Thursday, October 4, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 4-San Onofre nuclear restart plan faces lengthy review

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 4-San Onofre nuclear restart plan faces lengthy review
Oct 4th 2012, 20:43

Thu Oct 4, 2012 4:43pm EDT

  * NRC must approve San Onofre Unit 2 restart      * SCE wants to run Unit 2 at 70 pct for about five months      * Unit 3 to remain shut for additional tests      * Critics call plan "an experiment"          By Eileen O'Grady      Oct 4 (Reuters) - A plan laid out by Southern California  Edison on Thursday to restart one of two damaged nuclear  reactors faces months of regulatory review plus skepticism from  industry critics.      SCE, a unit of power company Edison International,  submitted a plan to nuclear regulators to restart the  1,070-megawatt Unit 2 at San Onofre nuclear station in  California, saying it will run the unit at 70 percent of  capacity for five months before shutting it to inspect wear on  damaged tubes within the reactor's steam generators.      Both San Onofre nuclear units have been shut since January  following a small radioactive steam leak at one unit that  pointed to a problem with accelerated degradation of tubes in  the units' brand new steam generators.      San Onofre is the biggest power plant in Southern  California. Loss of output from the units has increased the   likelihood of power outages in the region, forcing the state  grid operator to take steps to bolster the power grid.      New of the possible restart pushed Edison International  shares up 1 percent to close at $47.10 on Thursday, after rising  to $47.49 which was a 12-month high.       "We have concluded that Unit 2 at San Onofre can be operated  safely and within industry norms," Ron Litzinger, SCE president,  said in a statement. "When implemented, this plan will get San  Onofre Unit 2 back to providing reliable and clean energy to  Southern Californians."      It is not known how soon Unit 2 might restart since the plan  must first be approved by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory  Commission, SCE said.      The NRC said months of inspection and analysis will be  required before a decision is made.      "The agency will not permit a restart unless and until we  can conclude the reactor can be operated safely," NRC Chairman  Allison Macfarlane said in a separate statement.      "This could take a number of months. Our inspections and  review will be painstaking, thorough and will not be rushed,"  Macfarlane said.      NRC had determined that the serious damage to thousands of  tubes inside the steam generators was "unprecedented" and that  the utility must identify the root cause and find ways to manage  tube vibration before seeking approval to restart the units.       San Onofre 3, rated at 1,080 MW, will remain offline while  the utility continues to study problems that SCE said are unique  to that unit. A recovery plan may be submitted to the NRC next  summer, officials said.        Both reactors can generate enough power to supply about 1.4  million Southern California homes.            'EXPERIMENT'      Nuclear industry critics called SCE's plan "an experiment"  that could endanger 8 million people living nearby, citing the  lack of repair work planned to address vibration that led tubes  to rub against each other and against support structures inside  the massive generators.      "They are not out of the woods by reducing the power to 70  percent; I just don't believe it is appropriate to treat  Southern California as a science experiment," Arne Gundersen, a  nuclear engineer, told reporters on a conference call.      "Running at reduced power may not fix the problems but  rather make them worse or shift the damage to another part of  the generators," said Gundersen, who works at nuclear consulting  company Fairewinds Associates and who has prepared technical  reports on San Onofre for Friends of the Earth.       Pete Dietrich, SCE's chief nuclear officer, said vibration  analysis showed running Unit 2 at reduced output would eliminate  some thermal hydraulic conditions that led tubes to rub against  each other and would reduce tubes rubbing against supports.        "This is not an experiment," Dietrich told reporters. "We  have conducted, over eight months, more than 170,000 tube  inspections. We've assembled a renowned team of experts and we  have brought independent analysis and evaluation to this  process."      Dietrich said the experts concluded it will be safe to run  Unit 2 for a short operating period, then shut it to "conduct  another series of inspections to confirm our conclusions and  that our corrective actions have been effective."       Noting that Unit 2 operated at full power safely for 21  months after new steam generators were installed in 2010,  Dietrich said, "It's important to our customers that an asset  that is able to be utilized safely is used to support the  electric needs of our customers."       SCE officials declined to talk about how costs associated  with the extended San Onofre shutdown will affect customer  rates.                 EMISSION, GRID CHALLENGES      The prolonged shutdown of San Onofre, located in San  Clemente about halfway between Los Angeles and San Diego, has  been felt by the grid agency, other power producers and  California's carbon market, which will formally launch Nov. 14  when the state auctions about 61 million allowances.       Prices spiked for forward contracts for the permits in  over-the-counter trading in July when the severity of San  Onofre's problems were detailed by the NRC.       The absence of the carbon emissions-free power plant has  been bullish for carbon permit prices, which utility companies  like SCE will need to surrender to the state to comply with the  coming environmental regulation.       With San Onofre out of service for the summer months,  California's power grid operator had to make contingency plans  to ensure sufficient power during the hottest days when  consumers use air conditioning to escape the heat.      The ISO has already started making plans for next summer if   San Onofre remains offline.      The steam generators built by Japanese multinational  engineering firm Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd were  installed in 2010 and 2011.      SCE shut Unit 2 on Jan. 9, 2012, for a planned outage. Unit  3 was safely taken offline Jan. 31, 2012, after station  operators detected a small leak in a steam generator tube.      Nuclear fuel is being removed from Unit 3 and had been  removed earlier from Unit 2, SCE said.       SCE operates San Onofre for its owners: SCE (78.21 percent),  Sempra Energy's San Diego Gas & Electric (20 percent)  and the city of Riverside (1.79 percent).  
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