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bananas

(27,509 posts)
Tue Nov 4, 2014, 09:13 AM Nov 2014

Climate change stopping nuclear power? Lake Michigan Rough waves cause reactor shutdown!

http://www.wzzm13.com/story/news/local/lakeshore/2014/11/03/nuclear-reactors-taken-offline-amid-rough-waters/18409823/

Nuclear reactors taken offline amid rough waters
11:31 a.m. EST November 3, 2014

LAKE TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) -- Both reactors at the Donald C. Cook Nuclear Plant in southwestern Michigan were taken offline amid rough waters on Lake Michigan.

Indiana Michigan Power says in a statement the action was taken early Saturday after excessive debris from large lake swells damaged several water screens that remove debris carried in through three 16-foot cooling water intake tunnels for the plant in Berrien County's Lake Township.

The power company says the "conservative decision" to remove the units from service was made when an adequate cooling water supply to the non-nuclear side of the plant couldn't be guaranteed. It says both units "are in a safe and stable condition."

Indiana Michigan Power says there was no interruption of service to customers. It says the reactors remained offline Monday morning.


Via http://nuclear-news.net/2014/11/04/climate-change-stopping-nuclear-power-rough-waves-cause-reactor-shutdown/
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Climate change stopping nuclear power? Lake Michigan Rough waves cause reactor shutdown! (Original Post) bananas Nov 2014 OP
I had to read it twice before I realized it was Lake Michigan. bananas Nov 2014 #1
There was a strong north wind that blew straight down the lake. postulater Nov 2014 #4
Jack Frost plays havoc with U.S. nuclear power plants bananas Nov 2014 #2
Shut them all down. Thanks for your persistence to educate, bananas. nt Mnemosyne Nov 2014 #3

bananas

(27,509 posts)
1. I had to read it twice before I realized it was Lake Michigan.
Tue Nov 4, 2014, 09:21 AM
Nov 2014

I assumed it was on the ocean.

This is another way climate change is making nuclear energy even less useful.

A number of reactors have had to shut down because of heat and drought - the rivers and lakes they're on had water levels too low or too hot for them to operate.

I know of at least one reactor which shut down because the water froze - something which was never supposed to happen.

postulater

(5,075 posts)
4. There was a strong north wind that blew straight down the lake.
Tue Nov 4, 2014, 10:06 AM
Nov 2014

20-30 foot waves in the middle of the lake.

Chicago Lakeshore Drive was pretty bad.

bananas

(27,509 posts)
2. Jack Frost plays havoc with U.S. nuclear power plants
Tue Nov 4, 2014, 09:27 AM
Nov 2014

Here's an article about past shutdowns due to snow and ice:

http://www.beyondnuclear.org/nuclear-reactors-whatsnew/2014/1/29/jack-frost-plays-havoc-with-us-nuclear-power-plants.html

Jack Frost plays havoc with U.S. nuclear power plants
January 29, 2014

Winter weather conditions in January 2014 pointed out how nuclear power plants are unreliable power generators just when communities dependent upon electricity need them the most.

Nuclear power plants completely rely upon the electric grid system to power all reactor safety systems during power operations. If the grid is unstable or interrupted, nuclear power plants shut down and are unavailable until stable grid conditions are restored. Take for example, January 21, 2014, both Units 1 and 2 at the Calvert Cliffs nuclear generating station in Lusby, Maryland automatically shut down when snow and ice caused an electrical short-circuit in a ventilation louver. The electrical power supply shorted out to reactor safety systems including motors needed to move both reactors’ control rods, a malfunction in Unit 1’s main turbine control system and the circulating-water pumps for Unit 2. Emergency diesel generators for both units started up to provide backup power and successfully shut down the reactors.

Nuclear power plants also require tremendous amounts of water to keep the hot reactor cores from overheating during power operations and following shutdown. Ice flows getting sucked into the intake structures restricts vital cooling water to the reactor causing nukes to shut down like what happened to New Jersey’s Salem nuclear power plant in 2010. Since the nukes have to be located on or near large water systems like rivers, lakes, reservoirs or the ocean, they also have to be protect the intake structures from ice. When these protective measures are reduced or lost, the reactors have to shut down. This just happened on January 9, 2014 when the Fort Calhoun nuclear power station on the Missouri River had to manually shut down power production because sub-freezing weather caused an ice buildup on one of six flood protection gates preventing the gate from closing. Fort Calhoun had just restarted after being closed for nearly three years after flood waters surrounded the nuclear power plant for weeks.

An investigation is still ongoing into whether cold weather was the cause of the 23 day shutdown of the Pennsylvania's Beaver Valley nuclear power station on January 6th when a ruptured fire suppression system sprayed Unit 1's electric transformer with water which immediately froze, failed and caused the unit to shutdown.

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