4/24/2012 Irvine City Council meeting – San Onofre on agenda

San Onofre nuclear power plant issues are on the agenda for the 4/24/2012 Irvine City Council meeting. World renown independent nuclear and energy experts will be attending.

The meeting is open to the public.  If you live or work in Southern California, you are encouraged to attend.  This is a meeting you don’t want to miss.

Time: Meeting starts at 4:00 pm.  San Onofre is the last item on the agenda.

Location: City Council Chamber, One Civic Center Plaza, Irvine, CA 92606 

Agenda Item 6.2  SAN ONOFRE NUCLEAR GENERATING STATION

1) Review the City Council subcommittee’s draft advocacy letter, revise as deemed appropriate, and authorize its distribution in substantially similar form to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and other interested parties.

2) Receive and file response to questions posed during March 27, 2012 meeting.

See supporting material for above two items.

PUBLIC COMMENTS: (Limited to 3 minutes per speaker) Public comments will be heard at approximately 6:30 p.m. or prior to adjournment, whichever occurs earlier.

For details, see agenda or call city at 949-724-6000.

Posted in Action Alert, City Council, Events, SDG&E, Southern California Edison | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Nuclear Initiative signature drive falls short, but movement towards shutdown grows

Though we maintained optimism until the end that we may qualify our initiative for the November ballot, and while our hopes were bolstered by a recent influx of signatures due to publicity surrounding the anniversary of Fukushima as well as the recent closure of the San Onofre nuclear power plant, on April 16th we reached the end of our circulation period and have fallen considerably short of the over 800,000 signatures we had originally hoped for.

Since the beginning we recognized that this would be an uphill battle. We were also aware that the false and misleading claims made by California’s Legislative Analyst Office (LAO) —claims that were required by law to be printed on the Initiative—of tens of billions of dollars per year in added costs to the state as a result of rolling blackouts due to the closure of these plants would make it very difficult to garner the grassroots support necessary to effectively move forward with a signature drive of this magnitude. Literally every major anti-nuclear organization in California and the U.S. opted out of supporting us as a result of the LAO analysis.

Fortuitously, the recent closure of San Onofre has proven the rolling blackout myth false, along with the outlandish claims of astronomical financial impacts to the state, effectively validating what we have said since the very beginning. Though these revelations occurred too late to undo the damage caused by the LAO analysis, they have breathed new life and new opportunity into our efforts to shutter these plants.

There is still a chance, through court action, that this issue could be placed on the November ballot. There are also many organizations that initially turned away from us that are now reevaluating the possibility of directing their resources towards the closure of California’s nuclear plants in the near future. Our campaign has helped educate the public and provide the foundation necessary to proceed with these efforts.

Thank you to all of our volunteers for their time and effort in gathering signatures. Your efforts have helped propel this crucial issue forward and will not have been made in vain.

Ben Davis Jr., Initiative Proponent
Donna Gilmore, Initiative Coordinator
California Nuclear Initiative
 
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Cascading major design changes caused San Onofre nuclear reactor steam generator failures and radiation leak

Major steam generator design changes by Southern California Edison (SCE) are the likely cause of radiation leaks and unusual accelerated tube wear in the San Onofre nuclear power plant’s four steam generators, states a new study by nuclear expert Arnie Gundersen.

San Onofre has been shut down since January after plant operators discovered radiation leaking into the air. The leak was caused by a tube rupture in one of the new Unit 3 steam generators. Reactor Unit 2 has been offline since January 9th.  Unit 3 has been offline since January 31st, less than one year after it was installed. Both units have premature steam generator tube wear.

No rolling blackouts are predicted for Southern California due to the shutdown.  California’s electric grid operator has developed a number of contingency plans to avoid blackouts. See “California ISO Contingency Plan“.  The annual ISO Transmission Plan states that with San Onofre offline, there are “no stability concerns under normal or emergency condition.”

Nuclear expert Arnie Gundersen reviewed SCE and nuclear industry documents and found a series of cascading major design changes that lead to the steam generator failures:

Typical Combustion Engineering Steam Generator

Typical Combustion Engineering Steam Generator

  • The redesign crammed almost 400 additional tubes into each of the generators.
    • These additional tubes required additional holes be drilled in the “tubesheet,” the critical radiation barrier that serves as an enormous foundation supporting the entire generator.
    • Making room for these additional tubes required the removal of the critical supporting “stay cylinder”. This support pillar was designed to secure the generator and prevent vibration – exactly the kind of vibration that seems to be behind the tube degradation.
    • All of these changes necessitated pressure and flow changes in the generator’s operation.

This Fairewinds Associates study, San Onofre Cascading Steam Generator Failures Created by Edison, is the second in a series commissioned by nuclear watchdog Friends of the Earth.

The study also confirms that both reactor Units 2 and 3 have identical specifications and were subject to identical operating conditions.  SCE has been trying to draw distinctions between the two reactors, but late yesterday admitted that Unit 2 showed “additional minor tube wear” that was “similar to the type of wear that was seen in Unit 3, but at a very low level.”

“Southern California Edison continues to try to downplay the issue, even as they finally admit the truth – there is no difference between reactors 2 and 3 and they have the same problems” said Shaun Burnie nuclear specialist to Friends of the Earth. “This whole crisis arose because of substantive changes made in the design and fabrication of key components. The NRC has to date adopted the Edison position that there is a difference between reactors 2 and 3. That was always wrong and irresponsible and now we have confirmation from Edison about what our analysis has been saying for weeks. Here’s a tip: when your nuclear reactor is springing leaks and radioactive pipes are deteriorating twenty times faster than they should, it’s a big deal, and no amount of nuclear spin by Edison or the NRC can hide that fact,” said Burnie.

The report notes that these dramatic changes were all portrayed to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission as an exact replacement of the original steam generators. The original generators lasted over 20 years, while the new ones were falling apart within less than 20 months. The report also found no difference between Units 2 and 3.

“In Fairewinds’ opinion, the vibration between the tubes caused the steam generator leaks and degradation… and was due to the simultaneous implementation of numerous unreviewed fabrication and design changes to the replacement steam generators by Edison/MHI. The NRC can no longer justify its position of treating the problems at the reactors as separate. A root cause analysis of both reactors – not just unit 3 was always necessary – now Edison have provided the evidence as to why,” author of the report Arnie Gundersen stated.

Gundersen is a 40-year veteran of the nuclear power industry. A former nuclear industry senior vice president, he earned his Bachelor and Master Degrees in nuclear engineering, holds a nuclear safety patent, and was a licensed reactor operator. During his nuclear industry career, Gundersen managed and coordinated projects at 70-nuclear power plants around the country.

Friends of the Earth and local citizen’s groups released a new video ad campaign last week targeting Southern California Edison. The ad calls on citizens to let the utility know that their families come first – and that they must not restart the troubled San Onofre nuclear reactors currently facing serious questions about safety and secrecy. The citizen’s groups include Citizens Oversight Projects, Committee to Bridge the Gap, Physicians for Social Responsibility – Los Angeles, Residents Organized for a Safe Environment (ROSE), San Clemente Green, SanOnofreSafety.org, and the Peace Resource Center of San Diego.

Posted in California ISO, Energy Options, Friends of the Earth, NRC, nuclear power, Radiation Monitoring, SDG&E, Southern California Edison, Steam Generator | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

04/06/2012 Media Kit – San Onofre Press Conference

Other Resources

Posted in Action Alert, Energy Options, Friends of the Earth, NRC, Press Release, SDG&E, Southern California Edison, Steam Generator | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Mail California Nuclear Initiative petitions by April 7th

The last day to mail California Nuclear Initiative (CNI) petitions is this weekend, Saturday April 7th, 2012.  

ACTION #1: Please download and sign the petition and get others to do the same. Gather signatures at markets and large events. Mail petitions no later than April 7th (Easter weekend) so the campaign receives them in time to deliver to the Secretary of State’s Office by April 16th.  Download the petition forms, instructions and other handouts at

http://californianuclearinitiative.com/cni-petition/ or

https://sanonofresafety.org/california-nuclear-initiative/print-petition/

San Onofre is temporarily shut down due to radiation leaks from defective steam generators.

San Onofre has been shut down since January 31st when radiation leaked into the air from a ruptured tube in one of two steam generators in the Unit 3 reactor. Steam generator ruptures can cause meltdowns. We were lucky this time. Both Unit 2 and Unit 3 steam generators tubes are showing years of premature wear. Unit 3 was installed less than a year ago. Unit 2 was installed less than two years ago. Southern California Edison is working around the clock to find a way to put these defective generators back on-line. And given the track record of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission that will probably happen.

ACTION #2: It’s up to us to shut these plants down, so please help get the word out. There are many news articles about San Onofre right now. Please post comments on these articles, recommending people go to the CaliforniaNuclearInitiative.com website or the SanOnofreSafety.org website to download and mail petitions by April 7th.

 California has plenty of power without these nuclear plants.

The good news is, we have documents showing we do not need these nuclear plants for power in California and that blackouts are extremely unlikely this summer without San Onofre — although you would never know it from the scare tactic press releases.

ACTION #3: It’s time to educate the public with the facts. Share this information with the public, post comments on news articles correcting the “misinformation”. Include this link so people will have the data to backup your comments: https://sanonofresafety.org/energy-options/

Help spread the word.

With all the news media coverage of the one-year anniversary of Fukushima and the coverage of the San Onofre shutdown, citizens are more eager than ever to shut down these plants. However, they often do not know about the CNI petition.

ACTION #4: We need your help to get the word out about the petition. Please forward this information to others, post to Facebook, twitter and other social media sites.

Stay Updated.

ACTION #5: To continue to stay updated on issues about San Onofre and other California nuclear power related issues, recommend people follow or subscribe to the mailing list at https://sanonofresafety.org/

Thank you for your support. We can’t do this without you.

 
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4/6/2012 NRC Chairman to visit San Onofre

San Onofre Crisis Update: Energy Watchdogs, Community Members React to Planned Visit by NRC Chair

Demand robust, transparent and thorough investigation of urgent safety problems

Washington, D.C. and San Clemente, Calif. – The ongoing crisis at the troubled San Onofre nuclear reactors entered a new phase today, as Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chair Gregory Jaczko announced he will visit the plant this Friday, April 6th. Concerned organizations and community members reacted by demanding Jaczko announce a new policy of openness and require a full determination of what went wrong.

The two nuclear reactors at San Onofre, operated by Southern California Edison, have been shut down for more than two months following a radiation leak and the discovery of severely damaged equipment. Tubes in all four, new steam generators at both San Onofre reactors showed significant deterioration, which could lead to a serious release of radioactivity in the event of rupture.

“Chairman Jaczko needs to know that the citizens of Southern California are watching,” said Gary Headrick with San Clemente Green. “We deserve answers, and we better get them before they even think about turning these reactors back on. If the Nuclear Regulatory Commission wants any credibility in this town, they need to know they can’t sweep shoddy equipment and radiation leaks under the rug.”

Jaczko confirmed his plans in a letter to local organizations working to address the serious threats the reactors pose to the health and safety of southern Californians. He has agreed to meet with concerned, local organizations in San Clemente, a city near the reactor site, at 4:45 p.m. — at the end of his visit Friday. The NRC chair will hold a press conference at 3:00 p.m. Local groups will be holding a press conference on Friday morning at 10 a.m. at the entrance to the reactor site to explain their opposition to the San Onofre nuclear reactors and their concerns over the current problems and investigations.

A report last week by one of the nation’s leading independent nuclear engineers revealed that serious unresolved safety problems at San Onofre could lead to significant radiation releases if the plant is allowed to restart. The paper also documented that Edison misled the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission about changes made to the plant, which have led to unforeseen and undiagnosed safety problems. The report is online at:

http://libcloud.s3.amazonaws.com/93/fa/7/1255/Steam_Generator_Failures_at_San_Onofre.pdf

The NRC and Edison are conducting an investigation into the malfunctions at San Onofre’s reactors, yet it appears that the investigation does not include a thorough “root cause” analysis into what caused the problems – which the report concludes is essential. Without knowing what caused the damage, it’s impossible to assess the true extent of the problems, or what can be done to stop it happening again.

“Chairman Jaczko’s visit to San Onofre underscores the severity of the crisis, but you don’t get points just for showing up,” said Damon Moglen of Friends of the Earth. “We got here because of Edison’s culture of secrecy at San Onofre and that has to change. Edison has made its agenda clear: they want to restart these reactors as soon as possible, which would mean profits but not public safety. The public is looking to the NRC to get to the bottom of this crisis given the magnitude of the safety problems at the plant, band-aid solutions and empty assurances from Edison will not be good enough.”

Friends of the Earth and a variety of local citizens’ groups released a new ad campaign this week targeting Southern California Edison. The ad calls on citizens to let the utility know that their families come first – and that it must not restart the troubled San Onofre nuclear reactors currently facing serious questions about safety and secrecy. The citizens’ groups include Citizens Oversight Projects, Committee to Bridge the Gap, Physicians for Social Responsibility – Los Angeles, Residents Organized for a Safe Environment (ROSE), San Clemente Green, SanOnofreSafety.org, and the Peace Resource Center of San Diego. It is online at:

http://www.foe.org/news/archives/2012-04-new-television-ad-highlights-san-onofre-reactor-problems
Posted in Events, Friends of the Earth, NRC, nuclear power, Safety Allegations, Southern California Edison, Steam Generator | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

San Onofre radiation leak

This ad campaign follows report detailing Edison safety failures and regulators’ intervention at troubled nuclear reactors

A new television ad campaign targeting Southern California Edison calls on residents to let the utility know that their families come first — and that it must not restart the troubled San Onofre nuclear reactors, which are currently closed due to serious safety problems.

The ad will run all week in strong rotation at major cable news outlets in the Los Angeles and San Diego media markets. [View the ad above.]

“Why is Southern California Edison trying to reopen the plant, covering up evidence of more reactor defects?,” the ad’s narrator asks. “Profits? Demand that the safety of your family come first. Keep the San Onofre nuclear reactors shut down.”

The ad parallels the threat from San Onofre’s troubled reactors with the nuclear disaster in Fukushima, Japan — and notes that eight million Americans live within 50 miles of San Onofre, the distance the U.S. government advised should be evacuated in the Japan disaster.

report released last week by one of the nation’s leading independent nuclear engineers revealed serious unresolved safety problems with the steam generators at San Onofre’s two aging nuclear reactors and warned the problems could lead to accidents and significant radiation releases if the reactors are allowed to restart. The paper also documented that Edison misled the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission about changes made to the reactors, failing to disclose differences between old and new steam generators that could seriously compromise the safety of the reactors.

Hours after the report was released, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced that the reactors would stay offline until the cause of the major damage to the steam generators was identified and corrective action taken. However, Southern California Edison has restated its commitment to turning the reactors back on as soon as possible.

“The Nuclear Regulatory Commission knows these reactors need to stay offline, and Southern California families know it too,” said Damon Moglen, climate and energy project director at Friends of the Earth. “But Southern California Edison is pushing ahead. That’s unacceptable, especially after it was its deception that led to this dangerous situation. People deserve better than to have their power company racing to restart dangerous nuclear reactors after one sprang a radioactive leak and when both threaten much worse.”

The ad was paid for by Friends of the Earth. It was endorsed by Citizens Oversight Projects, Committee to Bridge the Gap, Physicians for Social Responsibility — Los Angeles, Residents Organized for a Safe Environment (ROSE), San Clemente Green, SanOnofreSafety.org, and the Peace Resource Center of San Diego, all groups representing local residents endangered by the San Onofre reactors.

Nuclear watchdog Friends of the Earth has been campaigning on the dangers of nuclear power since its founding in 1969.

Posted in Friends of the Earth, NRC, nuclear power, Southern California Edison, Steam Generator, Video | Tagged , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

No blackouts with San Onofre shut down

There will be no rolling blackouts this summer with San Onofre shut down. California’s electric grid operator has many options to prevent this.  The California Independent System Operator (ISO) on 3/22/2012 presented this list of various actions that would mitigate the outage risk:

3/22/2012 California ISO audio of Briefing on Summer 2012 Operations Preparedness

This 3/20/12 letter from S. David Freeman to the President of the ISO, Bob Foster, supports this:

“…[Bob], you and I have discussed how simple load management such as cycling air conditioners can reduce peak loads by large amounts. And you know we have all worked together to assure that blackouts never again happen in California. Under the leadership of the ISO, California is not and cannot be one power plant away from rolling blackouts…

… [the ISO should] put in place the efficiency and load management programs, that will in fact ‘keep the lights on’.  

With that approach the ‘worst’ that can happen is that consumers would save a bunch of money.

The problems at San Onofre are serious enough to require the NRC to dispatch a team to the plant site to discover the cause of the problems. They don’t need the pressure caused by the fear of rolling blackouts fanned by the spokesman for the ISO. On the contrary both the utility and the NRC need to be encouraged to take all the time needed to find out the full extent of the problem and fix it if that is possible and cost effective.”

Mr. Freeman served as general manager of large public power agencies for two decades, including the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power (DWP) from 1997 to 2001. Under his leadership, the DWP kept the rates level and lights on during California’s power crisis.  He was also the Trustee involved in creating the original ISO Charter. He created and ran the California Power Authority, managed the Sacramento Municipal Utility District after the closure of the Rancho Seco Nuclear Power Plant, managed the Tennessee Valley Authority, and authored “Winning Our Energy Independence: An Energy Insider Shows How.
Print California has Excess Power without Nuclear – No Blackouts
Posted in California ISO, Energy Options, SDG&E | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Edison wants utility customers to pay for seismic studies

Plant operator Southern California Edison is asking that utility customers, not shareholders, fund at least $64 million for a study that would survey seismic faults near the San Onofre plant.

On Friday, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission ordered safety changes for U.S. nuclear plants, including requirements they better assess earthquake risks and cope with incidents they were not initially designed to handle, such as prolonged power blackouts or damage to multiple reactors at the same time.

See details at San Onofre studies wait for answers – UTSanDiego 03/10/2012

Posted in CPUC, Earthquake, NRC, Southern California Edison | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

California doesn’t know if Fukushima can happen here

Special to the Mercury News

Can what happened in Fukushima happen in California? As the anniversary of Japan’s tragic earthquake nears, the California Energy Commission, in its official report to the governor and the Legislature, presented a shocking response to this urgent question:

The state of California has no opinion.

See story at Ben Davis Jr.: California doesn’t know if Fukushima can happen here – Mercury News 03/09/2012

See California Energy Commission February 8, 2012 IEPR meeting transcript. Ben Davis Jr.’s questions and comments start on Page 114.

Posted in Calif Nuclear Initiative, California Energy Commission | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment