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Tritium Leaks Found at Many Nuke Sites
BRACEVILLE, Ill. – Radioactive tritium has leaked from three-quarters of U.S. commercial nuclear power sites, often into groundwater from corroded, buried piping, an Associated Press investigation shows.
This March 16, 2011 photo shows steam rising from cooling towers at Exelon Corp.'s nuclear plant in Byron, Ill. Illinois has six nuclear plants, with a total of 11 reactors, more than any other state in the U.S. in 2010. Exelon, which has acknowledged violating Illinois state groundwater standards, agreed to pay $1.2 million to settle state and county complaints over the tritium leaks in Illinois' Braidwood, Dresden and Byron sites. The NRC also sanctioned Exelon. (AP Photo/Robert Ray) The number and severity of the leaks has been escalating, even as federal regulators extend the licenses of more and more reactors across the nation.
Tritium, which is a radioactive form of hydrogen, has leaked from at least 48 of 65 sites, according to U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission records reviewed as part of the AP's yearlong examination of safety issues at aging nuclear power plants. Leaks from at least 37 of those facilities contained concentrations exceeding the federal drinking water standard — sometimes at hundreds of times the limit.
While most leaks have been found within plant boundaries, some have migrated offsite. But none is known to have reached public water supplies.
At three sites — two in Illinois and one in Minnesota — leaks have contaminated drinking wells of nearby homes, the records show, but not at levels violating the drinking water standard. At a fourth site, in New Jersey, tritium has leaked into an aquifer and a discharge canal feeding picturesque Barnegat Bay off the Atlantic Ocean.
Previously, the AP reported that regulators and industry have weakened safety standards for decades to keep the nation's commercial nuclear reactors operating within the rules. While NRC officials and plant operators argue that safety margins can be eased without peril, critics say these accommodations are inching the reactors closer to an accident.
Any exposure to radioactivity, no matter how slight, boosts cancer risk, according to the National Academy of Sciences. Federal regulators set a limit for how much tritium is allowed in drinking water. So far, federal and industry officials say, the tritium leaks pose no health threat.
But it's hard to know how far some leaks have traveled into groundwater. Tritium moves through soil quickly, and when it is detected it often indicates the presence of more powerful radioactive isotopes that are often spilled at the same time.
For example, cesium-137 turned up with tritium at the Fort Calhoun nuclear unit near Omaha, Neb., in 2007. Strontium-90 was discovered with tritium two years earlier at the Indian Point nuclear power complex, where two reactors operate 25 miles north of New York City.
The tritium leaks also have spurred doubts among independent engineers about the reliability of emergency safety systems at the 104 nuclear reactors situated on the 65 sites. That's partly because some of the leaky underground pipes carry water meant to cool a reactor in an emergency shutdown and to prevent a meltdown. More than a mile of piping, much of it encased in concrete, can lie beneath a reactor.
Tritium is relatively short-lived and penetrates the body weakly through the air compared to other radioactive contaminants. Each of the known releases has been less radioactive than a single X-ray.
The main health risk from tritium, though, would be in drinking water. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says tritium should measure no more than 20,000 picocuries per liter in drinking water. The agency estimates seven of 200,000 people who drink such water for decades would develop cancer.
Still, the NRC and industry consider the leaks a public relations problem, not a public health or accident threat, records and interviews show.
"The public health and safety impact of this is next to zero," said Tony Pietrangelo, chief nuclear officer of the industry's Nuclear Energy Institute. "This is a public confidence issue."
___
LEAKS ARE PROLIFIC
Like rust under a car, corrosion has propagated for decades along the hard-to-reach, wet underbellies of the reactors — generally built in a burst of construction during the 1960s and 1970s. As part of an investigation of aging problems at the country's nuclear reactors, the AP uncovered evidence that despite government and industry programs to bring the causes of such leaks under control, breaches have become more frequent and widespread.
There were 38 leaks from underground piping between 2000 and 2009, according to an industry document presented at a tritium conference. Nearly two-thirds of the leaks were reported over the latest five years.
Here are some examples:
_At the three-unit Browns Ferry complex in Alabama, a valve was mistakenly left open in a storage tank during modifications over the years. When the tank was filled in April 2010 about 1,000 gallons of tritium-laden water poured onto the ground at a concentration of 2 million picocuries per liter. In drinking water, that would be 100 times higher than the EPA health standard.
_At the LaSalle site west of Chicago, tritium-laden water was accidentally released from a storage tank in July 2010 at a concentration of 715,000 picocuries per liter — 36 times the EPA standard.
_The year before, 123,000 picocuries per liter were detected in a well near the turbine building at Peach Bottom west of Philadelphia — six times the drinking water standard.
_And in 2008, 7.5 million picocuries per liter leaked from underground piping at Quad Cities in western Illinois — 375 times the EPA limit.
Subsurface water not only rusts underground pipes, it attacks other buried components, including electrical cables that carry signals to control operations. They too have been failing at high rates.
A 2008 NRC staff memo reported industry data showing 83 failed cables between 21 and 30 years of service — but only 40 within their first 10 years of service. Underground cabling set in concrete can be extraordinarily difficult to replace.
Under NRC rules, tiny concentrations of tritium and other contaminants are routinely released in monitored increments from nuclear plants; leaks from corroded pipes are not permitted.
The leaks sometimes go undiscovered for years, the AP found. Many of the pipes or tanks have been patched, and contaminated soil and water have been removed in some places. But leaks are often discovered later from other nearby piping, tanks or vaults. Mistakes and defective material have contributed to some leaks. However, corrosion — from decades of use and deterioration — is the main cause. And, safety engineers say, the rash of leaks suggest nuclear operators are hard put to maintain the decades-old systems.
Over the history of the U.S. industry, more than 400 known radioactive leaks of all kinds of substances have occurred, the activist Union of Concerned Scientists reported in September.
Several notable leaks above the EPA drinking-water limit for tritium happened five or more years ago, and from underground piping: 397,000 picocuries per liter at Tennessee's Watts Bar unit in 2005 — 20 times the EPA standard; four million at the two-reactor Hatch plant in Georgia in 2003 — 200 times the limit; 750,000 at Seabrook in New Hampshire in 1999 — nearly 38 times the standard; and 4.2 million at the three-unit Palo Verde facility in Arizona, in 1993 — 210 times the drinking-water limit.
Many safety experts worry about what the leaks suggest about the condition of miles of piping beneath the reactors. "Any leak is a problem because you have the leak itself — but it also says something about the piping," said Mario V. Bonaca, a former member of the NRC's Advisory Committee on Reactor Safeguards. "Evidently something has to be done."
However, even with the best probes, it is hard to pinpoint partial cracks or damage in skinny pipes or bends. The industry tends to inspect piping when it must be dug up for some other reason. Even when leaks are detected, repairs may be postponed for up to two years with the NRC's blessing.
"You got pipes that have been buried underground for 30 or 40 years, and they've never been inspected, and the NRC is looking the other way," said engineer Paul Blanch, who has worked for the industry and later became a whistleblower. "They could have corrosion all over the place."
Nuclear engineer Bill Corcoran, an industry consultant who has taught NRC personnel how to analyze the cause of accidents, said that since much of the piping is inaccessible and carries cooling water, the worry is if the pipes leak, there could be a meltdown.
___
EAST COAST ISSUES
One of the highest known tritium readings was discovered in 2002 at the Salem nuclear plant in Lower Alloways Creek Township, N.J. Tritium leaks from the spent fuel pool contaminated groundwater under the facility — located on an island in Delaware Bay — at a concentration of 15 million picocuries per liter. That's 750 times the EPA drinking water limit. According to NRC records, the tritium readings last year still exceeded EPA drinking water standards.
And tritium found separately in an onsite storm drain system measured 1 million picocuries per liter in April 2010.
Also last year, the operator, PSEG Nuclear, discovered 680 feet of corroded, buried pipe that is supposed to carry cooling water to Salem Unit 1 in an accident, according to an NRC report. Some had worn down to a quarter of its minimum required thickness, though no leaks were found. The piping was dug up and replaced.
The operator had not visually inspected the piping — the surest way to find corrosion_ since the reactor went on line in 1977, according to the NRC. PSEG Nuclear was found to be in violation of NRC rules because it hadn't even tested the piping since 1988.
Last year, the Vermont Senate was so troubled by tritium leaks as high as 2.5 million picocuries per liter at the Vermont Yankee reactor in southern Vermont (125 times the EPA drinking-water standard) that it voted to block relicensing — a power that the Legislature holds in that state.
Activists placed a bogus ad on the Web to sell Vermont Yankee, calling it a "quaint Vermont fixer-upper from the last millennium" with "tasty, pre-tritiated drinking water."
The gloating didn't last. In March, the NRC granted the plant a 20-year license extension, despite the state opposition. Weeks ago, operator Entergy sued Vermont in federal court, challenging its authority to force the plant to close.
At 41-year-old Oyster Creek in southern New Jersey, the country's oldest operating reactor, the latest tritium troubles started in April 2009, a week after it was relicensed for 20 more years. That's when plant workers discovered tritium by chance in about 3,000 gallons of water that had leaked into a concrete vault housing electrical lines.
Since then, workers have found leaking tritium three more times at concentrations up to 10.8 million picocuries per liter — 540 times the EPA's drinking water limit — according to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. None has been directly measured in drinking water, but it has been found in an aquifer and in a canal discharging into nearby Barnegat Bay, a popular spot for swimming, boating and fishing.
An earlier leak came from a network of pipes where rust was first discovered in 1991. Multiple holes were found, "indicating the potential for extensive corrosion," according to an analysis released to an environmental group by the NRC. Yet only patchwork repairs were done.
Tom Fote, who has fished in the bay near Oyster Creek, is unsettled by the leaks. "This was a plant that was up for renewal. It was up to them to make sure it was safe and it was not leaking anything," he said.
Added Richard Webster, an environmental lawyer who challenged relicensing at Oyster Creek: "It's symptomatic of the plants not having a handle on aging."
___
EXELON'S PIPING PROBLEMS
To Exelon — the country's biggest nuclear operator, with 17 units — piping problems are just a fact of life. At a meeting with regulators in 2009, representatives of Exelon acknowledged that "100 percent verification of piping integrity is not practical," according to a copy of its presentation.
Of course, the company could dig up the pipes and check them out. But that would be costly.
"Excavations have significant impact on plant operations," the company said.
Exelon has had some major leaks. At the company's two-reactor Dresden site west of Chicago, tritium has leaked into the ground at up to 9 million picocuries per liter — 450 times the federal limit for drinking water.
At least four separate problems have been discovered at the 40-year-old site since 2004, when its two reactors were awarded licenses for 20 more years of operation. A leaking section of piping was fixed that year, but another leak sprang nearby within two years, a government inspection report says. The Dresden leaks developed in systems that help cool the reactor core in an emergency. Leaks also have contaminated offsite drinking water wells, but below the EPA drinking water limit.
There's also been contamination of offsite drinking water wells near the two-unit Prairie Island plant southeast of Minneapolis, then operated by Nuclear Management Co. and now by Xcel Energy, and at Exelon's two-unit Braidwood nuclear facility, 10 miles from Dresden. The offsite tritium concentrations from both facilities also were below the EPA level.
The Prairie Island leak was found in the well of a nearby home in 1989. It was traced to a canal where radioactive waste was discharged.
Braidwood has leaked more than six million gallons of tritium-laden water in repeated leaks dating back to the 1990s — but not publicly reported until 2005. The leaks were traced to pipes that carried limited, monitored discharges of tritium into the river.
"They weren't properly maintained, and some of them had corrosion," said Exelon spokeswoman Krista Lopykinski.
Last year, Exelon, which has acknowledged violating Illinois state groundwater standards, agreed to pay $1.2 million to settle state and county complaints over the tritium leaks at Braidwood and nearby Dresden and Byron sites. The NRC also sanctioned Exelon.
Tritium measuring 1,500 picocuries per liter turned up in an offsite drinking well at a home near Braidwood. Though company and industry officials did not view any of the Braidwood concentrations as dangerous, unnerved residents took to bottled water and sued over feared loss of property value. A consolidated lawsuit was dismissed, but Exelon ultimately bought some homes so residents could leave.
Exelon refused to say how much it paid, but a search of county real estate records shows it bought at least nine properties in the contaminated area near Braidwood since 2006 for a total of $6.1 million.
Exelon says it has almost finished cleaning up the contamination, but the cost persists for some neighbors.
Retirees Bob and Nancy Scamen live in a two-story house within a mile of the reactors on 18 bucolic acres they bought in 1988, when Braidwood opened. He had worked there, and in other nuclear plants, as a pipefitter and welder — even sometimes fixing corroded piping. For the longest time, he felt the plants were well-managed and safe.
His feelings have changed.
An outlet from Braidwood's leaky discharge pipe 300 feet from his property poured out three million gallons of water in 1998, according to an NRC inspection report. The couple didn't realize the discharge was radioactive.
The Scamens no longer intend to pass the property on to their grandchildren for fear of hurting their health. The couple just wants out. But the only offer so far is from a buyer who left a note on the front door saying he'd pay the fire-sale price of $10,000.
They say Exelon has refused to buy their home because it has found tritium directly behind, but not beneath, their property.
"They say our property is not contaminated, and if they buy property that is not contaminated, it will set a precedent, and they'll have to buy everybody's property," said Scamen.
Their neighbors, Tom and Judy Zimmer, are also hoping for an offer from Exelon for the land and home they built on it, spending $418,000 for both.
They had just moved into the house in November 2005, and were laying the tile in their new foyer when two Exelon representatives appeared at the door.
"They said, `We're from Exelon, and we had a tritium spill. It's nothing to worry about,'" recalls Tom Zimmer. "I didn't know what tritium even meant."
But his wife says she understood right away that it was bad news — and they hadn't even emptied their moving boxes yet: "I thought, `Oh, my God. We're not even in this place. What are we going to do?'"
They say they had an interested buyer who backed out when he learned of the tritium. No one has made an offer since.
___
PUBLIC RELATIONS EFFORT
The NRC is certainly paying attention. How can it not when local residents fret over every new groundwater incident? But the agency's reports and actions suggest a preoccupation with image and perception.
An NRC task force on tritium leaks last year dismissed the danger to public health. Instead, its report called the leaks "a challenging issue from the perspective of communications around environmental protection." The task force noted ruefully that the rampant leaking had "impacted public confidence."
For sure, the industry also is trying to stop the leaks. For several years now, plant owners around the country have been drilling more monitoring wells and taking a more aggressive approach in replacing old piping when leaks are suspected or discovered.
For example, Exelon has been performing $14 million worth of work at Oyster Creek to give easier access to 2,000 feet of tritium-carrying piping, said site spokesman David Benson.
But such measures have yet to stop widespread leaking.
Meantime, the reactors keep getting older — 66 have been approved for 20-year extensions to their original 40-year licenses, with 16 more extensions pending. And, as the AP has been reporting in its ongoing series, Aging Nukes, regulators and industry have worked in concert to loosen safety standards to keep the plants operating.
In an initiative started last year, NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko asked his staff to examine regulations on buried piping to evaluate if stricter standards or more inspections were needed.
The staff report, issued in June, openly acknowledged that the NRC "has not placed an emphasis on preventing" the leaks.
The authors concluded there are no significant health threats or heightened risk of accidents.
And they predicted even more leaks in the future.

36 Comments so far
Show AllMove along people, Tritium leaks will soon be deemed to be legal and safe. Nothing to worry your little heads over...
Something else that's very scary at the moment is what is happening with the flood waters of the Missouri at the Fort Calhoun and Cooper Nuclear Plants. Protecting these facilities with sand bags is ludicrous with a possible increase of 5 ft in the water level due to the high snowfalls which are yet to melt. All it needs is one upstream dam to burst it's banks and it's Fukushima X 2.
I'm a little late to the posting as usual. but read, "US Orders News Blackout over crippled Nebraska Nuclear Power Plant". The article.is from the "The Nation" a Pakistan newspaper. The basic claim is that the US sent information to the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Russian equivalent of the US Atomic Energy Agency. They told them not to worry about a little mishap at the Ft Calhoun Nuclear power plant. It was so serious that both of these agencies were notified and a no fly zone was ordered near the plant. The basic story is that the water levels dropped too low in a cooling pond for spent radioactive fuel rods. How much of this article is true and how much is BS and hyperbole is hard to know. There is a picture of the power plant completely surrounded by water and it makes the story part way believable.
The one good thing Fukushima represents is a perfect reason to keep the dire perils of nuclear power front-and-centre in global debate. Wars come and go, regimes appear and crumble; even climate change will do its little dance and arrive at a new homeostasis, but it is radiation that occupies the spot as the lasting umbra of our little party here on this blue ball. Hell, even Styrofoam has a sooner expiration date! (Ours comes sooner, methinks...)
this should be alarming to the government
the only motivation in realty for having nuclear power plants is to produce the raw materials for nuclear weapons Tritium and Plutonium
to the government the concern that would get attention is not the safety of the people
BUT
the waste of Tritium
Yes: At the dawn of the nuclear power age, though thorium reactors would have produced only a tiny fraction of the radioactive waste that uranium reactors do, and would have been safer and superior for many reasons, thorium was rejected as a fuel precisely because it cannot be used to create nuclear weapons.
German civilians looked the other way when cattle cars full of Jews rolled past, but they had been full bellies for the first time in many months. That is easier to understand than South Africans who were more than willing to allow vast numbers of people to live in squalor and abject poverty just so they could enjoy a somewhat higher standard of living.
How much is cheap energy worth? Would you give up A/C in your home in return for clean water for people who live in another state? People you don't even know? How many lives of people you have never heard of is your TV remote worth?
I find it remarkable, almost unbelievable, what some people (Wall Street Bankers come to mind) will allow others to suffer just so they can have more money than they have any use for.
nuclear power is not cost effective when the cost of waste disposal cleaning up the worn out plant and storing the nuclear core forever the energy to make the fuel
when the over all costs are all added up it's 5 times the cost of solar with batteries for night time and a week of cloudy days
no the point is not to make electricity
the point is to make nuclear weapons
this is an out sourced cost of making nuclear weapons
passed off to electricity consumers
There is no effective way to contain radioactivity or radioactive waste that seeps out into the water, air or ground.
This article came out to settle the fears of people.
Tritium mixes with water very, very well; and where ever that water goes, tritium goes there too. No matter how long it takes, it will eventually get there.
The danger of tritium is not that you drink it but that you inhale it. The solubility of hydrogen in water is small because the element prefers to be in the gas phase.
Are you sure what you are talking about?
Tritium and Hydrogen are two different things.
Read Further! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tritiated_water
Crowsnest,
You are leaving quite a bit out of the nature of water and hydrogen when you refer to the weak solubilty of hydrogen in water. Water is NOT, as commonly believed by the masses, H2O. Although the H2O molecule certainly constitutes the main part of water, the polarity of the covalent bonding in this molecule leaves a slight negative charge in one area which forms a weak bond with a hydrogen atom. Hence, we get the hydronium ion H2O H → H3O (positive charged ion). The negative logarithm of the concentration of this ion determines the PH level (The hydronium ion is present in water, acids and bases). So when Tritium gets into water, it freely dissociates into the H3O population until saturation is reached and the rest bubbles out as gas.
Since the half life of Tritium is very short, I believe the main issue here is hydrogen embrittlement of pipe infrastructure. I believe this was instrumental in destroying the cooling ability of the Fukushima plant BEFORE the tsunami because of the earthquake. And, because the cracking and embrittlement is progressive and ubiquitous, we don't need an earthquake in the USA to experience a major radiation leak accident from nuclear power plants (see my other comment).
I read a half life of 12 years in the environment and 14 days if ingested.
Sounds like all the tritium's energy gets zapped by the body. OR The body zaps all the energy out of the tritium.
How far can water travel underground in twelve years? How about 24?
Agelbert; does the soil also reduce the half-life of the decay rate?
NMBill,
The soil does not alter the half life of a radionuclide or its' decay rate. Tritium is, of course, harmful to human health and leaking Tritium certainly justifies closing a nuclear power plant. I just wanted to make the point that, compared to cesium137 and other radionuclides with half lives (multiplied by ten to become harmless) that exceed several human whole lifetimes, Tritium is less dangerous.
With regards to all radioactive elements ingested by us there are two half lives. One is the radioactive half life and the other is the biological half life. I doubt that the biological half life of tritium in man is 12 years.
In neutral water H3O is one part in ten million. Big deal.
tritium easily enters the ground water as one of the leading edge contaminants. It cannot be filtered out of drinking water. The most common form of tritium is in water, since tritium and normal hydrogen react with oxygen in the same way to form water. Tritium replaces one of the stable hydrogens in the water molecule, H2O, and creates tritiated water, which is colorless and odorless.
You are much more likely to have exposure to tritium from water than gas.
Hang on there, Crowsnest.
Tritium is a form of hydrogen. The most abundant isotope of hydrogen by far is called protium. Its nucleus consists of a single proton, with no neutrons. Deuterium is the hydrogen isotope with a nucleus consisting of one proton and one neutron. Tritium is the hydrogen isotope with one proton and 2 neutrons in its nucleus. The nuclear force isn't enough to keep the 2 neutrons firmly glued into the nucleus, so the tritium nucleus eventually falls apart - tritium is radioactive.
Secondly, while tritium cannot penetrate the skin, it is dangerous if inhaled or ingested.
Thirdly, while pure hydrogen is a gas at room temperature, it's not found that way much because it binds so easily to other atoms. Most hydrogen exists as part of molecules, which can be solids, liquids, or gases. So it's a little weird to say that it prefers to be a gas. A tritium atom can be part of a water molecule, just as a protium or deuterium atom can. "Heavy water" is H2O where many of the H's happen to be deuterium.
NMBill and Angelbert are right about the half life. The half life of tritium is 12.32 years. The half life of any radioactive material is fixed. Every atom in the universe of a given radioactive isotope has the same half life. There's nothing you can do to change it.
1. When tritium converts to He-3 the nucleus emits an electron and a neutrino. The tritium nucleus does not "fall apart".
2. To the best of my knowledge most tritium escapes from reactors in the form of HT, a gas.
3. While it is true that a tritium atom of HT can exchange with a hydrogen atom in water that exchange is slow, at least a room temperatures.
4. My reaction about the solubility of HT in water was in response to the claim that tritium mixes well with water. Mixing in my book means dissolving.
5. Do you know in which form tritium escapes from these reactors?
6. "Every atom in the universe of a given radioactive isotope has the same half life". Wrong. The half lives of electron-capture nuclei are much longer in the interior of stars where the atoms have lost most of their electrons than on Earth.
"The main health risk from tritium, though, would be in drinking water. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says tritium should measure no more than 20,000 picocuries per liter in drinking water. The agency estimates seven of 200,000 people who drink such water for decades would develop cancer."
"The public health and safety impact of this is next to zero," said Tony Pietrangelo, chief nuclear officer of the industry's Nuclear Energy Institute. "This is a public confidence issue."
------
1 person gets cancer from it out of 33k... so they say, and that's next to 0 but it is NOT 0. They're still causing cancer. You can bet the amount of tritium reported leaking from those aging and rusty pipes, is well under the truth.
"Last year, the Vermont Senate was so troubled by tritium leaks as high as 2.5 million picocuries per liter at the Vermont Yankee reactor in southern Vermont (125 times the EPA drinking-water standard) that it voted to block relicensing — a power that the Legislature holds in that state."
"The gloating didn't last. In March, the NRC granted the plant a 20-year license extension, despite the state opposition. Weeks ago, operator Entergy sued Vermont in federal court, challenging its authority to force the plant to close."
"At 41-year-old Oyster Creek in southern New Jersey, the country's oldest operating reactor, the latest tritium troubles started in April 2009, a week after it was relicensed for 20 more years. That's when plant workers discovered tritium by chance in about 3,000 gallons of water that had leaked into a concrete vault housing electrical lines."
"In an initiative started last year, NRC Chairman Gregory Jaczko asked his staff to examine regulations on buried piping to evaluate if stricter standards or more inspections were needed.
The staff report, issued in June, openly acknowledged that the NRC "has not placed an emphasis on preventing" the leaks.
The authors concluded there are no significant health threats or heightened risk of accidents.
And they predicted even more leaks in the future."
-------------------
In other words the reactors all have corrosive pipes, are leaking like crazy, and the NRC is turning it's head and NOT making them fix the problem.
Sundome,
"In other words the reactors all have corrosive pipes, are leaking like crazy, and the NRC is turning it's head and NOT making them fix the problem."
It is even worse than that. There is no materials engineering technical knowledge in modern science that, beyond pipe replacement, can solve the problem of hydrogen embrittlement. The fact that the Tritium hydrogen radionuclide is involved, of course, makes it a health issue.
Most people don't know that most of the hydrogen gas produced for industrial processes (e.g. refining crude oil into gasolene) is itself extracted, not from water electrolysis, but from hydrocarbons like crude oil and natural gas. The refineries have had a hell of a time storing this hydrogen in steel containers because, to a hydrogen molecule, the thick steel walls of a container look like several levels of chain link fence would to a mosquito. It just weaves it's way through and out. As if this wasn't enough, regardless of the metal alloy used to contain the hydrogen, any metal wall that hydrogen filters through is embrittled. How exactly these walls become embrittled is NOT understood. Eventually cracks form and the whole container or pipe must be replaced. No patch or weld will do because the embrittlement permeates the entire structure even though the cracks only form at the most embrittled areas.
That is why these nuclear power plant pipes are riddled with cracks. That is why the NRC is dragging its' feet. The WHOLE pipe infrastructure has to be replaced when ANY part of the pipes show embrittlement cracks. That is how oil refineries, that simply cannot afford to have loose hydrogen gas around for obvious reasons, deal with this. That is why storing hydrogen in car fuel tanks hasn't come about.
There is no way the nuclear power plant operators are going to pay for the massive expense of replacing miles of Tritium embrittled pipes, regardless of the risk to you and me.
That's why they invented "informed risk" analysis bullshit. Informed risk analysis is just a form of criminal negligence for profit. All the other deadly, long lived radionuclides can follow Tritium through those massively embrittled pipe cracks as well.
Pipe corrosion was why the Trojan nuclear reactor outside Portland was closed after only 25 years of operation. Too expensive to replace and repair the piping. Are you watching the Ft. Calhoun reactor situation?
All it takes is for an earthquake to break those pipes and expose the fuel!!! BOOM!
It doesn't need an earth quake. It's already happening. Eventually they won't be able to cool a reactor because of the breaks in the pipe and they'll have a melt down - as the article points out.
Wow, finally some good news on CD for a change. I understand radioactive ground water makes the best popsickles EVAR kids!
/snark
Thom Hartman has a nice summary of the nuclear issue:
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheBigPictureRT
Nuclear power - the nightmare that keeps on giving. Is there any way to stop this madness? Obviously, all nuclear power plants should be shut down. Sadly, I have no faith in our so called "law makers." What can we the people do to protect ourselves? Unfortunately, there is no where to run. There are nuke plants in several parts of the country. Really, what can we do to change this? At least we know about this situation. Most people have no idea what is happening. Sadly, I fear that if I tell others about this they will simply think that I am "fear mongering" and pessimistic. Clearly, global climate change and the destruction of the environment is the major issue of our time. We need to build a massive movement.
Does tritium exposure actually ingender three eyed carps as is ostensibly the case of Homer Simpson's boss, Montgomery Burn's nuke plant where river water coolant does in Springfield, USA?
Why is everyone in a tizzy about this ? Our leaders tell us we are safe and that's all the majority of the sleeping masses need to hear. Don't forget - we are the greatest country in the world and we are also god's mostest favorite. Go back to sleep, there's no need to wake up - ever.
I was just thinking back to "The China Syndrome." There is a scene where they are trying to deal with the melt down and keep reading one particular gauge which stays in the safe zone. Then someone taps the gauge and it goes all the way into the red. The gauge had stuck!
Here, we are dealing with broken and frayed cables, leaking pipes and valves, breakdowns of metals due to radiation and erosion, andonandonandon. Tritium is just one of the symptoms, a small piece of evidence exposing global criminality for profit.
What do we do about it? Raise the failure level above whatever is found. Extend the license to double the design life of the plant, increase its output by 25%, and count the profits.
If the damned thing leaks or blows, the government will pay for it. No different than BP, really. Destroy the Gulf's ecosystem, destroy the livelihoods of the people of the Gulf, give out a little damages, stall the rest, apply for a bunch more deep drilling permits from the government and get them over the objections of millions of Americans ignored by their alleged "representatives."
More profit!!!
I grew up a proud CITIZEN of the United States of America, a constitutional republic.
I don't like being a powerless and impoverished SUBJECT or SERF of the American Empire.
There's no cleaning up though. They'll kill us all.
NRC personnel are scumbags usually from either the nuclear navy or the utility companies. The odds are we will have meltdown at a reactor or a spent fuel pool. Aging corroded pipes and faulty electrical systems will fail in seismic events. Then there are four reactors sitting on the California coast where they can have a tsunami coupled with powerful earthquakes.
Dept of Energy reactors are even worse. The ACRR at Sandia Labs in Albuquerque has no containment and is in a building that cannot be made safe for the earthquake in that region. The ventilation system cannot contain a radioactive release.
Then there are the DOE plans to build the plutonium bomb factory at Los Alamos in an unstable seismic zone. The cost for the project has escalated from $350 M to over $600 B to make nuclear bomb cores from plutonium that we do not need since we already have 23,000 plutonium pits.
The federal agencies are basically criminals robbing the public of tax dollars when they are not providing the protective services they are paid to render.