Santa Fe New Mexican

Fewer inspection­s for aging nuclear plants, regulators urge

- By Coral Davenport

WASHINGTON — A new report by staff members of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which oversees the safety of the nation’s 59 aging nuclear power plants, recommends that the commission­ers significan­tly weaken or reduce safety inspection­s of the plants.

The report, published Tuesday, comes after a yearlong consultati­on and public meeting process, including views from the Nuclear Energy Institute, which lobbies on behalf of the nuclear power plant industry and has long sought weaker safety rules. It also comes amid a broader push by the Trump administra­tion for reduced regulation­s on industry.

Democrats in Congress and nuclear safety advocates criticized the report’s proposals, saying they reflect the influence of an industry seeking to cut regulation­s rather than improve public safety.

The proposal comes as most of the nation’s nuclear power plants, which were designed and built in the 1960s or 1970s, are reaching the end of their original 40to 50-year operating licenses. Many plant operators have sought licenses to extend the operating life of their plants past the original deadlines, even as experts have warned that aging plants come with heightened concerns about safety.

Among the chief recommenda­tions in the new report, sent from Margaret Doane, the agency’s executive director for operations, to the panel of commission­ers, is to decrease inspection­s of nuclear operators’ safety programs from once every two years to once every three years. That change would require a vote of approval by the commission.

A spokesman for the panel, Scott Burnell, wrote in an email that there is “no set timeline” for the commission­ers to consider or vote on the proposals.

There are currently only four commission­ers on the five-member panel, which includes two appointed by President Donald Trump, one appointed by President George W. Bush and one appointed by President Barack Obama. Trump has not nominated a fifth commission­er.

The report describes the recommenda­tions as “targeted refinement­s” designed to make the “highly effective” oversight of the nation’s nuclear power plants, spread over 30 states, “more risk-informed and performanc­e-based.”

Senior House Democrats criticized the proposed changes and called for more public comment on them.

In a letter to Kristine Svinicki, chairwoman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, four House Democrats who oversee the agency’s budget and policies wrote, “It would be a mistake to attempt to make nuclear power more cost-competitiv­e by weakening NRC’s vital safety oversight. Cutting corners on such critical safety measures may eventually lead to a disaster that could be detrimenta­l to the future of the domestic nuclear industry.”

Maria Korsnick, president and chief executive of the Nuclear Energy Institute, said in an emailed statement that her organizati­on “applauds the NRC staff effort to systematic­ally evaluate the decades-old” inspection system.

She said this would “ensure that it reflects a more robust understand­ing of the current performanc­e of the U.S. nuclear fleet.”

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