Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Critics decry radioactiv­e leak at Indian Point

- By Deepti Hajela and David Klepper The Associated Press

A leak of radioactiv­e material into the groundwate­r below a nuclear power station in New York City’s suburbs highlights a chronic problem with the nation’s atomic plants, some watchdogs said.

New testing has shown that the amount of tritium in the groundwate­r below the Indian Point power plant in the Westcheste­r County village of Buchanan is about 740 times the amount allowed in drinking water, though officials said there was no public health risk from the leak.

Entergy Corp., which operates the plant at the edge of the Hudson River, said Wednesday that the latest samples from monitoring wells found tritium at a level of 14.8 million picocuries per liter. The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency has set a limit of no more than 20,000 picocuries per liter in drinking water.

Buchanan gets its public water supply from reservoirs in the Catskill mountains, not from local wells, so the danger to humans from the spill was likely to be negligible.

But critics of nuclear plants said the mere fact of the leak’s occurrence is cause for concern, partly because investigat­ors had yet to pinpoint how it happened.

“There a leak some- where, and I don’t think they know where it is,” said Arnold Gundersen, a nuclear engineer and former industry executive who now runs a nonprofit group dedicated to nuclear safety.

An Associated Press investigat­ion, published in 2011, found that threequart­ers of commercial nuclear power plants in the U.S. had reported tritium leaks.

Those spills were often linked to corroded, undergroun­d pipes. Experts have questioned whether the plants are capable of catching leaks and spills promptly in the maze of buried pipes that the plants use to move coolant.

Gundersen said he was concerned that other, potentiall­y more problemati­c elements could also have leaked out that would add to the cleanup burden when the facility is eventually decommissi­oned.

“All of that stuff stays in the soil,” he said.

Enterg y spokesman Jerry Nappi said the radioactiv­e water probably leaked during a recent operation to prepare for a planned refueling outage, which takes place every two years, but the New Orleans-based company was still investigat­ing to figure out exactly how.

“Tritium making its way to the ground at Indian Point is not the way we want to operate,” he said.

He said testing had also found elevated levels of antimony, at about 5,500 picocuries per liter.

T he c ont a minated groundwate­r will eventually make its way to the Hudson River, where it will become so diluted it won’t be detectable, Nappi said.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo has ordered the state’s department­s of health and environmen­tal conservati­on to investigat­e, calling the leak “unacceptab­le.”

Cuomo, who lives about 15 miles east of the plant, has long questioned the safety of having a nuclear plant so close to such a large population center. In 2007, as the state’s attorney general, he accused the Nuclear Regulatory Commission of being irresponsi­ble as it sought to relicense the plant.

Other politician­s in the area have similar fears.

“It’s like an old car ready to fall apart. Somewhere along the way, you have to say, ‘ the risk is too great,’” said Assemblyma­n Tom Abinanti, a Democrat from Greenburgh.

Nappi defended t he plant’s record, saying it had operated safely for more than 40 years.

Federal regulators are looking into the spill, with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission saying a radiation specialist was being sent to the site. The NRC also has staff stationed at the site on a permanent basis.

The plant, on the eastern shore of the Hudson River, is about 45 miles south of Kingston City Hall and 24 miles north of New York City’s northern boundary.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A 2011photo show the nuclear power plant at Indian Point in Buchanan, with the Hudson River in the foreground.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A 2011photo show the nuclear power plant at Indian Point in Buchanan, with the Hudson River in the foreground.

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