Sunday, July 3, 2011

Missouri River Water Levels Stabilizing, Near Flood Being Deemed Non-Inicident

With my previous post you can see the water levels in the successive reservoirs at each of the 5 damns along the Missouri river.  Take a look and it is clear that the waters have at least leveled off and are in fact declining.  This is very good news.  It seems that the damn system built by the Corps of Engineers after the 1952 flood was built just well enough to be up to the task.  And it seems that the Nebraska's nuclear stations were built just far enough from the tamed Mighty Mo.

The semi-official word on the nuclear plant is that barring a great deluge of rains, or a dam failure, all is well.  The story of Fort Calhoun:  It wasn't a Fukushima.  It was barely a national news story.

But ask yourself, was the news about this story enough?  Did it come soon enough?  Since the experts are thus far correct, that no major release of radiation has occurred, maybe so.  However I can't get over some of the early propaganda manuvers.  All the stories emphasizing that it was the nation's smallest nuclear plant and that it had been shut down since April.  No mainstream news explained the dangers of an overheating spent fuel pool.  No news agencies used this event to inform the public that spent fuel needs to be cooled for years after being used in the reactor.  Americans in short still know very little about what could have happened.  Omahans know very little and it was right next door.  Fort Calhoun has been a non-incident.

So where does this leave us?  Well, alive and healthy thankfully.  And I predict that unless something else happens to raise people's blood pressures and consciousness of this plant's dangerous location, Fort Calhoun will be firing up the reactor again come this September.  After all a flood like that only happens once 100 years at least, maybe once in 500 years.

Which leads me to another prediction.  The same folks who said, "nothing to worry about this isn't the big bad 500 year flood", will now say there WON'T  be a flood like this for another 500 years, so it's okay if the plant restarts and everything goes back to "normal."

Although I for one, would prefer the plant closes, and is cleaned up (a hugely expensive operation no doubt).  That spent fuel is moved to a safer location, (instead of being in mausoleums in the path of a mighty river where it's suppose to safely decay for 100,000 years).  That there is a huge local and national debate about closing it, after all it came pretty close to endangering the water supply for how many cities?  How many people?  (Omaha to Kansas City to Saint Louis...to  New Orleans, cough!)  I would prefer a debate about how many wind turbines it would take to replace that plant (geez 500 wind turbines is SOOO Many!).

But I hope none of that actually happens, because this incident has taught me that to have that debate, probably takes a disaster.

The plant just has to sit in the 4 feet of water for another month or two without incident.

3 comments:

  1. If everything does go well, and nothing catastrophic happens this year, what is going to be done to keep this from happening all over again at some future date?

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  2. I seriously wonder if this kind of emergency has happened before and we just haven't seen it in the press.
    I agree, the plants should close,especially the one run by Entergy,that's a shady company.Thanks for the coverage, I had the same idea when I head about this.

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