Photo courtesy of Nuclear Street Portal |
It was also stated that ruptured tubes under high pressure can result in a chain reaction causing adjacent tubes to rupture if not stopped in time, with potentially catastrophic results.
Another point stressed was that standard procedures were violated if they discovered the problem in Unit 2's tubes when it was being serviced before the leak occurred in Unit 3. When a failure of any critical system is discovered it is the responsibility of the plant operator to make the conservative decision to shutdown and inspect any "like components". In this case it appears that this was not done for the exact duplicate components in Unit 3.
I also got word that many workers inside the plant are secretively supportive of decommissioning and wish us on the outside success in doing what they can only hope for while clinging to their jobs. To that I say thanks for the encouragement, and thanks for doing your best to keep us all safe, but it is time for them to do a little soul searching. There is too much at stake to be thinking of your own security. Now is the time to let your concerns be known publicly.
Thanks for this Gary, it does make sense. I support the workers without a doubt. Also all nuke plant workers should be guaranteed a job and re-training when the plant is SHUTDOWN for good. I hope and pray it stays closed now & forever.
ReplyDeleteSONGS workers are told that they will lose their jobs, I want them to know that is not true. We support them and thank them working hard for everyone's safety including theirs.