Norobiik @Norobiik@noc.social · @Norobiik
471 followers · 7379 posts · Server noc.social

"’s in Fujian province releases about three times more into the than the planned discharge." Beijing appears to be basing its distinction on ’s discharge having originated from a ."

Fukushima: China accused of hypocrisy over its own release of wastewater from | Fukushima | The Guardian
theguardian.com/environment/20

#nuclearplants #nucleardisaster #japan #fukushima #pacificocean #tritium #powerplant #fuqing #china

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1328 followers · 17366 posts · Server kolektiva.social

Belgian and Back in the News

Feb 25, 2015

"The years-long saga surrounding the reactor pressure vessels at the Doel-3 power plant and Tihange-2 in has taken another turn, pushing these units back into the broader news cycle and renewing calls from some (uninformed) quarters for further worldwide action and/or permanent ."

ans.org/news/article-1678/belg

#Doel3 #Tihange2 #nuclear #npp #belgium #shutdowns #nuclearplants #hydrogenembrittlement #rethinknotrestart

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1327 followers · 17351 posts · Server kolektiva.social

And the should give more money to restart ? Ummmm...

Fines Once Again - Red Flags for

January 28, 2022

Media Contact: Anjuli.Ramos@sierraclub.org

"Holtec Decommission International was fined again by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Holtec agreed to pay a $50,000 fine after the plant’s armorer documents at the Oyster Creek in . According to the NRC investigation, the agency found that the plant’s armorer failed to perform mandatory firearms inspections and falsified related records. This is the second fine in two months for Holtec. In December, the company agreed to pay a $150,000 penalty for security related violations, however this time neither NRC nor Holtec disclosed the details of the violation due to the sensitivity of it.

“This is the second time in two months that Holtec has been fined for security related violations for the former Oyster Creek Nuclear Plant. It's the latest red flag in a series of red flags when it comes to Holtec. These violations should be an alarm bell going off for NRC not just to hold Holtec accountable, but to intervene in Holtec’s security and management of the site. It’s good that NRC conducted investigations and penalized Holtec, however that is clearly not enough, as this continues to happen,' said Anjuli Ramos-Busot, New Jersey Director of the Sierra Club.

"The public is concerned about Holtec’s plan to move still-hot nuclear waste out of water pools and into dry cask storage in half the usual time, typically 5 years. They claim their casts are proprietary and have not disclosed details about their design to the public. Until the rods are out of the spent-fuel pools and put into dry cask storage, the plant is extremely vulnerable. If there is a power outage, storm surge, or flood, the rods could melt down and create serious public health and environmental damage.

“The NRC and New Jersey must make sure there is proper oversight and to ensure Holtec is following safety protocols. This area is impacted by sea-level rise and climate change. During Sandy, the floodwaters came up onto the site at Oyster Creek. Storing nuclear waste in a site that already presents safety flaws is incredibly dangerous. If Holtec isn’t storing nuclear rods correctly, it could lead to major public health and environmental problems. That is why we need to make sure Holtec is not cutting corners [because as we all know, Holtec gets to keep what it doesn't spend] and will ensure transparency,' said Anjuli Ramos-Busot, New Jersey Director of the Sierra Club."

sierraclub.org/new-jersey/blog

#bidenadministrtion #HOLTEC #palisadesnuclearplant #nrc #oystercreek #falsified #nuclearplant #laceytownship #nuclearplants #violations #rethinknotrestart

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1327 followers · 17351 posts · Server kolektiva.social

under ‘criminal investigation,’ EDA says in since-redacted court filing

By Matt Friedman and Katherine Landergan, June 24, 2020

"Holtec International, which received one of the biggest in history, is under criminal investigation, according to a legal brief filed Monday by the New Jersey Economic Development Authority.

"The brief was in response to a lawsuit Holtec — an technology company — filed against the EDA in March for holding up a $26 million payment on its $260 million tax incentive to build a facility in Camden. The delay was because of an allegedly false answer Holtec gave on its 2014 tax credit application.

“Holtec’s — which include its failure to disclose a prior government debarment by the Tennessee Valley Authority (the ‘’) for bribing an official of that agency — first came to light during an investigation conducted by the Governor’s Task Force on the Economic Development Authority’s Tax Incentive Program, and they are now the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation,” reads the June 22 brief by attorney Ricardo Solano."

Read more: politico.com/states/new-jersey

#HOLTEC #taxcredits #newjersey #energy #misrepresentations #corporationslie #corruption #government #nuclear #nuclearplants #rethinknotrestart #tva

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1327 followers · 17351 posts · Server kolektiva.social

A timeline of incidents at Power Plant since 2007

Published: May. 12, 2013

"COVERT TOWNSHIP, MI -- The leak that shut down Palisades Nuclear Power Plant May 5 is one of a series of incidents that have bedeviled the nuclear reactor in recent years.

" Corp. bought Palisades from Consumers Energy in 2007 for $380 million. The one-reactor plant, which is located along in , supplies about 20 percent of the utility's power. The facility came online in 1971 and its license runs until 2031 [it was decommissioned in 2022].

"Below is a timeline of incidents at Palisades since 2007, based on NRC reports and previous MLive/Kalamazoo Gazette articles.

2007 -- Palisades' head of security resigned amid revelations he had fabricated some of his credentials.

2008 -- An NRC safety assessment found Palisades failed "to recognize and assess the impact of radiological hazards in the workplace." The NRC found that Palisades failed to determine how much radiation employees were exposed to after radiation monitors worn by the workers warned of an exposure.

August 2008 -- Five workers were trapped for 90 minutes inside a high-temperature area when a hatch malfunctioned. The NRC launched a probe and found the plant did not take proper precautions to prevent such occurrences.

2009 -- During an inspection, the NRC found that workers failed to notice a problem in the pool where spent fuel rods are kept. The finding, labeled a "low to moderate safety" risk that did not endanger the public, kept Palisades on the NRC's list of plants that required additional regulatory oversight for a second year. The plant's 2009 safety assessment also found problems with human performance regarding "error-prevention techniques."

May 2010
-- A Palisades manager left the control room without following protocol and the event was not reported within 24 hours, the NRC found.

January 2011
-- Palisades operated at 55 percent power for eight days after a cooling-water pump lost power when an electrical bus failed. The event did not represent a threat to health and safety, the NRC said.

May 2011
-- While NRC inspectors were conducting a routine test of the plant’s auxiliary feed water system, a turbine-driven pump was tripped. Investigators found a component of the pump that was greased and should not have been. The NRC classified the event as a "low to moderate" safety significance.

August 2011
-- The NRC launched a special inspection after the failure of a coupling that holds pipes together. It found Palisades did not follow industry standards when choosing the coupling and the cracking was preventable. Palisades replaced all couplings.

September 2011
-- Palisades shut down between Sept. 16 and Sept. 20 for repairs, after workers discovered a leaking valve in the system that cools the reactor.

September 2011
-- Palisades shut down for a week after a breaker fault in the plant's electrical system Sept. 25, when a worker performing maintenance on an electrical panel when a piece of metal came into contact with another metal piece and caused an arc. There were no injuries reported. The NRC launched a special investigation, the second in two months. The investigation found that during the incident, which it named of "substantial significance to safety," Palisades did not follow proper safety protocols before the shutdown.

November 2011
-- The NRC bumped Palisades down a level to the Regulatory Response column as a result of the May 2011 incident.

January 2012
-- Palisades shut down for 3-1/2 days to repair a wearing seal on a control rod mechanism.

February 2012
-- The NRC downgraded Palisades to the third regulatory column, making it among the four-worst performing reactors in the U.S. The downgrade came as a result of the two special investigations launched in 2011.

June 2012
-- Palisades shut down for a month to repair a leak in its safety injection refueling water tank. Numerous cracks were found within the 300,000-gallon storage tank, according to reports. When the plant returned to service, the tank was still leaking, but due to its size, it did not pose a safety risk, the NRC found.

July 2012
-- An independent review of Palisades found "examples of a lack of accountability at all levels."
The study, conducted by Conger & Elsea Inc. in January and February 2012, looked at plant operations related to human performance, safety-conscious work environment, problem identification and resolution.

August 2012
-- Palisades shut down for 18 days to repair a leak in the control rod mechanism drive in the containment building. The NRC sent a three-inspector team and launched a special inspection of the pressure-boundary leak. During the 30 days before the location of the leak was discovered, up to 10,000 gallons of radioactive water leaked from the containment vessel. The water was contained and did not pose a safety risk to the public, the NRC found.

September 2012
-- An NRC inspector found what it characterized as a small leak in a valve in the service water system. The water was not radioactive and did not represent a health or safety risk, the NRC said.

November 2012
-- Palisades shuts down for three days to repair a steam leak inside the plant's auxiliary building.

November 2012
-- The NRC upgraded Palisades after an 11-day inspection in September found that Entergy had made improvements and addressed deficiencies. The NRC ordered an additional 1,000 hours of inspections in 2013, on top of the standard 2,000 hours.

February 2013
-- Palisades shut down for six days to repair a leak in the component cooling water system. It was leaking 35 gallons of non-radioactive water an hour before the shutdown, the NRC said. The leak did not represent a threat to the public or the plant, the NRC said.

March 2013
-- Palisades was one of three U.S. plants with significant safety events, or "near-misses" in the past three years, according to a report by the independent Union of Concerned Scientists. The near-misses at Palisades resulted from long-standing problems, the UCS said, and it charged the NRC with failing to enforce violations.

May 2013
-- On May 5, Palisades shut down after the leak in the safety injection refueling water tank accelerated from one a day to 90 gallons within a 24-hour period, the NRC said. On May 4, before the shutdown, some 79 gallons of radioactive water from the tank went down a drain into a capture basin, where it was extremely diluted, according to the NRC, and ended up in Lake Michigan. The NRC has sent an additional inspector to Palisades, and one of its health physicists is also investigating the incident. As of May 10, Palisades was still offline while workers and inspectors search for the source of the leak and make repairs."

Source:
mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/2013/

#palisades #entergy #lakemichigan #coverttownship #michigan #nuclearplants #palisadesnuclearplant #HOLTEC #nrc #violations #rethinknotrestart #nuclear

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1327 followers · 17329 posts · Server kolektiva.social

has a long history of problems. And a long list of violations. They were made for each other [sarc]

plant gets $150 million in budget

By Sheri McWhirter, Jul. 03, 2023

"Michigan lawmakers included $150 million toward the effort to restart the Palisades nuclear plant as part of a record $81.7 billion state budget passed last week.

"State officials contributed the millions in taxpayer dollars toward International’s effort to get the nuclear plant upgraded and fired back up to provide 800 megawatts of carbon-free, base load power as the energy sector transitions away from fossil fuels. If it happens, it would be the first nuclear plant nationwide to return to generating power after being decommissioned.

"The plant was closed last year when its fuel ran out and the owner sold the facility to Holtec. The new owner has now twice applied for federal money to help get the plant operational again.

"The Biden administration has a $6 billion fund within the U.S. Department of Energy intended to preserve the U.S. nuclear reactor fleet and energy sector jobs.

"[...] Power generation at nuclear plants does not generate greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change, like burning fossil fuels does. However, some advocates remain concerned about ecological from needed and risk from nuclear plants produce."

mlive.com/public-interest/2023

#palisadesnuclearplant #HOLTEC #palisades #nuclear #michigan #environmental #degradation #uranium #mining #radiation #toxicwaste #UraniumMining #nuclearplants #NuclearWaste

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1326 followers · 17327 posts · Server kolektiva.social

Accident Possibilities at and Other Reactors

BACKGROUND INFORMATION ~ AUGUST 1995

by Gordon Edwards, Ph.D., President, Canadian Coalition for Responsibility

"When Gentilly-2 was built, nobody thought about the possibility that an accident could kill everybody in the control room of the nuclear reactor, possibly resulting in a catastrophic accident. (Even if the reactor is shut down, the heat still has to be removed from the core to prevent a catastrophe -- and that cannot be guaranteed if the operators are dead.) A few years ago, AECB discovered that a sudden break in one of the steam pipes passing over the roof of the control room could, in fact, kill everyone inside and make the control room unusable. Obviously, this improbable situation could be extremely hazardous for the population at large.

"At first, AECB wanted Hydro-Quebec to relocate the steam pipes, but Hydro-Quebec argued that this would be too expensive. Instead they offered to make some substantial alterations to the interior design of the building so as to minimize the effects of such a break in the steam pipes, and to carefully monitor the pipes so as to detect any weakening which might (or might not) occur before such a break would happen. Those corrective actions are still being carried out. Whether they are adequate to eliminate the possibility of a catastrophic accident caused by a steam pipe rupture is a matter of judgment.

"One of the most serious kinds of accidents in any nuclear reactor is a Loss of Coolant Accident, or LOCA. It is caused by a pipe break or an open valve, allowing the water normally used to remove the heat from the core of the reactor to escape. Without adequate cooling, the core of the reactor will overheat and fission products will be released from the damaged fuel, many of them in the form of radioactive gases and vapours. If these materials escape into the environment in large enough quantities, a nuclear catastrophe will result.

"Every CANDU reactor has an Emergency Core Cooling System (ECCS) which is supposed to flood the core of the reactor with ordinary water in case of a large LOCA to prevent it from overheating. Sometimes, however, the ECCS is not available. The AECB allows the ECCS to be unavailable for up to eight hours in any given year, and in some cases it is unavailable for a much longer period of time. If a large LOCA were to happen at such a time, serious core damage could occur and a nuclear catastrophe could result.

"The first LOCA in a Canadian nuclear generating station was at Pickering, just outside of Toronto, in 1983, when a pressure tube burst without warning in the core of the reactor. A few years earlier, nuclear experts had insisted that a pressure tube could not burst suddenly, because it would begin to leak long before it would break, giving the operators enough time to shut the reactor down and correct the situation. But the experts were wrong.

"Fortunately, it was not a very large LOCA, and the ECCS was not needed to keep the fuel from overheating. Most of the fuel remained undamaged and so not much radioactivity was released. However, repairs to the core of the Pickering reactor took four years and cost more than 500 million dollars. All of the pressure tubes had to be replaced, since many of them were showing signs of serious deterioration and some were developing blisters. If several pressure tubes had burst at the same time, a much more frightening situation would have to be dealt with.

"All CANDU reactors have pressure tubes, and all of them deteriorate with time. But the cost of replacing all the pressure tubes is so great that Ontario Hydro has decided to shut down some of its reactors permanently rather than spend the money needed to repair them. At Gentilly-2, until recently, Hydro-Quebec was also planning to replace all the pressure tubes; but now, to save money, they have decided to try something less expensive -- to re-adjust the "garter springs" which support the pressure tubes inside the core of the reactor, so they will not sag as much and, hopefully, will not develop the same kind of blisters that were seen in the pressure tubes at Pickering. This approach does not halt or reverse the deterioration of the pressure tubes, but it will perhaps slow it down.

"In December, 1994, a second LOCA occurred at a Canadian nuclear reactor. This time, it was not a pressure tube, but a relief valve that broke at Pickering.As the superheated mixture of water and steam escaped through the broken valve, a powerful vibration shook the pipe so hard that it broke, resulting in a large LOCA that required -- for the first time in Canadian history -- the use of the ECCS to prevent damage to the nuclear fuel. Similarly accidents involving broken relief valves in CANDU reactors have also occurred in , and -- in May 1995 -- at one of the Bruce reactors in . In these situations, however, the vibrations did not result in broken pipes.

"In June 1995, the AECB made public its analysis of these accidents. They have concluded that a similar accident could occur at any time at Gentilly-2, and that the resulting vibrations would very likely result in either broken pipes or damage to other valves, thus resulting in a serious LOCA. Hydro-Quebec has made no statement about the situation, and may not agree with the AECB as to the possibility of such an accident or the necessity of undertaking the necessary repair work which would involve redesigning that portion of the pressure relief system."

ccnr.org/Gentilly_Safety.html

#gentilly2 #candu #nuclear #southkorea #ontario #nuclearplants #canada #waterislife #renewablesnow

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1326 followers · 17326 posts · Server kolektiva.social

considers reopening power station

by Philip Authier, August 10, 2023

QUEBEC – "Hydro-Québec is currently studying the possibility of reopening the mothballed Gentilly-2 nuclear plant in to boost ’s available power resources in the face of soaring demand.

"On Thursday, Hydro officials confirmed the news, first reported by the Journal de Montréal .

"'Concerning the Gentilly-2 station, an evaluation on the current state of the station is underway, to evaluate our options and to feed our reflection on Quebec’s future energy offering,' the utility said in a statement to the Montreal Gazette.

"The new CEO of Hydro-Québec, , is already on the record saying he has 'an open mind (on future options) given the context of a strong increase in demand,' the statement added.

"'We are evaluating different possible options to increase the production of clean electricity. It would be irresponsible at this time to exclude certain energy sectors.'

"In 2012, the government endorsed a recommendation from Hydro-Québec to close Gentilly-2, a reactor, mainly owing to the high costs of upgrading the installation. It cost Hydro-Québec $80 million to shut down the plant.

"With a capacity of 675 megawatts, the Gentilly-2 reactor started producing power in 1981."

Source:
msn.com/en-ca/news/canada/hydr

#hydroquebec #gentilly2 #nuclear #becancour #quebec #michaelsabia #partiquebecois #candu #nuclearplants #environment #waterislife #NuclearWaste

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1326 followers · 17325 posts · Server kolektiva.social

profiting off reliance on fuel

Aug 11, 2023

"Russia sold about $1.7 billion in nuclear products to firms in the U.S. and , according to trade data and experts. The purchases occurred as the West has leveled stiff sanctions on Moscow over its 2022 invasion of Ukraine, blocking imports of such Russian staples as oil, gas, vodka and caviar.

"The West has been reluctant to target Russia’s nuclear exports, however, because they play key roles in keeping reactors humming. Russia supplied the U.S. nuclear industry with about 12% of its last year, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Europe reported getting about 17% of its uranium in 2022 from Russia.

"Reliance on nuclear power is expected to grow as nations embrace alternatives to fossil fuels. Nuclear power plants produce no emissions, though experts warn that nuclear energy comes with the risk of reactor meltdowns and the challenge of how to safely store . There are about 60 reactors under construction around the world — 300 more are in the planning stages."

altoonamirror.com/news/2023/08

#russia #us #nuclear #europe #uranium #radioactive #waste #nuclearplants #environment #waterislife #corruption #corporatism #lies

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1326 followers · 17324 posts · Server kolektiva.social

insecure process sensor systems may have affected the plant site

The compromise of Chernobyl’s process sensor readings reinforces the immediate need for the government and industry cybersecurity communities to address the cybersecurity gaps in control system field devices

by Joe Weiss, Aug. 11, 2023

"Process sensor systems include the physical transducer, conversion electronics, laptops/servers, calibrators, etc. Compromising any of those elements can cause the apparent sensor reading to be wrong. Unfortunately, when it comes to OT cybersecurity, process sensor readings are too often assumed to be uncompromised, authenticated and correct. It should be evident this is not the case. Even worse, in industries like , , /#gas, , etc., the cybersecurity of process sensors is effectively ignored."

controlglobal.com/blogs/unfett

#hacking #chernobyl #nuclear #electric #water #oil #Pipelines #infosec #CyberSecurity #nuclearplants #infrastructure #flaws

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1326 followers · 17327 posts · Server kolektiva.social

plant faces ongoing challenge of managing concrete degradation

by Angeljean Chiaramida, July 12, 2023

"A 2023 report shows concrete degradation has expanded from seven to 10 structures at the Seabrook plant.

"Discovered and reported by NextEra’s personnel in 2009, is a slow-developing type of degradation that can occur in some when moisture is present. Found most often in dams and bridges, ASR manifests as micro-cracking, staining, expansion and deformation of concrete.

"So far, the ’s repeated inspections determined ASR in Seabrook Station’s structures poses no immediate threat to public safety."

seacoastonline.com/story/news/

#seabrook #nuclear #asr #concrete #nrc #nuclearplants #newhampshire #seacoastnh #noevacuationpossibleinsummer

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1042 followers · 13941 posts · Server kolektiva.social

is good for you? The fringe viewpoint gains ground in the Trump administration

by Patrick Malone February 27, 2019

"These assertions [of "] stand scientific consensus on its head. Most experts say to the contrary that even low doses of radiation cause cell damage that years later can promote uncontrolled cell growth and replication, and that children and fetuses are particularly susceptible to harm. That seven-decade-old view was reaffirmed as recently as last April [2018] in a study by a congressionally chartered nonprofit organization, the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement.

"The study, overseen by a dozen experts from the government, academia, and industry, and funded by the NRC, considered 29 contemporary scientific studies of the effects of low-dose radiation in reaffirming that even low-level radiation should be avoided to the extent possible.

"'There is clear evidence of excess risks for many cancer types, such as bladder, breast, colon, stomach and lung,' from exposure to excess radiation, the report said. It acknowledged that at lower doses the relationship is less certain, but noted that several long studies of medical outcomes for tuberculosis patients given x-ray imaging known as fluoroscopy collectively showed “a straight-line relationship between breast tissue [radiation] dose and breast cancer, adding substantial weight to the judgment on the use of the [existing] model for radiation protection.'

"It added that 'there was no conclusive evidence' to refute the linear, or direct cause and effect, 'relationship for many of the risks attributable to low-level ionizing radiation' – essentially endorsing the mainstream insistence on low-dose protections as a prudent, cautionary measure. The NRC members will consider the report as they deliberate about the SARI members’ petition, McIntyre said."

publicintegrity.org/national-s

#radiation #hormesis #lnt #radiationhormesis #nuclear #industry #propaganda #fukushima #nodumping #FukushimaDaiIchi #nuclearplants

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
1033 followers · 13862 posts · Server kolektiva.social

Are Power Plants Ready for ?

As shorelines creep inland and worsen, nuclear reactors around the world face new challenges.

by John Vidal, August 21, 2018

"The outer defensive wall of what is expected to be the world’s most expensive nuclear power station is taking shape on the shoreline of the choppy gray waters of the Bristol Channel in western England.

"By the time the US $25-billion nuclear station is finished, possibly in 2028, the concrete seawall will be 12.5 meters high, 900 meters long, and durable enough, the UK regulator and French engineers say, to withstand the strongest storm surge, the greatest tsunami, and the highest sea-level rise.

"But will it? Independent nuclear consultant , a former adviser to the UK government and , points out that the tidal range along this stretch of coast is one of the highest in the world, and that is heavy. Indeed, observers reported serious flooding on the site in 1981 when an earlier nuclear power station had to be shut down for a week, following a and a . However well built, says Roche, the new seawall does not adequately take into account rise due to climate change.

" can be catastrophic to a nuclear power plant because it can knock out its electrical systems, disabling its cooling mechanisms and leading to overheating and possible and a dangerous release of . Flooding at the plant in Japan as a result of the March 2011 tsunami caused severe damage to several of the plant’s reactors and only narrowly avoided a catastrophic release of radioactivity that could have forced the evacuation of 50 million people.

"In the , where nine nuclear plants are within three kilometers of the and four reactors have been identified by Stanford academics as vulnerable to and sea-level rise, flooding is common, says David Lochbaum, a former nuclear engineer and director of the nuclear safety project at the Union of Concerned Scientists ().

"Lochbaum says over 20 flooding incidents have been recorded at US nuclear plants since the early 1980s. “The most likely [cause of flooding] is the increasing frequency of extreme events,' he says."

Full article:
hakaimagazine.com/features/are

#coastal #nuclear #sealevelrise #storms #HinkleyPointC #peteroche #greenpeace #erosion #Springtide #stormsurge #sealevel #flooding #meltdown #radioactivity #FukushimaDaiIchi #unitedstates #ocean #stormsurges #ucs #extremeweather #ClimateCrisis #nuclearplants #uk #hinkleypoint #CoastalFlooding

Last updated 1 year ago

Norobiik @Norobiik@noc.social · @Norobiik
336 followers · 5490 posts · Server noc.social

"The disaster sounded the alarm on the dangers of . Less than seven months after the accident, then-president decided that the Philippine government would not operate the for 'reasons of safety and economy.' The power plant has since remained dormant and has not produced a single watt of electricity."

is clean. But can the handle its risks?
rappler.com/environment/nuclea

#philippines #nuclear #nuclearpower #bataannuclearpowerplant #bnpp #corazonaquino #nuclearplants #chernobyl

Last updated 1 year ago

Gladwyn d’Souza · @godsouza
109 followers · 1322 posts · Server sfba.social
bs2 · @bsmall2
203 followers · 3668 posts · Server mstdn.jp

are too expensive (and slow) to save the world.
> According to Aho, cutting back on production due to excessively low electricity prices is very rare, but not unheard of.
> ...
> Around 500 megawatt-hours of new wind-generated went online in the country this year alone. Those kinds of developments mean that in future, prices could dip into negative numbers more often than they currently do.
yle.fi/a/74-20032375
/HT @bojacobs

#ElectricityMarket #electricity #nuclearpower #nuclearplants

Last updated 1 year ago

bs2 · @bsmall2
226 followers · 4006 posts · Server mstdn.jp

are too expensive (and slow) to save the world.
> According to Aho, cutting back on production due to excessively low electricity prices is very rare, but not unheard of.
> ...
> Around 500 megawatt-hours of new wind-generated went online in the country this year alone. Those kinds of developments mean that in future, prices could dip into negative numbers more often than they currently do.
yle.fi/a/74-20032375
/HT @bojacobs

#ElectricityMarket #electricity #nuclearpower #nuclearplants

Last updated 1 year ago

Kristoffer Lawson · @Setok
428 followers · 3200 posts · Server attractive.space

I honestly struggle to fathom the logic of shutting down its and replacing them with more … coal. Events like are often quoted. The grand total of people killed by that plant: 1. (And that’s in an area where natural disasters are frequent, unlike Germany).

bbc.com/news/world-europe-6526

#germany #nuclearplants #fukushima

Last updated 1 year ago

Curtis Roberts · @RefractiveComm
15 followers · 50 posts · Server mastodon.energy

“You know what literally saved Christmas? It was the 31 reactors in , including those in . PJM found overperformed and were the difference in avoiding the lights – and heat – going out for millions.”

pennlive.com/opinion/2023/04/h

#nuclear #pjm #Pennsylvania #nuclearplants #NuclearPower #Energy

Last updated 1 year ago

DoomsdaysCW · @DoomsdaysCW
586 followers · 5522 posts · Server kolektiva.social

quake revives debate over nuclear plant being built

By Menelaos Hadjicostis and Jennifer McDermott, AP, February 17, 2023

"A devastating earthquake that toppled buildings across parts of Turkey and neighboring has revived a longstanding debate locally and in neighboring about a large nuclear power station being built on Turkey’s southern Mediterranean coastline.

"The plant’s site in , located some 210 miles (338 kilometers) to the west of the epicenter of the Feb. 6 quake, is being designed to endure powerful tremors and did not sustain any damage or experience powerful ground shaking from the 7.8 magnitude earthquake and aftershocks.

"But the size of the quake — the deadliest in Turkey’s modern history — sharpened existing concerns about the facility being built on the edge of a major fault line."

Read more at: newsobserver.com/news/business

#turkey #syria #cyprus #Akkuyu #nonukes #waterislife #mediterranean #nuclearplants #earthquakes

Last updated 1 year ago