — A nuclear reactor at a northern Illinois plant shut down Monday after losing power, and steam was being vented to reduce pressure, according to officials from Exelon Nuclear and federal regulators.

Unit 2 at Byron Generating Station shut down around 10:18 a.m., after losing power from an off-site source, Exelon officials said. Diesel generators began supplying power to the plant equipment and operators began releasing steam from the non-nuclear side of the plant to help cool the reactor, officials said.

Even though the turbine is not turning to produce electricity, “you still need to cool the equipment.” said U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokeswoman Viktoria Mitlyng. Releasing steam helps “take away some of that energy still being produced by nuclear reaction but that doesn’t have anywhere to go now.”

The steam contains low levels of radioactive tritium, but the levels are safe for workers and the public, federal and plant officials said.

Unit 1 was operating normally while engineers investigate why Unit 2 lost power, which comes into the plant from the outside power grid, Mitlyng said. Smoke was seen from an onsite station transformer, she said, but no evidence of a fire was found when the plant’s fire brigade responded.

Exelon spokesman Paul Dempsey said there is “no reason we can pinpoint right now” for the power loss.

Mitlyng said Nuclear Regulatory Commission inspectors were in the control room at Byron and in constant contact with the agency’s incident response center in Lisle, Ill.

Byron Generating Station is in Ogle County, about 95 miles northwest of Chicago.
In March 2008, federal officials said they were investigating a problem with electrical transformers at the plant after outside power to a unit was interrupted.

In an unrelated issue last April, the commission said it was conducting special inspections of backup water pumps at the Byron and Braidwood generating stations after the agency’s inspectors raised concerns about whether the pumps would be able to cool the reactors if the normal system wasn’t working. The plants’ operator, Exelon Corp., initially said the pumps would work but later concluded they wouldn’t.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/industries/reactor-shuts-down-releases-steam-at-illinois-nuclear-plant-after-losing-outside-power/2012/01/30/gIQALf13cQ_story.html


Why is it that backup power supplies failed?? Something very fishy in all this...

midnight rambler
30th January 2012, 05:16 PM
Relying on off-site power to control the reactor(s) is just plain stupid.

Golden
30th January 2012, 05:22 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8HYNMqMgdaQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8HYNMqMgdaQ
Uploaded by Marygreeley1954 on Jan 30, 2012

ximmy
30th January 2012, 05:37 PM
I believe steam venting is a good sign (unlike viddy narrator)... if the reactor shuts down power output, the rods are being cooled as they should be... :confused:

MNeagle
30th January 2012, 05:57 PM
dunno ximmy, but this whole thing doesn't seem right to me.

Golden
30th January 2012, 06:32 PM
Radnet was taken down by the EPA in June 2011.
On March 11th, where was the Emergency Broadcast System for the worst nuclear disaster in history???

These are lessons for those with the ears to hear.

Golden
30th January 2012, 06:38 PM
I believe steam venting is a good sign (unlike viddy narrator)... if the reactor shuts down power output, the rods are being cooled as they should be... :confused:

Normally it is. However, Three mile island is an example of internal problems that project a normal outward appearance when inside all hell is breaking loose. Steam is all we can see from our perspective.

Spectrism
30th January 2012, 06:39 PM
If your mind is like a parachute and your feet are on the ground, you are sure to get dragged unpleasantly by any strong winds until your mind hits a snag.


Sounds like they have things well under control. Remote power securing the nuke plant. A little tritium steam released to freshen the air. Not sure what the problem is. Nothing to worry about.

MNeagle
30th January 2012, 06:40 PM
Radnet was taken down by the EPA in June 2011.
On March 11th, where was the Emergency Broadcast System for the worst nuclear disaster in history???

These are lessons for those with the ears to hear.

Apparently I was out of town/off-line; summary perhaps?

osoab
30th January 2012, 06:43 PM
It's just tritium. Well below federal safety standards. ;D

What happened with the Japanese safety standards?

At least the winds are blowing from the south for me. chad is screwed though.

Golden
30th January 2012, 06:46 PM
If your mind is like a parachute and your feet are on the ground, you are sure to get dragged unpleasantly by any strong winds until your mind hits a snag.


Sounds like they have things well under control. Remote power securing the nuke plant. A little tritium steam released to freshen the air. Not sure what the problem is. Nothing to worry about.

Sounds like, "a little", not sure, nothing to worry about? Well now, I'm convinced! ;) What me worry?

Golden
30th January 2012, 06:59 PM
Apparently I was out of town/off-line; summary perhaps?

I'm just pointing out trends. Radnet was a radiation monitoring system for N. America. And on 3/11 the EBS was MIA. I visit enenews for radiation info. Make sure to read comments as there is copious amounts of info from solid posters. I'm often overwhelmed physically and/or emotionally and retreat to break from posting for peace.

Awoke
31st January 2012, 05:19 AM
The steam they are releasing is strictly used to spin the turbines to generate electricity.
They are taking the electrical generation load off the system. This kind of thing happens more frequently than most people are aware of, and it's nothing to panic about.

All nuke stations have to have 3 or 4 backup electrical systems, all different classes, all different supplies. So while they may be relying on grid power to run at full capacity for generation, if they get into a situation where they have to derate the reactor, they will still have means to provide electricity to run all their safety systems and keep the fuel cooled, via back up generators, batter banks with inverters, etc.

Nothing to fret over. Unless you're told they can't cool the fuel. Then you can worry.

Awoke
31st January 2012, 05:21 AM
Normally it is. However, Three mile island is an example of internal problems that project a normal outward appearance when inside all hell is breaking loose. Steam is all we can see from our perspective.

Author Dr. John Coleman asserts that Three Mile Island was an inside job. Read his book "Nuclear Power: Anathema to the New World Order".

Bildo
31st January 2012, 05:41 AM
Don't know if it's related to the power plant shut down, but there was also an earthquake reported in IL last night. Not big, but unusual.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-ap-il-illinois-earthqua,0,4127871.story

SWRichmond
31st January 2012, 06:09 AM
The WaPo article contains incomplete information. This is not a surprise.

Loss of offsite power also means loss of the load, and the plant is forced to do a 100% load rejection. Imagine taking a 3500MWt heat source from 100% output to 0% output in under a second. Where's the heat gonna go?

Byron is a PWR, so it's gonna go out the steam generator steam relief valves. Venting this much 700psi steam directly to atmosphere is big, very visible, and noisy. The reactor trips, the DGs start, and you keep on pumping water into the steam generators to refill them as the heat source cools down. It's steam form the secondary side, and it is apparently mildly contaminated with tritium (did they once have tube leaks?). This is not good, but the report does not say how much tritium is being released. Remember, detectable does not = dangerous. We all have "detectable" radiation in our homes etc right now.

http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/basic-ref/teachers/04.pdf

Nuclear power knowledge leads to a reduction in the "fear factor." This is in marked contrast to financial system knowledge, which leads to greatly increased fear.

JDRock
31st January 2012, 06:54 AM
wtf is going to happen if in a shtf scenario power is disabled via a power grid attack/failure ? ...ahh yes, clean ,safe almost free nuclear power!

Awoke
31st January 2012, 07:04 AM
Nuclear power knowledge leads to a reduction in the "fear factor." This is in marked contrast to financial system knowledge, which leads to greatly increased fear.

Haha, well put!

mick silver
31st January 2012, 07:50 AM
a power plant with no power , whats up with that

Horn
31st January 2012, 07:55 AM
What happened with the Japanese safety standards?

At least the winds are blowing from the south for me. chad is screwed though.

Radiation doesn't work well in a back draft either.