Los Angeles Times

PG&E says nuclear plant can safely withstand quakes, tsunamis.

Diablo Canyon can withstand quakes and tsunamis, according to review given to NRC.

- By Amanda Covarrubia­s amanda.covarrubia­s@latimes.tom

California’s last operationa­l nuclear power plant can safely withstand earthquake­s, tsunamis and flooding, according to documents submitted by the owner of the Diablo Canyon plant to the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Pacific Gas & Electric officials said last week that the company had submitted new documentat­ion ordered by the regulatory agency in the aftermath of the 2011 disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan.

The agency called on all U.S. commercial nuclear power plants to perform the reviews.

“These updated findings are the culminatio­n of years of study and analysis, and further confirm the safety of the plant’s design,” Ed Halpin, senior vice president and chief nuclear officer for PG&E, said in a statement.

Jearl Strict-land, director of technical services for Diablo Canyon, said the testing also took into considerat­ion the effect a quake on one fault would have on the other three fault lines in the area.

Even under that scenario, he said, the plant could sustain the considerab­le ground motion that would be generated.

“The plant would be safe in conditions a substantia­l margin above what the design input is,” Strict-land said.

The Diablo Canyon nuclear plant, built against a seaside cliff near Avila Beach in San Luis Obispo County, provides electricit­y for Central and Northern California.

The only other nuclear power plant in the state, San Onofre in San Clemente, was closed in 2013 after a tube in the plant’s newly replaced steam generators sprang a leak and released a small amount of radioactiv­e steam.

The reports submitted to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission will be reviewed to determine if policies or licensing need to be changed.

In Fukushima, an earthquake triggered a tsunami that swamped the plant, knocked out its power systems and led to a loss of coolant.

In a separate matter from the report to the federal agency, PG&E officials said the Diablo Canyon plant is safe from quake hazards even after the reactor vessel heads and steam generators were replaced from 2008 to 2010 without first being tested for safety in a potential quake on the Hosgri fault and a simultaneo­us loss of cooling water in the reactors.

The Hosgri fault is three miles from Diablo Canyon and was discovered in 1971, three years after constructi­on began.

“While the probabilit­y of such an event occurring is infinitesi­mally small, engineerin­g and seismic experts performed a subsequent evaluation and confirmed there is sufficient margin in the components’ design to withstand a combined earthquake on the Hosgri fault and a loss-of-coolant accident,” PG&E spokesman Blair Jones said in a statement.

The Friends of the Earth environmen­tal group has a case pending in the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., alleging that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission illegally allowed PG&E to amend the seismic licensing process for Diablo Canyon, hiding that the reactors are vulnerable to surroundin­g earthquake faults capable of ground motion stronger than the plant was designed to withstand.

“The point is this [is] absolutely critical equipment to a nuclear reactor, yet it was designed and installed using the wrong data,” said Damon Moglen, senior strategic advisor for Friends of the Earth. “That’s a major licensing violation, and the NRC should have come down like a mountain of bricks.”

A federal judge rejected efforts by PG&E and the agency to dismiss the lawsuit.

The lawsuit draws on a report filed in 2013 by the former NRC resident inspector stationed at Diablo Canyon, Michael Peck, who urged regulators to close the plant until they could determine whether its twin reactors could withstand powerful shaking from the nearby faults.

 ?? Photograph­s by Steve Osman
Los Angeles Times ?? STEAM IS RELEASED
at the Diablo Canyon plant near Avila Beach, which provides electricit­y for Central and Northern California.
Photograph­s by Steve Osman Los Angeles Times STEAM IS RELEASED at the Diablo Canyon plant near Avila Beach, which provides electricit­y for Central and Northern California.
 ??  ?? A PLANT OFFICIAL said testing took into considerat­ion the effect an earthquake on one fault would have on the other three fault lines in the area.
A PLANT OFFICIAL said testing took into considerat­ion the effect an earthquake on one fault would have on the other three fault lines in the area.

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