News Archive 2002

EDITORIAL / Closing Indian Point Wouldn't Ease Terrorism Risk

05/10/2002
Newsday
(Copyright Newsday Inc., 2002)

The possibility of a Sept. 11-type terrorist attack on the Entergy Corp.'s two nuclear power plants at Indian Point, less than 30 miles up the Hudson from Manhattan, has ignited new demands that the plants be shut down for safety's sake. On balance, that's a bad idea: The cost of a shut-down - in lost electricity supplies, in the increased cost of power and in new air pollution from other plants - is far greater than the entirely speculative risk of an assault.

But while the reactors, by design, may be substantially shielded from an airliner attack, the spent fuel that has been removed from the plants and stored in water-filled pools on the site is not. Transferring as many of the old fuel rods as feasible from the pools, where they cool down for a few years after removal from a reactor, and dispersing them in super-strong shipping/storage casks would make them less of a target for an attack.

Because Indian Point's pools are near full, Entergy wants to move some of the fuel into casks anyway, to make room for newly spent fuel rods coming out of its reactors. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission should encourage it to remove from the pools as many of the rods as are sufficiently cooled, to reduce the quantity stored in the more vulnerable cooling pools.

With the right kind of casks, the fuel would be all the readier for shipping to a short- or long-term storage site. The House helped bring that day closer Wednesday, when it approved using federal land at Yucca Mountain in Nevada as a permanent nuclear-waste depository.

Entergy insists the spent-fuel pools are secure and, being relatively small, difficult targets. But with Indian Point adjoining a major population center, extra precautions are in order.

Closing the plants is not. The reactor buildings are designed to survive extreme stresses and, even if shuttered, the spent fuel would still be there. Replacement power sources would burn oil or gas, degrading the region's air. And New York can ill afford to lose the low-cost power from Indian Point at a time when summer supplies are already perilously tight.

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Corporate Profile: Entergy owns, operates and manages nine nuclear generation plants that are among the safest and most professionally operated energy facilities in the United States. Under Entergy's experienced management, several of these plants are rated among the best performing in the nation by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
For more information, visit www.entergy-nuclear.com.

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