Report Details Near Misses for Nuclear Disasters Across the United States

by Perry Wheeler

May 24, 2016

Washington, DC – Following the 30th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, Greenpeace USA today released a new report on the 166 near misses at U.S. nuclear power plants over the past decade. Of the incidents identified in Nuclear Near Misses: A Decade of Accident Precursors at U.S. Nuclear Plants, 10 are considered by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to be important precursors to a meltdown.

“Contrary to NRC commissioners’ claims, there is nothing safe about the nuclear reactors in the United States,” said Greenpeace Nuclear Policy Analyst Jim Riccio. “Thirty years after Chernobyl and five years after Fukushima, it is clear that these kinds of disasters could absolutely happen here. It is time for the NRC to listen to the whistleblowers within its own ranks and address these longstanding issues and vulnerabilities.”

In addition to the 163 accident precursors or near misses documented by the NRC, Greenpeace identified three significant near misses that NRC risk analysts failed to review under the agency’s Accident Sequence Precursor Program (ASP): the triple meltdown threat to Duke Energy’s Oconee Nuclear Station west of Greenville, South Carolina. According to NRC’s risk analysts, if nearby Jocassee Dam had failed, all three of the nuclear reactors at Oconee were certain to meltdown.

The report identified the following incidents as the top 10 near misses at nuclear plants between 2004-2014:

  1. Browns Ferry 1 in Athens, Alabama. Residual heat removal loop unavailable; valve failure.

  2. Wolf Creek in Burlington, Kansas. Multiple switchyard faults, reactor trip & loss of
    offsite power.

  3. Robinson in Hartsville, South Carolina. Fire causes partial loss of offsite power & reactor
    coolant pump seal cooling challenges.

  4. Fort Calhoun in Fort Calhoun, Nebraska. Fire in safety-related 480 volt electrical breaker due to
    deficient design control. 8 other breakers susceptible.

  5. River Bend in St. Francisville, Louisiana. Loss of normal service water, circulating water &
    feedwater caused by electrical fault.

  6. Oconee 1 in Seneca, South Carolina. Failure of Jocassee Dam would result in a meltdown.

  7. Oconee 2 in Seneca, South Carolina. Failure of Jocassee Dam would result in a meltdown.

  8. Oconee 3 in Seneca, South Carolina. Failure of Jocassee Dam would result in a meltdown.

  9. North Anna 1 in Mineral, Virginia. Dual loss of offsite power caused by earthquake
    AFW pump out of service & failure of Unit 2 EDG.

  10. Byron 2 in Byron, Illinois. Transformer & breaker failures cause Loss of Off Site
    Power, reactor trip and de-energizing of safety buses.

“If the NRC can’t even accurately track near meltdowns why should the public have any confidence that they can prevent them? It’s time to retire these dangerous nuclear plants and end the nuclear era once and for all,” concluded Riccio.

Greenpeace has long advocated for the phase out of nuclear power, and this report supports  that determination.

To read the report, please click here: https://www.greenpeace.org/usa/research/nuclear-energy-power-plant-accidents-united-states/

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Contact: Perry Wheeler, Greenpeace Media Officer, P: 301-675-8766

Perry Wheeler

By Perry Wheeler

Perry Wheeler is a senior communications specialist at Greenpeace USA.

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