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US nuke power plants safe from
air strike-industry
Reuters
December 23, 2002
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The nation's 103 operating nuclear
power plant reactors could withstand a direct hit by a fuel-laden
commercial airliner with no release of deadly radiation, a
U.S. nuclear industry study said Monday.
Last month, the FBI warned that the U.S. nuclear industry
could be the target of an attack by Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda
network as a way to inflict massive casualties, psychological
trauma and severe economic damage.
Since the Sept. 11 attacks on New York and Washington, lawmakers
and activist groups have raised repeated concerns that a similar
strike against a nuclear power plant could spew radioactive
material that would kill or sicken thousands of nearby residents.
A study commissioned by the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI)
concluded such an attack could damage the thick concrete walls
that surround nuclear reactors, but would not breach them.
Reactors are housed in structures designed to contain the
equivalent of a small nuclear explosion.
The study was not sanctioned by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
the federal agency charged with protecting nuclear plants.
It has its own study underway, but has not set a release date,
an NRC spokesman said.
The $1 million industry study, funded by the Energy Department,
used computer modeling to simulate a strike by an airliner
flying low to the ground at 350 miles per hour, similar to
the speed of the commercial jetliner that struck the Pentagon
more than a year ago, said the NEI, the nuclear industry's
main lobbying group.
The study showed that such a strike would damage a plant's
ability to generate electricity, but "public health and
safety would be protected," NEI President Joe Colvin
said.
Containment structures, used fuel storage pools and containers
used to hold radioactive byproducts would withstand the impact
"despite some concrete crushing and bent steel,"
NEI said in a statement.
The results "validate the industry's confidence that
nuclear power plants are robust and protect the fuel from
impacts of a large commercial aircraft," Colvin said.
STUDY ANALYZES ENGINE IMPACT
The new study's results also apply to the damage done by
an aircraft engine, which packs more punch than the fuselage
because of its density. The 9,500-pound engine size assumed
in the study is typical of most commercial airlines in service,
NEI said.
The study assumed that a fully fuel-laden Boeing 767-400
struck a containment structure at its maximum take-off weight
of 450,000 pounds, even though some of that fuel would be
consumed en route to any nuclear facility, NEI said.
The Boeing 767 is the most widely used "wide-body"
commercial aircraft in the U.S. fleet.
The computer models showed no part of an airplane's engine,
fuselage, wings or jet fuel entered the containment area,
NEI said. The industry group did not release the full report,
citing security concerns.
Rep. Edward Markey, a Massachusetts Democrat and long-time
critic of the nuclear industry, criticized the report's reliance
on virtual computer models.
"It is less than comforting to know that the nuclear
energy industry has computer models predicting that a virtual
airplane carrying a virtual load of fuel ... would be unlikely
to result in a virtual release of radioactivity," Markey
said in a statement.
CRITICS SAY PLANTS VULNERABLE
Activist groups said they were not convinced that nuclear
plants are safe from aircraft attack.
"There are a lot of safety equipment outside of the
containment that would disable and potentially lead to a meltdown,"
said Jim Riccio, a nuclear expert with Greenpeace. The greatest
chance of causing a plant meltdown comes from a loss of off-site
power, Riccio said.
"If an airplane strikes one of these nuclear sites it's
going to be in a world of hurt. And only the grace of God
is going to prevent a meltdown," he said.
Critics say that in addition to the nuclear core, another
security risk is the large amount of spent fuel waste stored
at most of the nation's nuclear power plants. Some 2,000 metric
tons of nuclear waste is produced every year by the power
plants, which must store the waste on site until a federal,
underground repository in Nevada is completed.
Several Democrats unsuccessfully pushed earlier this year
to federalize the privately employed security guards at nuclear
power plants as another safety precaution. Utilities and the
NRC opposed the proposal.
Some U.S. nuclear power plants, such as the Indian Point
plant about 25 miles north of New York City, have had National
Guard troops and other armed patrols keeping watch.
Nuclear power plants provide about 20 percent of the nation's
electricity.
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