Doubt grows around aging Vermont
Yankee reactor
By KATE GALBRAITH The New York Times
May 29, 2008
BRATTLEBORO — After part of a cooling tower collapsed last August at Vermont's
only nuclear power plant, the company that runs it blamed rotting wooden timbers
that it had failed to inspect properly. The uproar that followed rekindled
environmental groups' hopes of shutting down the aging plant.
The proposed closing, albeit a long shot, has gained some support this year
among Vermont politicians. The discussion here is bringing into sharp relief a
conflict between two objectives long held by environmental advocates: combating
nuclear power and stopping global warming.
Nuclear plants supply nearly 20 percent of the nation's electricity, and they do
so without emitting the carbon dioxide that is the principal cause of global
warming. Vermont's 36-year-old plant, which feeds into the regional power grid,
represents a third of the state's electrical generation.
Antinuclear groups who are arguing for closing the plant hope to replace the
lost electricity with renewable generation from wind turbines, solar power and
the combustion of plant material. Additionally, they cite the potential for
cutting electrical demand by making homes and business more efficient.
Even so, some environmental advocates have reluctantly acknowledged that no
combination of renewable power and improved efficiency can replace the plant,
Vermont Yankee, at least in the near term. Instead, the state would probably
have to tap the Northeastern grid — which derives more than half its energy from
fossil fuels — for extra power.
"We'll likely have to go to the market, and that will mean an increase in
Vermont's electricity portfolio that comes from fossil fuels," said Andrew
Perchlik, director of Renewable Energy Vermont, a group that promotes clean
power, speaking about the prospect of the plant's closing. He faulted the state
government and utilities for not focusing earlier on renewable energy, saying if
they had done so, "we wouldn't be in this predicament."
The Vermont debate comes as interest in nuclear power is increasing across the
country, driven by rising demand for power as well as emissions concerns.
Like other plants nationwide, Vermont Yankee is seeking a 20-year extension of
its operating license from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the federal body
that oversees the country's reactor fleet. A decision that could allow the plant
to keep operating until 2032 is expected later this year. Several utilities,
encouraged by the federal government, are considering building nuclear reactors
for the first time in three decades.
In Vermont, home to many people with a back-to-the-land viewpoint, surveys show
that people want to move away from fuels like coal and oil that emit large
amounts of carbon dioxide. They also support renewable energy.
But the same surveys show less consensus on nuclear power. At energy workshops
last year, nearly two-thirds of participants said Vermont utilities should cease
buying power from the nuclear plant — unless fossil fuels and out-of-state
nuclear power were the alternatives, in which case more than half would continue
with Vermont Yankee.
Not counting dams, another low-emission energy source that many environmental
groups oppose, renewable power makes up 2.5 percent of the nation's electricity
generation. That figure is higher in Vermont, 6 percent, but renewables are
still a long way from supplying the bulk of the state's power.
Starting from these slim figures, many advocacy groups dream of achieving a
nuclear-free mix burnished by local renewables. State researchers estimate that
as much as 48 percent of Vermont's power could one day come from local
renewables, including small hydropower projects.
"When you look at all the scenarios for climate change, nuclear is not a
must-do," said James Moore, the clean-energy advocate for the Vermont Public
Interest Research Group, a group that opposes the nuclear plant.
But utilities in Vermont, like their counterparts elsewhere in the country,
argue that environmental advocates are mistaken if they believe a low-emission
future can be achieved without nuclear power. They note the intermittency of
power sources like windmills and solar panels, and argue that the nation needs
more, not fewer, big power plants that emit no carbon dioxide.
"Vermont is in an enviable position right now," said Steve Costello, a spokesman
for the state's largest utility, Central Vermont Public Service. "We have
arguably the cleanest power in the country from an air-emissions standpoint, and
we have the lowest rates in the Northeast."
His utility is willing to build more renewables, he said, but closing Vermont
Yankee would make maintaining clean and cheap power "much more difficult."
Even as some Vermonters argue for more renewable power, proposals to build it
have hit snags. Vermont has only one commercial wind farm, 11 turbines along a
mountain ridge. They have less than 1 percent of the capacity of Vermont Yankee,
a relatively small nuclear plant.
Other proposed projects have been stalled by local opposition. One wind project
would infringe on bear habitat. Another won approval from state regulators, but
a local group filed a court appeal to block it.
"Vermont is very protective of its environment regulation," said Perchlik, of
Renewable Energy Vermont. "It's not going to be done Texas-style, where you can
get a permit in a month." He nonetheless hopes that wind turbines can provide 20
percent of Vermont's electricity by 2015.
Besides tapping into the Northeastern grid, Vermont could import more power from
Hydro Quebec, a giant dam system in Canada that already accounts for a third of
Vermont's electricity, but that would probably help push up prices. Solar power
is also costly. Burning wood chips or other plant material is one option —
Burlington already has such a plant — but a large one would face pollution and
other problems.
The best bet for reducing the state's emissions may be energy efficiency, in
which Vermont already excels. Since 2000, an outfit called Efficiency Vermont
has coaxed homeowners and businesses to change their light bulbs and buy more
efficient appliances, like refrigerators. The state believes it has already cut
power demand slightly this way.
Concerns about the Vermont Yankee nuclear plant, in the town of Vernon, focus on
the disposal of spent nuclear fuel, a nationwide problem, and on local concerns
about safety.
Last August, Vermonters were shocked to see images of water gushing out of a
huge pipe onto a heap of collapsed wooden beams. A portion of one of the plant's
two cooling towers had fallen in after decay weakened the wood. No radioactivity
was released, but Entergy, the plant's operator, labored to explain how it could
have missed such an obvious problem.
Rob Williams, an Entergy spokesman, said the cooling tower, along with other
recent incidents, "certainly impacted reliability, but the safety was not at all
impacted." Major repairs and improvements to both cooling towers have just been
completed, he said, with crucial timbers replaced by fiberglass-reinforced
plastic.
The Vermont legislature has already voted to tighten plant oversight, and next
year it is likely to take a vote on shutting down the plant, though whether the
state would actually have the power to do that is unclear. The federal Nuclear
Regulatory Commission licenses and regulates all reactors, and some experts
predict lawsuits if Vermont tries a shutdown.
Source: The Rutland Herald