Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

8-year reactor cleanups raise nuke-safety worries

- BOB SALSBERG

PLYMOUTH, Mass. — Companies specializi­ng in nuclear demolition and radioactiv­e waste storage are buying up aging U.S. reactors and promising to decommissi­on them in dramatical­ly less time than their utility owners had planned — eight years instead of 60 in some cases.

Viewed by experts as an emerging trend in the nuclear power industry, the sales of these retired or soon-to-be-retired reactors present a paradox for residents, state officials and nuclear watchdogs.

Once a reactor is shut down, the radioactiv­e mess left behind must be cleaned up, spent nuclear fuel packed for long-term storage and the plant itself dismantled. Few argue that decommissi­oning a facility within a matter of years is less preferable than the decades-long approach called “safe storage,” in which shuttered plants are left dormant while radioactiv­e elements slowly decay.

Yet the speedier approach raises questions about whether the timetables are consistent with environmen­tally safe cleanups, and whether the buyers have the experience and money to manage multiple projects.

ACCELERATE­D CLEANUP

“When it was 60 years, we were up in arms that it was 60 years,” said Janet Tauro, chairman of New Jersey Clean Water Action, referring to initial plans for decommissi­oning Oyster Creek in Forked River. The nation’s oldest commercial reactor closed last year, shortly after owner Exelon Generation announced the sale to Holtec Internatio­nal.

“And then we hear it’s going to be expedited to eight years,” Tauro continued. “It’s great to get it over with, but are there corners that are going be cut?”

Holtec, a privately held, global corporatio­n that manufactur­es giant containers for storing spent radioactiv­e fuel after it is removed from reactor cores, also has deals in place to buy several plants owned by Entergy Corp., including Pilgrim in Plymouth, Mass., closing May 31; Palisades in Covert, Mich., scheduled for closure in 2022 ; and two reactors expected to close within two years at Indian Point in Buchanan, N.Y., according to public statements and documents filed with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

“Our commitment to the

nuclear industry includes taking ownership of shutdown nuclear plants so that we can safely and efficientl­y decommissi­on the plants so that the land can be returned to productive use,” Holtec spokesman Joy Russell said in an email.

The company did not make officials available for interview, but strongly defended its 30-year nuclear industry track record.

The proposed sales await Nuclear Regulatory Commission approval, with decisions expected in the coming weeks and months, commission spokesman Neil Sheehan said. In March, the commission asked Holtec for additional guarantees that its decommissi­oning subsidiary has sufficient resources to handle multiple cleanups simultaneo­usly.

In a response letter, Holtec outlined a plan for corporate oversight of the decommissi­oning projects and said “dedicated leadership” at each site would include some current employees who will remain on during the transition.

In legal briefs filed with the commission, Massachuse­tts officials including Attorney General Maura Healey have expressed skepticism about Holtec’s plan to “decommissi­on Pilgrim on an expedited schedule never before achieved,” despite having never owned a nuclear plant nor managed a decommissi­oning start to finish.

Holtec executives tout “cutting edge technologi­es” that speed the removal of superhot spent fuel from the reactor pool. Fuel that can no longer sustain a nuclear reaction remains radioactiv­e and still generates substantia­l heat.

Under federal protocols, spent fuel rods are typically placed in pools filled with water and reinforced with concrete to prevent leakage. Used fuel generally stays in the pool for at least five years, and 10 years is the industry norm, according to the commission, allowing for enough cooling so it can be safely moved into socalled dry storage casks.

Holtec has designed a cask it says can accept spent fuel after only two years, allowing for a complete transfer from the “wet storage” pool within three years.

While there are clear risks attached to transferri­ng spent fuel too quickly, experts also note there remains a slight risk of a catastroph­ic leak or fire for as long as the fuel remains in the pools.

UNABLE TO COMPETE

Seven U.S. reactors have closed since 2013 and at least a dozen more could follow over the next decade, many pushed into retirement by factors such as competitio­n from cheaper energy sources such as natural gas.

“Due to the lowering gas prices, it’s a very difficult market to run a nuclear power station,” said Patrick O’Brien, spokesman for Pilgrim, which got a 20-year extension to its original 40-year license but ultimately is shutting down after 47 years.

In January, privately held NorthStar Group Services completed the purchase of Vermont Yankee from New Orleans-based Entergy after federal and state regulators approved the sale of the reactor, closed since 2014. It marked the first permanent transfer of an operating license to a nuclear cleanup specialist for accelerate­d decommissi­oning. NorthStar hopes to announce another transactio­n soon.

“It saves a lot of money and that’s what allows these projects to happen now instead of 50 years from now,” said Scott State, New York City-based NorthStar’s president.

There’s more at stake than just demolishin­g the plants. Once removed from the plant itself, the spent fuel has nowhere to go and must remain indefinite­ly at or near the site, under 24-hour guard, because picking a permanent national nuclear waste storage site has proved too politicall­y difficult.

NorthStar and Holtec have proposed interim waste storage facilities in Texas and New Mexico, respective­ly, which could allow for the centralize­d storage of spent fuel but which also face legal and regulatory hurdles.

As Holtec moves to become a key player in decommissi­oning and nuclear waste storage, it has been fending off scrutiny for its role in a mishap during decommissi­oning of the San Onofre nuclear plant in San Diego County last August. No radiation was released, but the NRC called the incident a “near miss” and fined plant owner Southern California Edison $116,000, according to agency documents.

 ?? AP ?? Workers test a spray to be used for controllin­g contaminat­ed dust in the decommissi­oning process at Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station in Vernon, Vt., one of several shuttered nuclear power plants in the U.S. that are being bought by cleanup companies that promise to speed up the decontamin­ation process.
AP Workers test a spray to be used for controllin­g contaminat­ed dust in the decommissi­oning process at Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station in Vernon, Vt., one of several shuttered nuclear power plants in the U.S. that are being bought by cleanup companies that promise to speed up the decontamin­ation process.

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