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    AP IMPACT: NRC and industry rewrite nuke history

    ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) — When commercial nuclear power was getting its start in the 1960s and 1970s, industry and regulators stated unequivocally that reactors were designed only to operate for 40 years. Now they tell another story — insisting that the units were built with no inherent life span, and can run for up to a century, an Associated Press investigation shows.

    By rewriting history, plant owners are making it easier to extend the lives of dozens of reactors in a relicensing process that resembles nothing more than an elaborate rubber stamp.

    As part of a yearlong investigation of aging issues at the nation's nuclear power plants, the AP found that the relicensing process often lacks fully independent safety reviews. Records show that paperwork of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission sometimes matches word-for-word the language used in a plant operator's application.

    Also, the relicensing process relies heavily on such paperwork, with very little onsite inspection and verification.

    And under relicensing rules, tighter standards are not required to compensate for decades of wear and tear.

    So far, 66 of 104 reactors have been granted license renewals. Most of the 20-year extensions have been granted with scant public attention. And the NRC has yet to reject a single application to extend an original license. The process has been so routine that many in the industry are already planning for additional license extensions, which could push the plants to operate for 80 years, and then 100.

    Regulators and industry now contend that the 40-year limit was chosen for economic reasons and to satisfy antitrust concerns, not for safety issues. They contend that a nuclear plant has no technical limit on its life.

    But an AP review of historical records, along with interviews with engineers who helped develop nuclear power, shows just the opposite: Reactors were made to last only 40 years. Period.

    The record also shows that a design limitation on operating life was an accepted truism.

    In 1982, D. Clark Gibbs, chairman of the licensing and safety committee of an early industry group, wrote to the NRC that "most nuclear power plants, including those operating, under construction or planned for the future, are designed for a duty cycle which corresponds to a 40-year life."

    And three years later, when Illinois Power Co. sought a license for its Clinton station, utility official D.W. Wilson told the NRC on behalf of his company's nuclear licensing department that "all safety margins were established with the understanding of the limitations that are imposed by a 40-year design life."

    One person who should know the real story is engineering professor Richard T. Lahey Jr., at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y. Lahey once served in the nuclear Navy. Later, in the early 1970s, he helped design reactors for General Electric Co.; he oversaw safety research and development.

    Lahey dismisses claims that reactors were made with no particular life span. "These reactors were really designed for a certain lifetime," he said. "What they're saying is really a fabrication."

    ___

    NUCLEAR LIFE RENEWED

    Relicensing is a lucrative deal for operators. By the end of their original licenses, reactors are largely paid for. When they're operating, they're producing profits. They generate a fifth of the country's electricity.

    New ones would each cost billions of dollars and take many years for approval, construction and testing. Local opposition may be strong. Already there is controversy about the safety of a next-generation design. Even before the nuclear crisis at the Fukushima Dai-ichi complex in Japan, only a handful of proposed new reactors in the U.S. had taken the first steps toward construction.

    Solar and wind power are projected to make very limited contributions as electrical demand rises about 30 percent by 2035. So keeping old plants operating makes good business sense.

    But it's challenging to keep existing plants safe and up to date.

    The NRC has indicated that safety improvements are likely in the aftermath of melted fuel in the Japanese reactors in March. NRC inspectors have found some problems with U.S. equipment and procedures. But the agency says all sites are ready to deal with earthquakes and flooding. The NRC also has formed a task force to investigate further and report back in July. Both the task force and the NRC chairman have already suggested that changes will be needed.

    Meanwhile, license renewals, which began in 2000, continue. The process essentially requires a government-approved plan to manage wear. These plans entail more inspection, testing and maintenance by the operator, but only of certain equipment viewed as subject to deterioration over time.

    The plans focus on large systems like reactor vessels. It is assumed that existing maintenance is good enough to keep critical smaller parts — cables, controls, pumps, motors — in good working order for decades more.

    Some modernization has been put in place — upgrades on fire-prevention measures and electronic controls, for example. But many potential improvements are limited by the government's so-called "backfit rule." The provision exempts existing units from safety improvements unless such upgrades bring "a substantial increase" in public protection.

    Even with required maintenance, aging problems keep popping up.

    During its Aging Nukes investigation, the AP conducted scores of interviews and analyzed thousands of pages of industry and government records, reports and data. The documents show that for decades compromises have been made repeatedly in safety margins, regulations and emergency planning to keep the aging units operating within the rules. The AP has reported that nuclear plants have sustained repeated equipment failures, leading critics to fear that the U.S. industry is one failure away from a disaster.

    ___

    INDUSTRY, GOVERNMENT AS PARTNERS

    Despite the aging problems, relicensing rules prohibits any overall safety review of the entire operation. More conservative safety margins are not required in anticipation of higher failure rates in old plants, regulators acknowledge.

    The approach has turned relicensing reviews into routine approvals.

    "Everything I've seen is rubber-stamped," said Joe Hopenfeld, an engineer who worked on aging-related issues at the NRC before retiring in 2008. He has since worked for groups challenging relicensing.

    Numerous reports from the NRC's Office of Inspector General offer disturbing corroboration of his view.

    For example, in 2002 the inspector general wrote: "Senior NRC officials confirmed that the agency is highly reliant on information from licensee risk assessments." Essentially that means the industry tells the NRC how likely an accident is and the NRC accepts the analysis.

    Five years later, in a relicensing audit, the inspector general complained of frequent instances of "identical or nearly identical word-for-word repetition" of the plant applications in NRC reviews. The inspector general worried that the repetition indicated superficial reviews that went through the motions, instead of thorough and independent examinations.

    The problems went beyond paperwork. The inspector general found that the NRC reviews usually relied on the plants to report on their operating experience, but the agency didn't independently verify the information.

    NRC spokesman Eliot Brenner said staffers have now agreed to use their own words in their reviews of relicensing applications.

    Christopher Grimes, former director of license renewal at the NRC, acknowledges that the agency "has to rely much more on the contents of the applications ... over direct inspection."

    He blames budget constraints, but others view relicensing as a charade. Clean Ocean Action unsuccessfully challenged relicensing at the Oyster Creek plant in New Jersey, but chief scientist Jennifer Sampson said, "We really knew it was a waste of time."

    ___

    FROM 40 YEARS TO 60 AND BEYOND

    There are two thrusts to the revisionist argument that nuclear reactors can last for decades and decades: First, that they weren't really designed only for 40 years; second, that there is no technical limitation on any length of time. Tony Pietrangelo, chief nuclear officer at the industry's Nuclear Energy Institute, says 40 years for the initial license was simply how long it was expected to take to pay off construction loans.

    In 2008, an NRC report was emphatic about the economic rationale of 40-year license, insisting that "this time limit was developed from utility antitrust concerns and not physically based design limitations from engineering analysis, components, or materials."

    Even so, it felt compelled to acknowledge, in passing, that "some individual plant and equipment designs" were engineered for 40 years of life.

    What's the truth? Fifty years ago, rural electricity cooperatives, worried about competition, did object to granting indefinitely long licenses to the new nuclear industry. But that's only part of the story.

    The 40-year license was created by Congress as a somewhat arbitrary political compromise — "some long period of time, because nobody in his right mind would want to operate a nuclear plant beyond that time,'" said Ivan Selin, an engineer who chaired the NRC in the early 1990s.

    Instead of stopping at 40 years, or even 60, the industry began advancing the idea of even longer nuclear life in discussions with its NRC partners starting several years ago.

    In 2009, an issue paper by the industry-funded Electric Power Research Institute said that "many experts believe ... that these plants can operate safely well beyond their initial or extended operating periods — possibly to 80 or 100 years."

    In November, an EPRI survey of industry executives found that more than 60 percent of executives strongly believed reactors can last at least 80 years.

    EPRI engineer Neil Wilmshurst, vice president of its nuclear sector, said in an interview that many in the industry foresee the feasibility of reactors lasting even longer.

    Adding its own push, Congress has set aside $12 million over the past two fiscal years for the Department of Energy to study if nuclear plants can last decades longer.

    So for industry, the question is not if plants can run decades longer — that is now presumed true — but for how long?

    "The research must start now, as it will take years to gather the data necessary to justify life extension out to 80 or 100 years," EPRI says in a background document.

    ___

    HOW LONG CAN THEY GO?

    Reactors and their surrounding equipment obviously were not made to fall apart the day after their 40th birthday. But how long can they safely last?

    Other power generators have recognized the limits of design life. Though plants burning coal and other traditional fuels incorporate many similar systems to nuclear units — minus the atomic reactor — 90 percent close within 50 years, according to Department of Energy data analyzed by the AP.

    Dana Powers, a member of the NRC's independent Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards, said he believes nuclear plants can last for just one license extension, or up to 60 years total. "I doubt they go two," he added.

    Peter Lyons, a physicist and recent NRC commissioner, said several features of plants are extraordinarily hard to replace and could limit their lifetimes. They include reactor vessels, electric cables set in concrete, and underground piping.

    In an AP interview at NRC headquarters here, agency chairman Gregory Jaczko said decisions on license extensions are based on safety, not economics.

    Former NRC chief Selin says extension decisions should be made "on a case-by-case basis."

    And industry executives and regulators acknowledge that more research is needed.

    In the past, though, both parties found ways to shift assumptions, theories and standards enough to keep reactors chugging.

    There's every reason to think they'll try to do it again.

    ___

    The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate(at)ap.org

     

    142 comments

    • Dano or Danbo  •  11 mths ago
      In my area we just had a bridge collapse that was said to last over 100 years... It's less than 20 years old.
      • Milos 11 mths ago
        In my country we had almost all bridges collapse in 1999. because they were bombed to rubble by Americans in the name of aiding kidnaping people for their organs. The bombings were all similar, with murdering pilots returning to hit a bridge with wounded people on it for the second time, and intentionally hitting buses and trains exactly while crossing bridges. In one such attrocity, in the city of Varvarin on 30. may 1999., bombers destroyed the bridge near the busy vegetable market with two missiles, and after returned to murder people who came to help those wounded. Among those murdered in the second two missile attack was Sanja Milenkovic, 16 year old girl who came running to help people near the bridge. She was the best mathematician and physicist of her age ever in Yugoslavia, and Serbia, the country Nikola Tesla is from. So, you should rejoice that the evil empire is crumbling, if you are human.
      • Prometheus 11 mths ago
        Milos, you must have been one of the ones helping round up shoot, and deport the Croats and Bosniaks. That or you lost a cushy job at a concentration camp. Of course, none of those "ethnically cleansed" were anybody valuable, right?
      • concerned 11 mths ago
        There's always two sides to any story. I'm sure even Adolf Hitler could tell a story that would tug at your heart strings. I feel sorry for both sides. I'm sorry that they're all so filled with hate that they have no room for love, pity, consideration or mercy. In the end, all will lose, all.
    • RBC  •  11 mths ago
      I've never heard of an engineering product with no lifespan, it's madness to say there's no limit!
      • Use Your Head 11 mths ago
        Have you ever heard of a safety factor? If you were designing a nuclear reactor that had to last 40 years that factor would be pretty high. Right? No one is saying the plants will last forever. Don't flip just because you hear the word Nuclear.
      • Mark 11 mths ago
        ever fly? a huge number of planes are 40+ yrs old...
      • Prometheus 11 mths ago
        The safety factors have also been cut back, the margins eased to allow greater leakage, greater corrosion. There's not as much safety factor left as when the plants were built.
    • Jim  •  11 mths ago
      Most of our bridges and highway overpasses were designed to last 50 years ... in the 1950's. Generational Theft.
    • Pete  •  11 mths ago
      Loose translation: The US is now not capable of building new plants and we can't afford to turn the existing ones off due to power consumption needs. Yes Virginia, the US is a 3rd world nation.
      • Steve 11 mths ago
        You throw the phrase "3rd world nation" around like you know what it means. We have problems, I agree, but we are far from 3rd world. I'm ashamed of so many of my fellow Americans who think we have it sooooo bad. If you think it's so bad here then move to Somalia, Hati, Afghanistan, Mexico, or even Brazil. Learn a little more about the world before you put down all that our ancestors have worked to create. Move to a 3rd world national and live there for a year and then tell me how 3rd world the United States is.
      • Steve 11 mths ago
        nation not national*
      • David 11 mths ago
        I think he was exaggerating :P
    • Semaj  •  11 mths ago
      The original lifespan of a nuclear plant was based on the effects of neutron embrittlement on the reactor vessel, as it is not replaceable. Not much was known 40-50 years ago with regard to the long term effects of neutron embrittlement on carbon steel . A conservative life span of 30 - 40 years was initially chosen. Removable metallic samples called coupons were place inside all reactors where they would be exposed to the same neutron exposure as the reactor vessel. After several fuel cycles some of these coupons were removed and sent to high tech metallurgy labs for examination. Others were left inside to be removed after several more fuel cycles prior to examination. After 40 years, the results were conclusive that the effects of neutron embrittlement of the reactor vessel were greatly over estimated. As a result extensions were applied for and were received if they met all of the additional requirements established by the NRC for the extension.

      Even well maintained equipment eventually has to be replaced such as pumps, turbines, steam generators, valves, electrical generators, heat exchangers etc. It is done responsibly with the safety of the plant and the public in mind.

      This was at best a shoddy piece of yellow journalism written by the AP.
      • JakeC 11 mths ago
        Interesting rebuttal. I'll have to check this out.
      • Semaj 11 mths ago
        It is based on and an education and nearly 40 years in the industry including the Navy nuclear program, the dept of Energy and over 30 years in the commercial industry at over 30 nuclear facilities.

        I am pleasantly surprised to have gotten an objective response. Thanks!
      • Chad 11 mths ago
        Sound like 40 years ago we didn't have facts, and now we do..
    • Phil R  •  11 mths ago
      The whole purpose of regulatory agencies is to protect those they regulate from the public interest.
      • EDWIN 11 mths ago
        Not in America. In America it is to protect corporate profits.

        (Yes, they do skim a little off the top for protection money in the form of fines for violations)
    • joe  •  11 mths ago
      Everything is fine until it is not fine. Analysts do not look at Nuclear safety equipment in terms of years but in terms of fatigue cycles. So in that respect Nuclear plants can run for 60 or 80 years if the predicted fatigue has an acceptable margin.

      What no one knows are the long term effects of Nuclear chemistry and the environment on the equipment reliability. Are the existing tests and inspections adequate to demonstrate adequacy?

      To me the dark side of extending the life of old Nuclear plants is that their safety systems and materials would not be accepted by today's standards, so by extending their license we are complicit in allowing old unacceptable safety standard plants to continue to operate.
    • Kimo  •  11 mths ago
      If nuclear Engineers and scientists have determined that the design of nuclear plants can last longer than the original intent, what is the problem???
    • HoRoThro  •  11 mths ago
      I don't know the ins and the outs of how nuclear power plants are built, and how much wear and tear they get. But this sounds bad, just utterly cynical.

      If they had to rebuild and/or refurbish old power plants, wouldn't that create jobs? And instead everything's just become entrenched. Where's the leadership in my country??
    • Butizit True  •  11 mths ago
      The nuke industry waits until a disaster strikes before taking a fresh look at safety issues. Their motto seems to be, we can only learn from our mistakes. Better hope you don't get caught downwind when they experience their next learning opportunity.
    • Derrible D  •  11 mths ago
      I have fit pipe on Nuclear Submarines. I know it can be done safely. Since the Navy isn't in it for the money they are much more effiecient at it. The reactors are refit approximately every 7 years. There are some new discoveries about Nuclear energy that will make future reactors safer. Wind and solor will never be able to provide what Nuclear Power does.
    • Lenn  •  11 mths ago
      Work at Nukes for over 25 years. Much of that time was as a Project Manger. I have replaced, rebuilt or repaired many aged Nuke components (e.g. Reactor Coolant Pumps, safety related transformers, reactor controls, security systems, etc.). Over the years, some of the assumptions that were made to initially arrive at a 40 year life span proved to be overly conservative. Consequently, some components will truly last more than 40 years. Other less durable components have been systematically replaced. Areas that concern me the most are the cables and the reactor vessel. While these components may go 60 years. I would have to question longer. However, the condition of these components are monitored closely and frequently examined and tested. Many of us have cables in our homes older than 60 years. I can see where many mechanical components can go for 60 years. After that, I would think the Plant components may be faced with significant metal and insulation fatigue, etc. However, one also needs to remember, most of these plants never operated at over 50% capacity for the first couple decades. So 60 years is not really 60 years of operating. In my opinion, the most critical problem we have with aging N-Plants is getting the spent fuel either stored in Yucca Mountain or reprocessed. If you want to do something, get Nobamma and Reid off their butts and get the spent fuel out of the Spent Fuel Pools, Dry Casks and stored where it is safe (i.e. Yucca Mountain, Nevada!) Also, lets even go the next step and get reprocessing off the ground in this country. Getting that spent fuel off-site and into Yucca Mountain should be our #1 priority for this industry. Call your Federal legislators and "turn up the heat," for missing their deadline to take receipt of spent fuel. Help solve this while it is only a political problem versus after it becomes nuclear accident in one of our back yards. Spent Fuel pools are an N-Plant's weakest link!
    • jeffersonlinux  •  11 mths ago
      We need the real story, which neither the operators nor NRC can provide. The key here is identifying and examining those components that are the most difficult to monitor and replace. Hopefully, the $12M to DOE will go toward modeling with supercomputers.
    • johnas  •  11 mths ago
      That's the moneymen making the rules for themselves again. Lobbying is the scourge of America
    • the antiguy  •  11 mths ago
      ah. it feels so god to warm my hands on the product of 20 yrs of republican DEregulation. are your republican masters in corporate america rich enough yet? or do you need to deregulate a few more things? corporate america sure gets their moneys worth out of you conservatives huh? so they can post more RECORD profits every quarter yet whine they need MORE tax breaks.
      ah america, the land of representative government. unfortuantely, the only people you cons represent, is your owners in corporate america. the people no longer have any representation.
    • Mike  •  11 mths ago
      Yeah, O.K. and my car will run for 100 years. And your television will last one hundred years. The half life of the waste being produced by these plants is 25,000 years. Which means that in 25,000 years it will only be half as radioactive as it is today! And, they continue to stack this stuff up around their nuclear reactors!!! And now they want to build new nuclear power plants!!!!!!!
    • Chad  •  11 mths ago
      These docuements stated in the article at written summaries of MANY MANY inspections. I have been part of these inspections. The NRC is doing there job. This article does not provide adequate infor of the hours of test performed each and every year!!!
    • Rob  •  11 mths ago
      So when the volcano blows the ceos will be in their penthouses in Dubai
    • Dudenohair  •  11 mths ago
      Hey, I thought you people thought government could do a great job overseeing things like healthcare too.
    • Me  •  11 mths ago
      Guess those here in charge are not aware of went happened in Japan this year.
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