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To: tech who wrote (1561)12/12/1997 8:35:00 PM
From: Jeffrey S. Mitchell  Respond to of 3391
 
Like I figured, the more bizarre the question, the more likely it is true. As for the two independent nations, I guess I inserted an extra comma because I thought you implied they were both in New York. I did know they were the two smallest "real" places, but I figured since Indians consider themselves to be a "nation" that there were some tribes in New York that owned an acre or two. Nevertheless, I never stopped to consider that the Vatican and Monaco were smaller than Central Park. Wonder if Simon & Garfunkel ever gave a free concert there?

- Jeff



To: tech who wrote (1561)12/12/1997 8:59:00 PM
From: tech  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3391
 
Why the NRC Is Likely to Shut Down All 108 Nuclear Power Plants

Link: y2ktimebomb.com


Bureaucrats follow the book. The book requires compliance of all systems.
The Year 2000 Problem threatens compliance. Conclusion: shut them down
before 2000.

This essay on Westergaard's site points to the problem. The author, Rick
Cowles, has a Web site devoted to electrical utilities and 2000.

Nuclear power supplies 20% of U.S. power. Take this off-line in late 1999, and
what happens if railroad coal shipments start breaking down in 2000? Oil
delivery?



* * * * * * *

A lot of automatic safety and support systems are necessary to operate the
average nuclear facility. What if all the nuclear plants in the U.S. were required
to shut down as a precautionary measure prior to 01/01/2000 because no one
knew if these systems were going to function properly?

The production of nuclear energy from the 108 domestic U.S. nuclear facilities
accounts for nearly 20 percent of the total domestic (US) electrical generation
capacity. In some regions of the country, this percentage is much greater. For
example, the eastern seaboard of the U.S. depends on nearly 40% of its
electricity being generated by splitting atoms. . . .

NRC regulations that were developed as a result of TMI [Three Mile Island,
1979] require all plants to do an exhaustive analysis of potential safety
problems. These analyses are conducted to make sure that the plant operators
training and understanding of how the plant operates doesn't change because
of some type of failure mechanism that was never considered before (and Y2K
is one heck of a potential failure mechanism that was never considered
before). The detail, structure, and depth of these analyses would boggle the
mind of the average person outside of the industry.

Here's an analogy: let's say the manufacturer of your car recommends that
you use 89-octane fuel in your car. You, however, wish to switch to 91-octane
fuel for better engine performance. What if Environmental Protection Agency
regulations said that you couldn't legally switch fuel grades until you had a
mechanic analyze the impact of such a change on every system of your car?
And provide assurance that using a higher-octane fuel would not
fundamentally alter the actual performance (or your understanding of the
performance) of any aspect of your car? And that you couldn't drive your car
until you had written certification of your mechanic's analysis?

. . . .Think about the magnitude of the Year 2000 computer problem - it touches
virtually every area, administrative and operationally, of a nuclear power
plant. Hundreds of automatic controls and embedded chips exist throughout a
typical plant. Many important (and date dependent) databases and
maintenance scheduling computer programs are administratively required for
a plant to continue operating. And literally everything has to be reviewed and
intensively documented for Y2K impact on the ability to safely operate the
plant.

Unless a nuclear plant can prove conclusively that the Y2K bug will not
impact the safe operation of the plant or the ability to safely shut it down, the
plant doesn't run. Conservative, safe operation of a nuclear power facility
dictates this thought process. The NRC has publicly stated that a certification
of Year 2000 readiness will be required from every nuclear plant in the
country. In the absence of that guarantee, the NRC has no recourse, by
federal regulations, but to require the shutdown of the plants that aren't Y2K
certified. I would expect this requirement to be enforced no later than the 3rd
or 4th quarter of 1999. . . .

As noted before, a significant percentage of all domestic U.S. electrical power
is produced by nuclear energy. At any given time, there's about a 15% reserve
in makeup power available (provided all other generating plants are available
and running). If the nukes aren't operating, where's the extra power going to
come from? You can do the math on this one.

---------------------------------------------------------------


Idea for ConSyGen's PR guy:

Send and information packet to the Governors in all the states with plants, also send packets to the Department of Energy and the NRC
nrc.gov