Defective Nuclear-Waste Storage

Written by Jim the Realtor

December 9, 2018

Are you looking for one more reason to move away? 

It sounds like if/when the Big One starts shaking, you will need to grab everything you own and move to Yuma.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) admits in their November 28, 2018 NRC Inspection Report and Notice of Violation, every Holtec canister downloaded into the storage holes is damaged due to inadequate clearance between the canister and the divider shell in the storage hole (vault).  The NRC states canister walls are already “worn”.  This results in cracks. Once cracks start, they continue to grow through the wall.

The NRC stated Southern California Edison (and Holtec) knew about this since January 2018, but continued to load 29 canisters anyway.  Edison’s August 24, 2018 press release states they plan to finish loading mid 2019.

The NRC states Edison must stop loading canisters until this issue is resolved.  However, there is no method to inspect or repair cracking canisters and the NRC knows this.

The NRC should require all San Onofre thin-wall canisters be replaced with thick-wall transportable storage casks.  These are the only proven dry storage systems that can be inspected, maintained, repaired and monitored in a manner to prevent major radiological releases and explosions.

California state agencies should revoke San Onofre permits and withhold Decommissioning Trust Funds until these issues are resolved.

The Navy should consider revoking the San Onofre Camp Pendleton lease until Edison agrees to replace thin-wall canisters with proven thick-wall transportable storage casks.  This is a national security issue. If the NRC cannot do their job, maybe it’s time to bring in the Marines. The Navy has nuclear experts.

The current storage system puts the public at risk. Nuclear waste stored in thin-wall steel canisters (only 5/8? thick) cannot be inspected, repaired or safely transported. Thin-wall canisters crack, but technology does not exist to inspect for cracks or repair cracks once canisters are filled with highly radioactive nuclear fuel waste.

The President of Holtec has stated a through-wall crack will release millions of curies of radionuclides and it’s not practical to repair them, even if you could find the cracks.

Yet, they have no plan in place  to stop or contain a cracking, radiation-leaking, and potentially exploding canister.

Each canister contains roughly a Chernobyl nuclear disaster.  Once canisters explode, the radionuclides will travel with the wind, similar to how smoke traveled with the California Camp Fire.

San Onofre will have 73 canisters stored on-site by mid 2019.

Link to Article

11 Comments

  1. Ataraxia

    Wow! You’re a stand up guy for sharing this information in your sales area. And I’m looking to move back to that area… Pretty much anywhere between San Diego and Huntington Beach. Sigh.

  2. Jim the Realtor

    I’d shrug it off as fake news if I didn’t read every link.

    The lack of oversight by regulators is shocking. The workers make a mistake and drop a canister into the hole without positioning it correctly, and the NRC hasn’t gotten around to a reprimand yet, let alone corrective action?

    And they let them continue to load more canisters in place?

    From the NRC report:

    10 CFR 72.172 requires, in part, that, licensees establish measures to ensure that conditions adverse to quality, such as failures, malfunctions, deficiencies, and deviations, are promptly identified and corrected.

    Contrary to the above, from January 30 to August 3, 2018, the licensee failed to establish measures to ensure that conditions adverse to quality, such as failures, malfunctions, deficiencies, and deviations, were promptly identified and corrected.

    Specifically:

    1. On July 22, 2018, the loading crew experienced difficulty in aligning canister 28 for downloading into the independent spent fuel installation vault. However, the licensee failed to enter this deviation in downloading conditions into its corrective action program to determine the cause of the misalignment problem and develop corrective actions to preclude reoccurrence.

    2. From January 30 to August 3, 2018, during canister downloading, contact between the canister and vault components frequently occurred. However, the licensee failed to enter instances of contact into its corrective action program and perform an assessment to disposition the exterior conditions of the downloaded canisters and vault components.

    This is a Severity Level IV violation (NRC Enforcement Policy Section 6.3).

  3. Ataraxia

    I like the move though. The more public exposure this gets the more likely there will be positive progress with the issue. It’s the right thing to do.

  4. Jim the Realtor

    Watch the youtube below of the president of the company talking about cracks in the canisters.

    He says they are highly unlikely, but if they do happen there isn’t anything they can do. They will have to wing it.

    Here he says it’s ‘not practical’ to repair them:

    https://youtu.be/euaFZt0YPi4

  5. Jim the Realtor

    I like the move though. The more public exposure this gets the more likely there will be positive progress with the issue. It’s the right thing to do.

    I agree, and not only can we handle the truth, but if somebody happens to read this who knows somebody in charge, maybe we can effect change.

    Burke once said: “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men should do nothing.”

    I’m going to say something!

  6. Jim the Realtor

    I don’t have to get into the decades of disputes about where to store nuclear waste, and how it led to the decision to just leave the junk at San Onofre, but it is insane that it is allowed to happen right in the middle of 10 million people who live on an earthquake fault.

  7. Jim the Realtor

    Lovely…..

    More than 80,000 metric tons of high-level nuclear waste are stored at nuclear reactor sites in more than 35 states. The longer the waste sits, the more the government will be forced to compensate nuclear power producers for its inaction.

    Estimates place the government’s liability from nuclear waste at $34 billion and growing, a number that doesn’t include the effects on the communities unable to reuse the land.

    That liability stems from the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, which said the federal government would take responsibility for disposing of the waste in a nuclear repository. A 1987 update to that law dedicated the controversial Yucca Mountain site in Nevada as the location for that facility, despite protests from state and local officials in Nevada.

  8. Jim the Realtor

    but if somebody happens to read this who knows somebody in charge, maybe we can effect change.

    BTW, I think the Fed reads the blog, and my request is for them to not raise their rate at the December meeting so we can avert plunging real estate sales in early 2019.

    Please Santa?

  9. Name

    Wow, good work JIm!

  10. Eddie89

    Looking at the NOAA map, there’s a lot of “red” states that will also be impacted by what “could” happen at San Onofre.

    Those Congress People/Senators that think this is only a California problem, better think again! Wait until those states realize what could come at them through those winds!
    https://sanonofresafety.files.wordpress.com/2018/11/noaa-campfiremap2018-11-18a.jpg

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