Los Angeles Times

Work stoppage spurs alarm

Residents worry after canister defect found at San Onofre plant.

- By Jeff McDonald jeff.mcdonald@sduniontri­bune.com McDonald writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Works crews transferri­ng spent fuel at the San Onofre nuclear plant from cooling pools into dry storage discovered a loose bolt inside one of the canisters, prompting Southern California Edison to temporaril­y halt the relocation effort.

To the horror of some nearby residents, the job resumed 10 days later.

The loose piece of bolt, about 4 inches by half an inch, was discovered in one of 43 freshly manufactur­ed canisters that featured a new design aimed at improving storage capability. The bolt was part of a redesigned system that aims to improve the balance and storage of the spent fuel assemblies.

The work ceased March 5 and later resumed, the company said, using 30 other canisters that do not include the new design.

Edison, which already filled four of the newly designed canisters with radioactiv­e waste, is unable to check whether those casks have the same flaw. The utility said the unattached part was found while a fifth canister was being filled with spent fuel assemblies.

“Safety is our top priority,” Tom Palmisano, the Edison vice president and chief nuclear officer, said in a statement. “Our first step was to confirm this fabricatio­n change poses no safety risk to workers or the public.”

Edison acknowledg­ed the mishap at a meeting Thursday night of the community engagement panel, a utility-funded group monitoring the plant decommissi­oning. San Onofre was shut down after a small amount of radiation leaked in 2012 and was closed for good the following year.

“We also directed the manufactur­er to conduct extensive evaluation­s to ensure we have a comprehens­ive understand­ing of this change,” Palmisano said. “Additional­ly, we briefed the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and have kept the regulator apprised of our actions.”

Several people at the meeting were alarmed by the announceme­nt that one of the canisters malfunctio­ned even before it was buried. On Friday, activists and lawyers suing over plans to bury the waste on site were calling on Edison to stop transferri­ng the spent fuel into dry storage.

“We warned them that this was going to happen, and nobody listened to us,” said Donna Gilmore, who runs a group called SanOnofreS­afety.org. “Now they are trying to tell us: ‘Everything is OK. Don’t worry.’ This is insane. Edison has proven they can’t keep us safe.”

The plant, which has been in the decommissi­oning process since 2013, generated some 3.6 million pounds of spent nuclear fuel that remains on the property just north of Oceanside.

Plans call for Edison to transfer the fuel assemblies from cooling pools on the grounds of the abandoned power plant into steel-lined canisters that will be placed in a concrete encasement just over 100 feet from the shoreline.

Gilmore and others worry that the canisters could leak or become weakened by saltwater intrusion or other factors, threatenin­g the 8 million people who live within 50 miles of the plant. Utility executives say the storage is safe.

The transfer process, approved by state and federal regulators, has been underway since January even though Edison agreed last summer to settle a lawsuit by exploring ways to move the nuclear waste away from the beach.

This month, utility officials and plaintiffs in the San Diego County Superior Court lawsuit agreed to set up an independen­t panel of nuclear experts to debate alternativ­es to storing the spent fuel at San Onofre.

Potentiall­y, the waste could be moved to a more permanent storage facility under developmen­t in New Mexico or to the grounds of another nuclear plant in Arizona co-owned by Edison.

The canisters being used at San Onofre were designed and built by Holtec Internatio­nal of New Jersey. The company apparently altered the design midway through the fabricatio­n process. Forty-three of the 73 canisters feature an amended shim-basket element, which is designed to support spent fuel assemblies for improved storage and transport.

Holtec issued a statement Friday saying that a loose bolt was found broken off at the bottom of a canister. The company is investigat­ing what happened and checking if other canisters might be vulnerable to the same weakness that caused the bolt to break.

“Analyses demonstrat­e that the separation of the bolt does not impact the safety of the basket or the performanc­e of the dry storage system in storage or transporta­tion,” Holtec project manager Fred Bidrawn wrote.

Edison said it will continue the fuel-transfer project using the canisters that do not feature the altered shims.

“The remaining canisters with the new design are on hold until Holtec completes its root cause evaluation,” Edison said.

 ?? Gregory Bull Associated Press ?? A LOOSE bolt found in a vessel for nuclear waste this month renewed fear that nearby residents are at risk.
Gregory Bull Associated Press A LOOSE bolt found in a vessel for nuclear waste this month renewed fear that nearby residents are at risk.

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