Nukes Up the Hudson
Bad Days at Indian Point
By JEFFREY ST. CLAIR
These are desperate days for Entergy, the big Arkansas-based power conglomerate that owns the frail Indian Point nuclear plant, located on the east bank of the Hudson River outside Buchanan, New York—just twenty-two miles from Manhattan.
First, a scathing report issued in 2005 by a nuclear engineer fingered Indian Point as one of the five worst nuclear plants in the United States, and predicted that its emergency cooling system “is virtually certain to fail.”
This disclosure was hotly followed by the release of a study conducted by the Los Alamos National Laboratory for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission that ominously concluded that the chances of a reactor meltdown increased by a factor of nearly 100 at Indian Point, because the plant’s drainage pits (also known as containment sumps) are “almost certain” to be blocked with debris during an accident.
“The NRC has known about the containment sump problem at Indian Point since September 1996,” said David Lochbaum, a nuclear safety engineer with the Union of Concerned Scientists. “The NRC cannot take more than a decade to fix a safety problem that places millions of Americans at undue risk.”
Link to con.
Saturday, December 13, 2008
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1 comment:
Mr St Clair is badly behind the times. All of the so-called "problems" he writes about are now solved, or were never real in the first place.
I'm amazed at the blatant use of non-fact to create....what?
A conspiracy theory potboiler?
Doomist agitprop?
St. Clair is way off base, we can very wisely ignore him on this.
(Knowledgeable Citizen)
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