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    Flood berm collapses at Nebraska nuclear plant

    BROWNVILLE, Neb. (AP) — A berm holding the flooded Missouri River back from a Nebraska nuclear power station collapsed early Sunday, but federal regulators said they were monitoring the situation and there was no danger.

    The Fort Calhoun Nuclear Station shut down in early April for refueling, and there is no water inside the plant, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said. Also, the river is not expected to rise higher than the level the plant was designed to handle. NRC spokesman Victor Dricks said the plant remains safe.

    The federal commission had inspectors at the plant 20 miles north of Omaha when the 2,000-foot berm collapsed about 1:30 a.m. Sunday. Water surrounded the auxiliary and containment buildings at the plant, it said in a statement.

    The Omaha Public Power District has said the complex will not be reactivated until the flooding subsides. Its spokesman, Jeff Hanson, said the berm wasn't critical to protecting the plant but a crew will look at whether it can be patched.

    "That was an additional layer of protection we put in," Hanson said.

    The berm's collapse didn't affect the reactor shutdown cooling or the spent fuel pool cooling, but the power supply was cut after water surrounded the main electrical transformers, the NRC said. Emergency generators powered the plant until an off-site power supply was connected Sunday afternoon, according to OPPD.

    NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko said the loss of the berm at Fort Calhoun nuclear plant doesn't threaten the safety of the plant.

    "There are other structures and systems in place that can ensure they will continue operating safely," Jaczko said.

    Jaczko will tour the Fort Calhoun plant Monday. His visit was scheduled last week. On Sunday, he toured Nebraska's other nuclear power plant, which sits along the Missouri River near Brownville. Cooper nuclear power plant is about 75 miles south of Omaha and run by the Nebraska Public Power District.

    Jaczko said he can't predict what the river will do this summer but that NPPD and OPPD seem to be taking appropriate steps to defend against flooding.

    Jaczko spent much of his tour of Cooper asking NPPD officials and the NRC's local inspectors questions about the plant and this year's flooding. He said his visit was designed to gather information.

    NPPD officials have been monitoring river levels closely during the flooding, and they have already brought in more than 5,000 tons of sand to build barricades protecting the Cooper plant, the onsite power substations and the plant's access roads.

    Accessing critical parts of the plant requires visitors to use ladders or steel stairs to climb over sandbag barriers both outside and inside the doors. When the Jaczko saw one of Cooper's two back-up diesel generators, he had to climb over three different sandbag barriers to get there.

    The Cooper plant remains dry because it sits at an elevation above the river level. The base of Cooper and its storage area for used nuclear fuel is 903 feet above sea level while on Sunday the river was just above 899 feet.

    Cooper would be shut down if the river rose to 902 feet above sea level, but officials say that is unlikely.

    "This plant is designed to deal with a flood much higher than we are seeing — 906 feet," Jaczko said.

    Both nuclear plants issued flooding alerts earlier this month, although they were routine as the river's rise has been expected. Cooper has been operating at full capacity.

    Flooding remains a concern all along the Missouri because of massive amounts of water the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has released from upstream reservoirs. The river is expected to rise as much as 5 to 7 feet above flood stage in much of Nebraska and Iowa and as much as 10 feet over flood stage in parts of Missouri.

    The corps expects the river to remain high at least into August because of heavy spring rains in the upper Plains and substantial Rocky Mountain snowpack melting into the river basin.

    ___

    Josh Funk Associated Press Writer Timberly Ross contributed to this report from Omaha and can be reached at http://twitter.com/timberlysross.

     

    273 comments

    • Anna  •  8 mths ago
      I just hope that we're not being told "There's nothing to worry about", like the Japanese were when the Tsunami surges hit their Nuclear plants. There really was & still is cause for great concern in that region.

      It's amazing how some of our government officials play down what is truly important & what will affect people the most. Yet promote the issues that no one gives a damn about, right now.
    • monsoonman  •  8 mths ago
      Who builds a necular power plant in a 100 year flood plane?
    • Megan  •  8 mths ago
      If it's a non-issue what was the point in building the "berm" in the first place?
    • bob  •  8 mths ago
      " ... the river is not expected to rise higher than the level the plant was designed to handle ..."

      well, that makes me feel safer already. because, you know, nature never does anything unexpected.
    • Leucothea  •  8 mths ago
      A week or so ago, the NRC announced they were loosening safety standards. WOW! That's one way to stay in compliance.
    • Apocol0id  •  8 mths ago
      2011 seems to be the year that Earth decides to 'screw nuclear power' on its own.
    • colo mtn man  •  8 mths ago
      The FAA has made this a no fly-zone since June 6th.. Why would they do that?? I can smell a rat and I live in the Rocky Mountains..
    • A Yahoo User  •  8 mths ago
      Lies of NUCLEAR proportion!
    • jack  •  8 mths ago
      fools..when these guys start saying it is safe, thats when i start worrying.
    • Leucothea  •  8 mths ago
      There was no danger in Japan either, until there was!
    • ecannabisunum420  •  8 mths ago
      nuclear power is not the way to go the crap thats left will be radioactive for 10,000 years,we need to use the wind and the sun for power it is unlimitlessness clean energy.
    • mike  •  8 mths ago
      DON'T WORRY.EVERYTHING IS UNDER CONTROL.WOULD THE NUKE INDUSTRY LIE?????????????????
    • Mike Leach  •  8 mths ago
      My neighbors some of which work at the ft. calhoun plant have sent their families out of state. Wonder why?
    • .  •  8 mths ago
      Are their noses growing because of the lies or nuclear induced bodily mutations?
      Either way it's baaad!
    • Bill R  •  8 mths ago
      Federal Regulators are always lying to us, Germany the worlds 4 largest economy is doing away with its atom power plants because they simply are deadly to all life including your un born baby's.
    • incredulous  •  8 mths ago
      Why aren't they telling the whole story here? There was a fire there last month, which is why they had to shut it down. There are also two other nuclear power plants in this country currently being threatened by floods. I guess the nuclear folks don't want us to know that nuclear power isn't as safe as they say it is. Some forms of radiation continue to be dangerous for thousands of years. Is it worth it for the nation, our children and posterity to be playing with such dangerous technology? And we wonder why the rate of cancer, birth defects, autism and immune disorders is skyrocketing. Just wait until we have one or more reactors act like Fukushima and then see how many people are still for this. What you don't know CAN hurt you.
    • Fed_up  •  8 mths ago
      Here is what is really happening folks, don't believe the BS you are being fed! Ready for a meltdown in the US?

      US orders news blackout over crippled Nebraska Nuclear Plant: report

      shocking report prepared by Russia’s Federal Atomic Energy Agency (FAAE) on information provided to them by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) states that the Obama regime has ordered a “total and complete” news blackout relating to any information regarding the near catastrophic meltdown of the Fort Calhoun Nuclear Power Plant located in Nebraska.
      According to this report, the Fort Calhoun Nuclear Plant suffered a “catastrophic loss of cooling” to one of its idle spent fuel rod pools on 7 June after this plant was deluged with water caused by the historic flooding of the Missouri River which resulted in a fire causing the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) to issue a “no-fly ban” over the area.
      Located about 20 minutes outside downtown Omaha, the largest city in Nebraska, the Fort Calhoun Nuclear Plant is owned by Omaha Public Power District (OPPD) who on their website denies their plant is at a “Level 4” emergency by stating: “This terminology is not accurate, and is not how emergencies at nuclear power plants are classified.”
      Russian atomic scientists in this FAAE report, however, say that this OPPD statement is an “outright falsehood” as all nuclear plants in the world operate under the guidelines of the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale (INES) which clearly states the “events” occurring at the Fort Calhoun Nuclear Power Plant do, indeed, put it in the “Level 4” emergency category of an “accident with local consequences” thus making this one of the worst nuclear accidents in US history.
      Though this report confirms independent readings in the United States of “negligible release of nuclear gasses” related to this accident it warns that by the Obama regimes censoring of this event for “political purposes” it risks a “serious blowback” from the American public should they gain knowledge of this being hidden from them.
      Interesting to note about this event was the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) Chief, Gregory B. Jaczko, blasting the Obama regime just days before the near meltdown of the Fort Calhoun Nuclear Power Plant by declaring that “the policy of not enforcing most fire code violations at dozens of nuclear plants is “unacceptable” and has tied the hands of NRC inspectors.”
    • .  •  8 mths ago
      Move along. Move along, folks. Nothing to see here. You can count on Japan to have the highest quality standards in the world. . . .
    • .  •  8 mths ago
      No matter who runs our gov, the lobbyists win.
    • dax  •  8 mths ago
      Since nixon our government is run by corporations at the expense of the american people...as you can see the situation of this country,,let a corporation run a segment of our economy with no oversight....bingo....unpatriotic greed comes a run...wall mob street, lowlife trash bankers, corporate CEO's hiding funds overseas and paying no taxes - unpatirotic trash, unpatirotic trash sewer dwellers hiding money overseas vs paying their taxes like real americans do....remember their is a price for freedom, fighting for it or paying for it thru taxes....anyone trying to hide taxes are not different then a deserter or unpatriotic coward and a traitor...
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