General Electric-designed reactors in Fukushima have 23 sisters in U.S.

http://openchannel.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/03/13/6256121-general-e...

 

The General Electric-designed nuclear reactors involved in the Japanese emergency are very similar to 23 reactors in use in the United States, according to Nuclear Regulatory Commission records.

The NRC database of nuclear power plants shows that 23 of the 104 nuclear plants in the U.S. are GE boiling-water reactors with GE's Mark I systems for containing radioactivity, the same containment system used by the reactors in trouble at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. The U.S. reactors are in Alabama, Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Vermont.

In addition, 12 reactors in the U.S. have the later Mark II or Mark III containment system from GE. These 12 are in Illinois, Louisiana, Mississippi, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Washington state. See the full list below.

 

General Electric is a parent company of msnbc.com through GE's 49 percent stake in NBCUniversal. NBCUniversal and Microsoft are equal partners in msnbc.com.)

Msnbc.com sent questions Saturday to GE Energy, asking whether the Japanese reactors differed from those of the same general design used in the U.S.

A GE spokesman, Michael Tetuan, referred all questions to the Nuclear Energy Institute, an industry trade and lobbying group. Tetuan said GE nuclear staff members in Wilmington, N.C., are focused on assisting GE employees in Japan and standing by to help the Japanese authorities if asked to help. The NEI on Sunday confirmed that the figure of 23 is correct.

The six reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant, which had the explosion on Saturday, are all GE-designed boiling-water reactors, according to the anti-nuclear advocacy group Nuclear Information and Resource Service. The group says that five have containment systems of GE's Mark I design, and the sixth is of the Mark II type. They were placed in operation between 1971 and 1979.

A fact sheet from the group contends that the Mark I design has design problems, and that in 1972 an Atomic Energy Commission member, Dr. Stephen Hanuaer, recommended that this type of system be discontinued.

"Some modifications have been made to U.S. Mark I reactors since 1986, although the fundamental design deficiencies remain," NIRS said. The group has a commentary online describing what it says are hazards of boiling-water reactors: human invervention needed to vent radioactive steam in the case of a core meltdown, and problems with aging.


advertisement
advertisement
advertisement

Since the earthquake struck Japan on Friday, the early statements by the industry's Nuclear Industry Institute have emphasized that only six plants in the U.S. have precisely the same generation of reactor design (GE boiling-water reactor model 3) as the first reactor to have trouble in Fukushima Daiichi. Problems then developed at different reactors of GE model 4.

But aside from the generation of reactor design, the following 23 U.S. plants have GE boiling-water reactors (GE models 2, 3 or 4) with the same Mark I containment design used at Fukushima, according to the NRC's online database:

   • Browns Ferry 1, Athens, Alabama, operating license since 1973, reactor type GE 4.

   • Browns Ferry 2, Athens, Alabama, 1974, GE 4.

   • Browns Ferry 3, Athens, Alabama, 1976, GE 4.

   • Brunswick 1, Southport, North Carolina, 1976, GE 4.

   • Brunswick 2, Southport, North Carolina, 1974, GE 4.

   • Cooper, Brownville, Nebraska, 1974, GE 4.

   • Dresden 2, Morris, Illinois, 1970, GE 3.

   • Dresden 3, Morris, Illinois, 1971, GE 3.

   • Duane Arnold, Palo, Iowa, 1974, GE 4.

   • Fermi 2, Monroe, Michigan, 1985, GE 4.

   • FitzPatrick, Scriba, New York, 1974, GE 4.

   • Hatch 1, Baxley, Georgia, 1974, GE 4.

   • Hatch 2, Baxley, Georgia, 1978, GE 4.

   • Hope Creek, Hancock's Bridge, New Jersey, 1986, GE 4.

   • Monticello, Monticello, Minnesota, 1970, GE 3.

   • Nine Mile Point 1, Scriba, New York, 1969, GE 2.

   • Oyster Creek, Forked River, New Jersey, 1969, GE 2.

   • Peach Bottom 2, Delta, Pennsylvania, 1973, GE 4.

   • Peach Bottom 3, Delta, Pennsylvania, 1974,  GE 4.

• Pilgrim, Plymouth, Massachusetts, 1972, GE 3.

   • Quad Cities 1, Cordova, Illinois, 1972, GE 3.

   • Quad Cities 2, Moline, Illinois, 1972, GE 3.

   • Vermont Yankee, Vernon, Vermont, 1972, GE 4.

 

And these 12 newer GE boiling-water reactors have a Mark II or Mark III design:

   • Clinton, Clinton, Illinois, 1987, GE 6, Mark III.

   • Columbia Generating Station, Richland, Washington, 1984, GE 5, Mark II.

   • Grand Gulf, Port Gibson, Mississippi, 1984, GE 6, Mark III.

   • LaSalle 1, Marseilles, Illinois, 1982, GE 5, Mark II.

   • LaSalle 2, Marseilles, Illinois, 1983, GE 5, Mark II.

   • Limerick 1, Limerick, Pennsylvania, 1985, GE 4, Mark II.

   • Limerick 2, Limerick, Pennsylvania, 1989, GE 4, Mark II.

   • Nine Mile Point 2, Scriba, New York, 1987, GE 5, Mark II.

   • Perry, Perry, Ohio, 1986, GE 6, Mark III.

   • River Bend, St. Francisville, Louisiana, 1985, GE 6, Mark III.

   • Susquehanna 1, Salem Township, Pennsylvania, 1982, GE 4, Mark II.

   • Susquehanna 2, Salem Township, Pennsylvania, 1984, GE 4, Mark II.

 

Other resources:

Details on each U.S. reactor are in the NRC list.

The NRC has an explainer on boiling-water reactors and the various GE containment designs.

Here's an earthquake hazard map of the lower 48 United States from the U.S. Geological Survey showing the areas with the greatest risks. More detailed state-by-state maps from the USGS are here.

Scientific American looks at the technical situation facing the engineers in Japan. And The Wall Street Journal describes how this emergency calls into question the redundancies that nuclear plant designers rely on.

advertisement
advertisement
advertisement

The Wall Street Journal reported that Tokyo Electric tested the Fukushima plant to withstand an earthquake less severe than the one that struck last week:

Separately, company documents show that Tokyo Electric tested the Fukushima plant to withstand a maximum seismic jolt lower than Friday's 8.9 earthquake. Tepco's last safety test of nuclear power plant Number 1—one that is currently in danger of meltdown—was done at a seismic magnitude the company considered the highest possible, but in fact turned out to be lower than Friday's quake. The information comes from the company's "Fukushima No. 1 and No. 2 Updated Safety Measures" documents written in Japanese in 2010 and 2009. The documents were reviewed by Dow Jones.

The company said in the documents that 7.9 was the highest magnitude for which they tested the safety for their No. 1 and No. 2 nuclear power plants in Fukushima.

Simultaneous seismic activity along the three tectonic plates in the sea east of the plants—the epicenter of Friday's quake—wouldn't surpass 7.9, according to the company's presentation.

The company based its models partly on previous seismic activity in the area, including a 7.0 earthquake in May 1938 and two simultaneous earthquakes of 7.3 and 7.5 on November 5 of the same year.

 

Views: 47

Reply to This

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

tjdavis favorited Parrhesia's video
8 hours ago
tjdavis favorited UnitedWeStand's video
8 hours ago
tjdavis favorited Sandy's video
8 hours ago
tjdavis posted a photo
8 hours ago
Doc Vega commented on rlionhearted_3's photo
Thumbnail

2DF36465-A826-443C-A3A8-6638BC1D4FFA

"You can't subvert a nation that has already been subverted by Marxists and drug cartles who…"
yesterday
Doc Vega commented on rlionhearted_3's photo
Thumbnail

2DF36465-A826-443C-A3A8-6638BC1D4FFA

"Venezuela was once a thriving nation until the left and Communism infiltrated the government, and…"
yesterday
tjdavis posted a photo
yesterday
tjdavis posted a video

Jacob Collier Improvises With Orchestra (Live in San Francisco)

A few months ago, I had the joy of performing with the world's first Audience Symphony Orchestra in San Francisco, a gathering of fans from all over North Am...
yesterday
Doc Vega posted blog posts
yesterday
Роман posted a blog post

Архітектура для мегаполісів: виклики та рішення урбаністики

Сучасні мегаполіси — це складні живі організми, де переплітаються економіка, культура, технології…See More
Monday
Tori Kovach posted a discussion

Pumpkin Face

Is he dead yet?See More
Sunday
cheeki kea posted a blog post
Sunday
cheeki kea commented on Sandy's photo
Thumbnail

FB_IMG_1770501160448

"Thumbs up find. So what ever do we have here then? Revolving doors of corruption and deceit that…"
Sunday
cheeki kea left a comment for Роман
"Greetings and well wishes to you POMaH, great that you've joined us all here at the site. May…"
Sunday
Sandy posted photos
Sunday
Doc Vega posted a blog post

Something is Making Fishermen Disappear It’s not Alligators or Sharks

 The setting is a section of the Ohio River where many locals enjoy fishing, swimming, and boating.…See More
Saturday
Роман is now a member of 12160 Social Network
Saturday
Doc Vega posted a blog post

Always Wondering

The face of reality pressed against your window paneIs it engineered or is it real rain?So, you…See More
Friday
tjdavis favorited Burbia's video
Feb 5
tjdavis posted a photo
Feb 5

© 2026   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted