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- <text id=91TT0568>
- <title>
- Mar. 18, 1991: Mid-Life Crisis For Nukes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 18, 1991 A Moment To Savor
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 87
- Mid-Life Crisis for Nukes
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Designed to last 40 years, U.S. atomic plants face increased
- maintenance woes and may soon be perilously past their prime
- </p>
- <p>By Christine Gorman--With reporting by Robert Ajemian/Boston
- </p>
- <p> Like many of the technicians and engineers who run them,
- nuclear power plants in the U.S. are pushing middle age. So
- far, only nine of the nation's 112 commercial reactors, which
- were designed and licensed to run for 40 years, have passed the
- midpoint of their careers. But by 1995, 40 more plants will
- celebrate their 20th birthday. Because of that, and because no
- new plants have been ordered since 1978, within four years 44%
- of America's atomic facilities will be past their prime. At a
- time when the Bush Administration is pushing for a renewed
- emphasis on nuclear power, there is growing concern about the
- safety of the country's geriatric plants.
- </p>
- <p> Fueling these worries is a new rule, scheduled to be enacted
- in June by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, that would
- stretch the legal life-span of many atomic plants to 60 years.
- Although the NRC says it will ensure that the industry
- addresses age-related issues, some scientists charge that the
- agency's safety guidelines are not stringent enough to prevent
- catastrophic accidents. Forty years ago, "these nuclear plants,
- after concerted study, were granted a finite number of years
- to operate," says M.I.T. physicist Henry Kendall, who shared a
- Nobel Prize last year for discovering subatomic particles called
- quarks. "Now the industry wants to extend that time by 20
- years. They're changing the rules of the game." Nuclear
- officials dispute the charge, pointing out that the 1954 Atomic
- Energy Act contained provisions for license renewal.
- </p>
- <p> First in line for a new lease on life is the oldest
- commercial reactor in the U.S., the 30-year-old Yankee nuclear
- power plant in Rowe, Mass. "Yankee Rowe" reliably produces more
- than 1 billion kW-h of electricity a year--about one-sixth
- the capacity of its more modern counterparts--and boasts an
- excellent safety record. However, after decades of absorbing
- the high-energy neutrons that are released during nuclear
- reactions, the walls of Yankee Rowe's reactor vessel have begun
- to weaken. Just how much is not clear. This so-called reactor
- embrittlement is potentially the most dangerous problem faced
- by aging atomic plants, because a crack in these walls could
- expose the highly radioactive reactor core.
- </p>
- <p> At an NRC hearing last September, Neal Randall, one of the
- agency's engineers, testified that based on worst-case
- calculations, he believed the "Yankee Rowe vessel is quite
- brittle" and was therefore unsafe to operate even for the
- remainder of its license. The precise extent of the problem is
- uncertain because the utility has run out of easily accessible
- test samples of the original steel used in building the vessel.
- Ideally, such samples are periodically examined for hidden
- cracks, allowing scientists to determine how much embrittlement
- has occurred. Although Randall's opinion was a minority view,
- it electrified the plant's critics. The utility has promised
- to take new weld samples from within the reactor vessel
- sometime next year.
- </p>
- <p> "We're not saying that aging problems do not exist," says
- Andrew Kadak, the Rowe plant's chief executive officer. "But
- we address them constantly. It cost $40 million to build this
- plant, and we've put another $40 million into it to keep it
- current and efficient." Kadak insists that Yankee's reactor
- vessel can operate safely for another 20 years: "We believe we
- can prove that." Among other things, he says, engineers use
- more advanced techniques to detect flaws and are developing an
- annealing process that would strengthen irradiated metal. The
- key point "is the size and thickness of our vessel," he argues.
- "At eight inches, the walls are as thick as at brand-new
- plants."
- </p>
- <p> Surprisingly, most of the age-related problems in nuclear
- facilities are not triggered by radiation but are due to more
- ordinary kinds of wear and tear. Corrosion can lead to leaks
- in the steam generators of some reactors, causing the eventual
- rupture of component tubes and the escape of radioactive water.
- Such a sequence of events was probably responsible for the
- accident in Mihama, Japan, last month, which resulted in the
- release of a small amount of radiation into the sea and air.
- </p>
- <p> Of course, faulty design or parts would exacerbate the
- problems of aging. In one of the most acrimonious legal battles
- ever to hit the nuclear industry, the Duke Power Co. of
- Charlotte, N.C., has accused Pittsburgh-based Westinghouse of
- fraudulently selling it 16 defective steam generators. The
- utility claims that the generators, which were installed at two
- of its plants in the late 1970s, cost more to maintain than
- normal and may have to be replaced as soon as 1995, long before
- the end of their life-span. Duke estimates the cost of putting
- in new generators to be in excess of $600 million. Others in
- the industry are closely following the case, which is scheduled
- for trial in 1993, since identical Westinghouse generators are
- in place at 14 other U.S. facilities.
- </p>
- <p> Aging is a concern even outside the containment structures
- of nuclear reactors. Although the pipes that crisscross such
- facilities have been designed to withstand tremendous changes
- in pressure and temperature, they are not immune to corrosion.
- Nuclear engineers confidently predict that they can find and
- replace worn-out equipment before it presents a hazard. But as
- many a householder can sadly attest, pipes do not always signal
- when they are about to burst. For nuclear reactors as for human
- beings, growing old frequently brings on unexpected--and
- irreversible--problems.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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