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PO
Box 61051 Durham,
NC 27715-1051 Phone: (919) 416-5077 Fax: (919) 286-3985 ncwarn@ncwarn.org www.ncwarn.org |
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Jim Warren
June 23, 2005 919-416-5077
7th Consecutive Look Finds More Fire Risks
at N-Plant
Group Says
Owner Dodging Corrections; Urges Legislators Touring Shearon Harris to Look
Beyond New Paint, Guards & Guns
DURHAM, NC – A federal
report shows scores of additional pumps, valves and electrical cables
unprotected against fire at the Shearon Harris nuclear plant – the seventh
inspection since 2002 finding the plant in violation of federal
regulations. The news comes on top of recent reports showing the Wake
County power plant ranks worst nationally in two other fire protection
categories, as well as in the risk of a reactor accident due to loss of offsite
power.
Environmental group NC WARN
said the report shows that Progress Energy continues a years-long pattern of
delaying corrective measures needed to protect the reactor’s cooling system
from fire. The group charged that instead of protecting the reactor,
Progress is one of several utilities pushing to abolish federal rules put in
place after an Alabama plant was largely destroyed in 1975.
A number of state legislators are planning to tour the
Harris plant late today, apparently as part of an effort by Progress Energy to
gain support for a new reactor at the site – along with state subsidies. In April, the company announced its interest
in a new reactor, part of a national push to revive the flagging nuclear
industry. NC WARN today urged state
officials not to be wooed by appearances at the plant.
“Shearon now ranks worst nationally in 2 of 3 key fire
compliance categories … and probably the third as well,” said NC WARN Executive Director Jim Warren today. “Progress Energy should fix these high-risk
problems instead of punting them down the road year after year while pressing
the NRC to gut the regulations altogether.”
Fires at nuclear plants
constitute 50% of the industry-wide risk of reactor meltdown, according to
studies by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). The Licensee Event Report revealed today
indicates Harris’ violations – involving combustible and missing fire barriers
– won’t be corrected for at least two years; similar violations have lingered
since the mid-1990s. The report to the
NRC indicates at least 14 separate areas with unprotected safety
equipment. Many of these involve the
primary loop that circulates cooling water through the reactor. It was the seventh consecutive inspection
since 2002 in which workers found additional unprotected equipment.
Last month, it was learned that Harris ranks first
nationally in a separate critical facet of fire protection: reliance on another
faulty fire barrier that wraps electric cables. Tests from Sandia Laboratory show that the product, called Hemyc, fails within minutes, while
Harris uses it as a three-hour fire barrier.
Progress told The News &
Observer it intends to test the material itself in August because Harris’
barrier uses a different coating than the one tested by Sandia. The NRC said the materials are identical.
“Progress will never test that material,” predicted Warren.
“They’re trying to run out the clock by changing the federal
rules.” A Progress spokesman
called the failing fire barrier “a long term” safety concern. But Warren points out that the miles of
electric cables at Harris are already 20 to 30 years old, and an electrical
short could start a fire that disables key safety equipment.
In place of the physical fire protections required by
law, Shearon Harris relies on human fire patrols. It also illegally relies on over 100 complex written procedures –
the most of any U.S. plant – that instruct
technicians to run through the plant if control cables have burned away, and to
manually operate valves and breakers needed to shut down the reactor. The NRC has allowed some plants to remain in
such violation for years, and now appears poised to succumb to industry
pressure to retroactively legalize all the noncompliant conditions. Warren said Progress has more to gain by
the rules changes than any other utility, but the region is being placed under
greater risk.
One local resident wrote to legislators urging
skepticism about touring the Harris plant because the multiple safety problems
won’t be visibly obvious. “Judging
the safety of the Harris plant by just looking at it is like walking around
Enron's headquarters and then saying it must be a well-run company,” said
Liz Cullington of Pittsboro. “This
is especially true when that visit is pre-arranged, and the janitorial staff
has gone through and the security staff is cued to look observant.”
In the face of an intense public relations offensive
pushing for new taxpayer-funded reactors, the industry continues to mute news
coverage of numerous reactor emergencies and other safety failures. Warren added that, “most news items skate past
safety as a problem of the past. But
Harris' growing list of troubles is central to the question of building a new
reactor – and to the current safety of the regional public.”
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See the fire inspection report: http://www.ncwarn.org/Campaigns/NuclearWatchdog/Fire.pdf