Tens of millions
of acres in the US corn belt have flooded, which will spike the
cost of gas and food over the next several months. Worse, several
nuclear power plants sit in the flooded plains. Both nuclear plants
in Nebraska are partly submerged and the FAA has issued a no-fly
order over both of them.
On June 7,
the Fort Calhoun Nuclear Power Plant
filed an Alert with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission after
a fire broke out in the switchgear room. During the event, spent
fuel pool cooling was lost when two fuel pumps failed for
about 90 minutes.
On June 9,
Nebraskas other plant, Cooper Nuclear Power Station near Brownville,
filed
a Notice of Unusual Event (NOUE), advising it is unable to discharge
sludge into the Missouri River due to flooding, and therefore overtopped
its sludge pond.
The Fort
Calhoun TFR (temporary flight restriction) was issued the day
before the nuclear Alert. The FAA issued another TFR
on June 7 for the Cooper plant.
Other flood-related
TFRs were issued on
June 13 for the Garrison Dam in Bismarck, North Dakota and on
June 5 for rescue operations in Sioux City, SD.
Under the four-level
nuclear event scale used in the US, an NOUE is the least hazardous.
In an Alert, however, events are in process or have occurred
that involve an actual or potential substantial degradation in the
level of safety of the plant, according to the NRC.
Despite some
media reports, Ft Calhoun is not at a stage 4 level of emergency,
which under the US scale, would be actual or imminent substantial
core damage or melting of reactor fuel with the potential for loss
of containment integrity.
If that rumor
refers to the seven-level
International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale, a Level 4 incident
requires at least one death, which has not occurred.
Continued flooding
does threaten the plants, however. As nuclear engineer Arnie Gundersen
explains in the below video,
cooling pumps must operate continuously, even years after a plant
is shut down.
One group,
the Foundation
for Resilient Societies, has proposed solar panels and other
high-reliability power sources to supply backup cooling for the
fuel pools at nuclear plants.
Thomas Popik
told Food
Freedom that FRS invited the Chief Nuclear Officers of
nearly every nuclear power utility to comment on their proposal
and only heard back from one operator. Otherwise, not one CNO has
officially responded to the NRC-filed
proposal.
While hindsight
might be 20/20, the lack of foresight can be blindingly deadly when
it comes to radioactive waste that lasts tens of thousands of years
for the measly prize of 40 years of electricity.
The Ft. Calhoun
plant which stores its fuel rods at ground level according to
Tom Burnett is already partly submerged.
Ft. Calhoun
is the designated spent fuel storage facility for the entire state
of Nebraska and maybe for more than one state. Calhoun stores
its spent fuel in ground-level pools which are underwater anyway
but they are open at the top. When the Missouri river pours
in there, its going to make Fukushima look like an x-ray.
In 2010, Nebraska
stored 840 metric tons of the highly radioactive spent fuel rods,
reports the Nuclear
Energy Institute. That's one-tenth of what Illinois stores (8,440
MT), and less than Louisiana (1,210) and Minnesota (1,160). But
it's more than other flood-threatened states like Missouri (650)
and Iowa (420).
But thats
not all, adds Burnett. There are a LOT of nuclear plants
on both the Missouri and Mississippi and they can all go to hell
fast.
The black triangles
in the below image prepared by the Center
for Public Integrity show the disclosed locations of nuclear
power plants in the US, minus research and military plants. (Red
lines indicate both Mississippi and Missouri rivers):
Fort Calhoun
is the smallest
nuke plant in the nation, with one pressurized water reactor
generating less than 500 MW. The NRC relicensed
the plant thru 2033, giving it a lifespan of 60 years. Cooper was
first commissioned in 1974 and has been relicensed
thru 2034, also giving it a 60-year lifespan.
Since June
7, Cooper has been running under Abnormal
Operating Procedures when river depth topped 38.5 feet
(895 feet MSL), flooding the north access road. Sandbags and extra
diesel fuel were brought in, reports WOWT.
As of 1:15
pm ET on June 16, the river height of just over 40 feet near
Cooper is still 5 feet below the elevation required for a plant
shutdown. Near Fort Calhoun, the river is even lower as of 1:15
pm ET on June 16 (under 32 feet).
The Midwest
floods will seriously impact food and gas prices over the next year.
Angela Tague at Business
Gather suspects the lost farmland is behind the price spike
to $7.55 a bushel for corn twice last year's price. Tague
notes that the corn shortage will have far-reaching consequences:
Corn
is a key ingredient in ethanol gasoline, feeds America's livestock
and is found in many food products including soft drinks and cereal.
Prices will undoubtedly increase steadily at the grocery store,
gas pump and butcher shop throughout the summer as Midwest flooding
continues along the Missouri River basin. Not only are farmers losing
their homes, land and fields ultimately their bank accounts will
also suffer this season.
And let's not
forget all that genetically modified seed washing south to contaminate
natural fields.
Click
here to hear the entire 40-minute podcast of Robert Knight's
5 o'clock Shadow radio show interviewing Arnie Gundersen of Fairewinds
Associates.
Click
here to hear Gundersen's testimony before the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards on Thursday
May 26, 2011.