Friday, September 28, 2007

NRG Seeks First US Nuclear Plant Permit in Decades


By Chris Baltimore and Lisa Lee
Reuters

Tuesday 25 September 2007

Washington/New York - NRG Energy will file an application with regulators on Tuesday to build two new nuclear reactors in Texas, the first such request in the United States in 29 years, the company said Monday.

The two 1,350-megawatt General Electric advanced boiling water reactors (ABWR) would join two existing reactors at the South Texas nuclear power plant in Bay City, Texas, near Houston.

The filing with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission would be the first complete request to construct new reactors in the United States after Constellation Energy Group Inc and French-owned Areva issued a partial request to build new reactors at the Calvert Cliff Nuclear Power Plant in Lusby, Maryland, in August.

"Being the first to file is important, but the most important thing is to be the first application approved," NRG Chief Executive Officer David Crane told Reuters.

The resurgence of nuclear power in the United States comes as companies seek new generating capacity from energy sources that do not emit carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas blamed for global warming.

The NRC says it expects US companies to file applications for about 30 new combined construction and operating licenses in coming months. If granted by the NRC, the licenses would allow companies to construct and operate a nuclear plant in one fell swoop, minimizing possible regulatory delays.

No applications for new nuclear power plants have been filed since at least 1977, and several planned plants were canceled after the 1979 Three Mile Island accident in Pennsylvania that sparked a backlash against the technology.

Now Dominion Resources, Duke Energy and Southern Co are among the utilities in the process of seeking plant licenses, according to the NRC.

The regulator is expected to take about three years to process applications, and construction could take four years, putting the first new US reactors online sometime around 2015.

High Price, Government Help

Currently, 104 nuclear units are in operation in the United States, contributing about 20 percent of the nation's power.

The price tag to develop NRG's reactors will be US$6 billion to US$7 billion - costs that the company said it could afford only with the incentives provided by the federal government in 2005.

"We would not have even started otherwise. It was created to start a race. We set out to move as quickly as possible," Crane said.

The Energy Policy Act of 2005 authorized a production tax credit of up to US$125 million per year for companies that seek a construction and operating license application by the end of 2008, start construction by the end of 2013 and are operating before 2021.

NRG is the second largest power generator in Texas, behind TXU, and the South Texas Project is the state's largest nuclear reactor. Its two units began operation in 1988 and 1989.

NRG has yet to convince its two municipal utility partners in the existing STP facility to invest in the new reactors.

"We have not made a decision," said Ed Clark, spokesman for Austin Energy. "It will be 2008 before we decide."

A spokeswoman for City Public Service of San Antonio, the second-largest owner of STP, said late last month that no timetable had been set for the utility to make its decision.


Additional reporting by Eileen O'Grady in Houston.


Go to Original

Yucca Fault Line Might Spring Surprise
By Keith Rogers
The Las Vegas Review-Journal

Monday 24 September 2007

Letter, maps suggest it's not where scientists had thought it was.

Bore hole drilling operations at the planned Yucca Mountain nuclear waste site have turned up preliminary evidence that an earthquake fault line passes beneath the place where project officials want to build concrete pads for storing thousands of tons of highly radioactive spent fuel.

A letter and maps from the U.S. Geological Survey obtained last week by the Review-Journal show that the Bow Ridge fault passes directly beneath the footprint of a pad where spent fuel canisters would age or cool down before they are entombed in a maze of tunnels inside the mountain, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas.

Rock core samples extracted by drill rigs about 250 feet below the surface indicate that the fault is hundreds of feet east of where scientists had thought it was.

That means designers either must revamp their plans or show regulators that the so-called aging pad, and possibly nearby buildings where nuclear waste would be handled, can be fortified enough to withstand an offset of the rock layers beneath them, said Bob Loux, executive director of the Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects.

The agency for two decades has been reviewing scientific work and plans for the Yucca Mountain repository. Loux has been an outspoken critic of the Department of Energy project.

"It certainly looks like DOE has encountered a surprise out there, and it certainly speaks to the fact they haven't done the technical work they should have done years ago," Loux said Friday in a telephone interview from Carson City.

"It's going to have to cause some change of the design in the final analysis," Loux said. "It's going to impact the safety case."

The DOE's "11th hour" bore hole drilling operations, as Loux calls them, have been the focus of recent legal wrangling in federal court in Las Vegas. Attorneys for Loux and State Engineer Tracy Taylor asked U.S. District Judge Roger Hunt to make the DOE stop using Nevada's water for cooling and lubricating drill rigs and creating mud to collect rock samples. Hunt denied their request last week.

In the meantime, the DOE had proceeded with the first phase of bore hole work but agreed to stop using the state's water for the second phase, which was in progress until Sept. 6.

The bore holes that were completed, however, might bolster the state's arguments that the site is not safe because of looming earthquake hazards. Other potential natural threats include floods and volcanic activity. The mountain itself is a volcanic-rock ridge formed about 13 million years ago by ash deposited by a nearby volcanic eruption.

A May 21 letter from Kenneth Skipper, chief of the U.S. Geological Survey's Yucca Mountain Project Branch, to Andrew Orrell, senior program manager for DOE's lead laboratory, said: "Preliminary data from the recent drilling phase indicate the location of the Bow Ridge fault in northern Midway Valley may be farther east than projected from previous work in the area."

Skipper's letter goes on to say: "Originally, it was thought that the Bow Ridge fault was west of the proposed aging pads; however, these preliminary drilling results indicate that a large down-to-the-west fault, that could be the Bow Ridge fault, is farther east than originally mapped."

Yucca Mountain Project officials last week said they would try to address questions about design changes and the potential magnitude of the Bow Ridge fault, based on the new, preliminary information from bore hole work.

But late Friday, they sent by e-mail a one paragraph statement repeating the DOE's oft-stated position that it continues to develop the repository's design and construction and operational plans in preparation for its license application to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

While some project scientists are scrambling to complete design of surface facilities, others continue to assess seismic risks in the area.

The problem is that the risk assessment team lacks 65 percent of the facilities' design, leaving much guesswork in their predictions on how cranes, hoists and pools for transferring some spent nuclear fuel assemblies will function if an earthquake strikes.

To meet a self-imposed deadline for submitting a license application to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in June 2008, the team is taking a nontraditional approach to their assessment task. It's based on probabilities that earthquakes will occur.

If calculations show that the probability is too great, then design concepts will have to be modified accordingly. Otherwise, the design will stand.

That's what a project contractor scientist told a presidential oversight panel last week in Las Vegas. The scientist, Michael Frank of Bechtel SAIC Co., said the team expects to know by February what could go wrong with numerous pieces of equipment in the surface facilities' operations, how likely that would be and the potential consequences.

The task, he said, "is a very large effort with a compressed schedule."

A panel consultant, seismologist Leon Reiter, who was at last week's meeting, said there are more than 10 faults within a 20-mile radius of Yucca Mountain that can generate ground motion, including the Solitario Canyon fault just west of the planned repository site. He said the Solitario Canyon fault is capable of producing an earthquake with a magnitude of about 6.5.

Loux, however, is quick to note that the Department of Energy never has produced any blueprints that state officials could review for comments.

Instead, he said, "Everything is conception designs and cartoons."

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