"This storm and flood is
absolutely without precedent even before adding the possibility of a nuclear
accident that could further imperil millions of people who are already battling
for their lives."
As record-breaking rainfall
and unprecedented flooding continue to batter the greater Houston area and
along the Gulf coast on Tuesday, energy watchdogs groups are warning of "a
credible threat of a severe accident" at two nuclear reactors still
operating at full capacity in nearby Bay City, Texas.
Three groups—Beyond Nuclear,
South Texas Association for Responsible Energy, and the SEED Coalition—are
calling for the immediate shutdown of the South Texas Project (STP) which sits
behind an embankment they say could be overwhelmed by the raging flood waters
and torrential rains caused by Hurricane Harvey.
Both the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission and the STP operator have previously recognized a
credible threat of a severe accident initiated by a breach of the embankment
wall that surrounds the 7,000-acre reactor cooling water reservoir," said
Paul Gunter, director of the Beyond Nuclear's Reactor Oversight Project, in a statement
by the coalition on Tuesday.
The groups warn that as
Harvey—which on Tuesday was
declared the most intense rain event in U.S. history—continues to
dump water on the area, a breach of the embankment wall surrounding the twin
reactors would create "an external flood potentially impacting the
electrical supply from the switchyard to the reactor safety systems." In
turn, the water has the potential to "cause high-energy electrical fires
and other cascading events initiating a severe accident leading to core
damage." Even worse, they added, "any significant loss of cooling
water inventory in the Main Cooling Reservoir would reduce cooling capacity to
the still operating reactors that could result in a meltdown."
With the nearby Colorado River
already cresting at extremely high levels and flowing at 70 times the normal
rate, Karen Hadden, director of SEED Coalition, warned that the continue
rainfall might create flooding that could reach the reactors. "There is
plenty of reserve capacity on our electric grid," she said, "so we
don't have to run the reactors in order to keep the lights on. With anticipated
flooding of the Colorado River, the nuclear reactors should be shut down now to
ensure safety."
Last week, the STP operators said
that safety for their workers and local residents was their top concern, but
that they would keep the plant operating despite the approaching storm.
Susan Dancer, president of the
South Texas Association for Responsible Energy, said that as residents in Bay
City—herself included—were being forced to leave their homes under manadatory
evacaution orders, it makes no sense to keep the nuclear plant online.
"Our 911 system is down,
no emergency services are available, and yet the nuclear reactors are still
running. Where is the concern for employees and their families? Where is the
concern for public safety? This is an outrageous and irresponsible
decision," declared Dancer. "This storm and flood is absolutely
without precedent even before adding the possibility of a nuclear accident that
could further imperil millions of people who are already battling for their
lives."
As Harvey hovers over the
coastal region, heavy rains are expected to persist for days even as the storm
system creeps toward to Louisiana in the east.
But no matter how remote the
possibility, said Gunter, "it's simply prudent that the operator put this
reactor into its safest condition, cold shutdown."
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