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ARTICLE ARCHIVE

Entries from February 1, 2021 - February 28, 2021

Thursday
Feb182021

80 YEARS AT POINT BEACH, WI? Comment against high-risk extension!

Point Beach Units 1 & 2, Two Creeks, WI on the Lake Michigan shoreline. NRC file photo.Working with allies like Physicians for Social Responsibility-Wisconsin, Beyond Nuclear helped turn out more than 100 concerned citizens to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's public comment call-in session on February 17. Fifteen of 16 who made environmental scoping public comments at NRC's call-in session opposed NRC rubber-stamping three more decades of operations at the twin-reactor nuclear power plant; the only proponent was a Point Beach vice president. We have prepared comments you can use verbatim, or to help you write your own. So too has PSR-WI. Written comments to NRC are due by 11:59pm Eastern on Wednesday, March 3, and can be submitted online. Help protect Lake Michigan, drinking water source for 40 million downstream!

READ MORE

Thursday
Feb182021

Texas grid collapse no fault of wind power: Extreme weather exposes atomic shortcuts

Google Earth Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott jumped on Fox News to blame President Biden along with wind and solar power for the state’s electric grid collapse during this latest round of climate-crisis extreme winter weather. But that was false information Bloomberg reports. According to Electric Reliability Council of Texas, the state’s grid manager, more wind was online than forecasted and was the least affected. All energy generators on the grid were hard hit, including nuclear power, but the blizzard exposed energy politics and energy lobbyists, not renewable technology, as the chief culprit. South Texas nuclear power plant was one contributor to the grid collapse when it failed to winterize its steam turbines, to save money, and frozen feedwater pumps caused a reactor SCRAM. 

Other extreme weather and climate-related events can contribute to the automatic shutdown of nuclear power stations and destabilization of the electric grid including ice buildup on offsite electric utility lines which provide 100% of the power to all reactor safety systems. A power grid distruption to the nuclear power station will cause the reactor to SCRAM and reactor cooling systems and a subset of safety systems will be powered by onsite emergency generators. Reactor cooling water systems are also vulnerable to extreme weather and climate related events. Ice buildup around cooling water intake systems will also cause reactors to power down or shutdown. To the other extreme, extreme or prolonged heat will cause reactor cooling water temperatures to rise with ineffective cooling capacity causing reactors to power down or shut down as will falling reactor cooling water intake levels affected by prolonged drought. Similarly, high winds can take down electrical grid lines causing an automatic SCRAM. Once hurricane wind levels exceed Category 1 (74 mph), reactor operators are required to manually shutdown the reactor before offsite power is lost.

More potential adverse impacts from the nuclear industry taking risky economic short shortcuts during construction and operations to increase profit margins by shaving safety margins and electricity reliability have included flood protection around power reactors and earthquake upgrades for critical systems, structures and components. 


Wednesday
Feb172021

Bernard Lown, whose IPPNW won Nobel Peace Prize, dies

As the developer of the first effective heart defibrillator, Dr. Bernard Lown saved countless lives. In 1961, he formed Physicians for Social Responsibility and by 1980, along with a Russian friend and colleague, Yevgeny Chazov, had cofounded International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War — the winner of the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize. In endeavoring to prevent a nuclear conflict between the two superpowers, Lown was arguably responsible for global efforts to save effectively all lives on Planet Earth. Emigrating to the US from Lithuania with his family as a child, Lown grew up in Maine but was long associated with Harvard medical school in Boston, the city where he died on February 16 at 99. More

Photo:Dr. Bernard Lown, second from right, with IPPNW colleagues at the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in 1985. Photo: IPPNW

Wednesday
Feb172021

Point Beach, WI nuclear power plant 80-year license extension

NRC file photo of Point Beach nuclear power plant Units 1 & 2, located on the Lake Michigan shore in Two Rivers, WI, near Manitowoc.Help Protect the Great Lakes Against Radioactive Risks! Please make environmental scoping comments, Wed., Feb. 17, 1-3pm Central (2-4pm Eastern), at NRC's mtg. re: 80 years of proposed operations at the dangerously embrittled Pt. Beach nuclear power plant on Lake Michigan's WI shore!

NRC slideshow:

https://adamswebsearch2.nrc.gov/webSearch2/main.jsp?AccessionNumber=ML21042B945

WEBINAR ACCESS

*Please log into both the Teams meeting and Bridgeline audio. Visuals will be through Microsoft Teams and audio will be through Bridgeline.

TEAMS link: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_YzA4MjM0M2UtZTRjNy00Mjc3LThjOGItNzg1OTFjZjY4Yjdm%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22e8d01475-c3b5-436a-a065-5def4c64f52e%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%22423488ef-ed1f-4f6b-bd2e-fc72ac8da562%22%7d

[If webinar link does not work, the PDF of the NRC slideshow is linked above. This will likely be the only visual during the meeting anyway. The audio/phone bridgeline below is all you'll need to follow along as the slideshow is presented, and to otherwise take part as well, such as making a public comment.]

Bridgeline Number: 800-369-1750 -> Passcode: 4187785 then #

PHONE ACCESS

Bridge Number: (800) 369-1750
Passcode: 4187785

MORE INFO., incliuding ideas you can use for making a public comment.

Sunday
Feb142021

Radioactive Water Spills Out From Fukushima Pools With Nuclear Waste Due to Earthquake in Japan