Mounting Climate Impacts Threaten #USNuclearPlants

Higher temperatures, rising #flood risks and increased #water stress mean facilities need to take additional resiliency measures

By Avery Ellfeldt
August 20, 2020

"'It looks like almost all plants see some kind of climate risk worsening over the next 20 years,' said David Kamran, the report’s author.

"The study also underscored that the nuclear sector’s vulnerability to regional climate risks in large part depends on plants’ proximity to water.

"Because nuclear generation facilities rely on external water sources for cooling, the vast majority are situated near #rivers, #lakes and #oceans. That exposes them to #flooding and storm surges, which can damage critical equipment.

"The Four Twenty Seven data show 37 gigawatts of U.S. nuclear capacity is overly exposed to flood risk.

"That includes plants along the East and Gulf coasts, which are likely to grapple with rising sea levels and intensifying #hurricanes in the decades to come. Storm-related rainfall, the reports adds, could 'inundate' nuclear facilities and 'damage transmission lines or substations, hindering a plant’s ability to deliver power.'

"Facilities in the Midwest and South Florida, meanwhile, are more likely to suffer from higher temperatures that have the potential to reduce plants’ ability to generate power. The generation process involves creating steam, which is then cooled and condensed into liquid for reuse.

"'If the temperature of incoming water to cool and condense steam is too high, or if the temperature of the discharge water is too high, power plants can be forced to curtail production or shut down temporarily,' the report says.

"Facilities in the Rocky Mountain region, near the Colorado River and in California, on the other hand, are projected to face water scarcity, spiking uncertainty about having long-term access to necessary water supplies."

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/mounting-climate-impacts-threaten-u-s-nuclear-reactors/

#NoNukes #RethinkNotRestart
#ClimateCrisis #SeaLevelRise
#ClimateCatastrophe #WaterIsLife #ExtremeWeather #Flooding #ExtremeTemperatures #WaterTemperatureRise

Mounting Climate Impacts Threaten U.S. Nuclear Reactors

Higher temperatures, rising flood risks and increased water stress mean facilities need to take additional resiliency measures

Scientific American

Article includes map of #Flood vulnerable #USNuclearPlants

Can Aging U.S. #NuclearPowerPlants Withstand More #ExtremeWeather?

There is no consensus on how #ClimateChange has already affected nuclear power plants globally, but one researcher found an increasing rate of reactor outages linked to climate-related disruptions since 1990.

By James Dinneen
April 24, 2024

"This debate is now playing out again in fights over the future of nuclear power plants as they reach the end of their design lives. Paul Gunter at #BeyondNuclear, an anti-nuclear advocacy group, argues continued vulnerability to climate hazards is a reason the NRC should deny relicensing applications at some plants, such as the #NorthAnnaNuclearGeneratingStation in #Virginia, where Gunter plans to specifically cite the GAO report’s findings on flooding. According to the report, around two-thirds of U.S. #NuclearPlants are in areas with high #flood hazard."

https://e360.yale.edu/digest/u.s.-nuclear-power-climate-change

#NoNukes #RethinkNotRestart #ClimateCrisis #SeaLevelRise #ClimateCatastrophe

Can Aging U.S. Nuclear Power Plants Withstand More Extreme Weather?

Yale E360