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Spent nuclear fuel shifted
Inspectors find that containers holding spent fuel shifted several inches in last week's earthquake.
Date published: 9/1/2011

By RUSTY DENNEN

In another indication of the power of last week's magnitude-5.8 earthquake, officials at North Anna Power Station said yesterday that 25 of 27 vertical steel casks that hold highly radioactive spent fuel shifted on their pads.

Richard Zuercher, spokesman for Dominion power's nuclear operations, said none is leaking, all are intact, and there is no danger to the public or plant employees.

"The earthquake did move, slightly, some of the dry storage casks on the pad," he said. The steel casks, which weigh up to 115 tons when loaded, shifted between an inch and 4 inches.

"We're evaluating whether we need to move them back," Zuercher said.

Other newer steel and concrete casks that sit horizontally on pads sustained some minor "cosmetic" damage, Zuercher said. "Everything there is intact and easily fixable." Thirteen of those casks also contain spent fuel.

The fuel for North Anna's two reactors is enriched uranium dioxide, compressed into small ceramic pellets and stacked in metal-alloy tubes called fuel rods.

The rods are bundled together in 8-inch by 14-foot fuel assemblies. There are 157 fuel assemblies in each reactor.

After powering each reactor for about nine months, the fuel is spent, then shifted into a swimming-pool-like container to cool underwater for several years.

When cool enough, the fuel assemblies are shifted to the casks and stored outside the reactor containment domes on pads in a secure area. Each cask contains 32 fuel assemblies.

Plans for a permanent, national repository for the fuel, which remains radioactive for thousands of years, are still in a holding pattern. So the material is accumulating at the nation's 104 commercial nuclear reactors.

Environmental groups argue that spent-fuel pool and storage casks are inviting targets for terrorists; the industry maintains both are safe and secure.

The topic has come up in recent years at North Anna because Dominion has an application pending with the NRC for a third reactor. The plant is on Lake Anna in Louisa County, near Mineral.

The news about the fuel-storage casks comes as a special Nuclear Regulatory Commission team continues its work at North Anna. The team arrived earlier this week to look into reports that ground motion from the quake may have exceeded the plant's design.


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Dry cask storage allows spent fuel that has already been cooled in the spent-fuel pool for at least a year to be surrounded by inert gas inside a container called a cask.

The casks are typically steel cylinders that are either welded or bolted closed. The cylinder provides a leak-tight containment of the spent fuel. Each cylinder is surrounded by additional steel, concrete or other material to provide radiation shielding. Some of the cask designs can be used for both storage and transportation.

There are various dry storage cask designs. With some, the steel cylinders containing the fuel are placed vertically in a concrete vault; other designs orient the cylinders horizontally. The concrete vaults provide the radiation shielding. Other cask designs orient the steel cylinder vertically on a concrete pad at a dry cask storage site, using both metal and concrete outer cylinders for radiation shielding.

-Nuclear Regulatory Commission



Date published: 9/1/2011



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