August 22, 2011

TVA shuts down nuclear plants


As oblivious as the proverbial frogs in slowly boiling water, we are beginning to experience the seemingly benign first years of catastrophic climate change. With the temperature in the Tennessee River approaching that of a nice warm hot tub, for a second summer in a row, three Tennessee Valley Authority nuclear power plants had to shut down this week.


As temperatures across the South have skyrocketed in record-breaking heat waves, the water in the Tennessee River, where the plants discharge their cooling water, is already a staggering 90 degrees.


Because hot rivers are not good for fish, by law nuclear plants must not heat rivers above 86.9 degrees with their discharged water.


But that now quaint-seeming environmental protection was passed decades ago, well before global warming began to impact air and water temperatures. Summers like these make environmenal niceties like not overheating rivers with nuclear cooling water a bit irrelevant, because the river in question is already as hot as a hot tub.


"When the river's ambient temperature reaches 90 degrees, we can't add any heat to it," TVA's nuclear spokesman Ray Golden told the Times Free Press.


The shutdown marks the second summer in a row that TVA has had to shut down nuclear power as local rivers have reached record temperatures.
Last year's shutdown cost the company $50 million in replacement power, a cost it passed along to its customers. To forestall the same problem reoccurring in future years, TVA invested $80 million in a seventh cooling tower at Browns Ferry, which began construction last October.


The additional tower would have been ready to prevent another summer heat shutdown by now, but construction has also been impacted by this year's extreme weather.


Source: Clean Technica (http://s.tt/12ZZ2)

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