Hole and corrosion found in containment at Turkey Point reactor
 Workers at the Turkey Point nuclear power plant in South Florida have discovered a  rusty quarter-sized hole in  the steel liner of  the containment of one of the two reactors there  along with a 30-inch section of corrosion. The hole and corrosion were  found during a refueling shutdown. Turkey Point is now the fourth  reactor to have discovered a containment liner hole in the last two  years but the problem is feared to be widespread within the aging U.S.  reactor fleet. According to Arnie Gundersen, a Vermont-based nuclear  engineer and consultant who produced a report detailing holes and cracks  at half a dozen U.S. reactors, a hole such as that found at Turkey  Point could allow  enough radiation to escape to threaten public safety.
Workers at the Turkey Point nuclear power plant in South Florida have discovered a  rusty quarter-sized hole in  the steel liner of  the containment of one of the two reactors there  along with a 30-inch section of corrosion. The hole and corrosion were  found during a refueling shutdown. Turkey Point is now the fourth  reactor to have discovered a containment liner hole in the last two  years but the problem is feared to be widespread within the aging U.S.  reactor fleet. According to Arnie Gundersen, a Vermont-based nuclear  engineer and consultant who produced a report detailing holes and cracks  at half a dozen U.S. reactors, a hole such as that found at Turkey  Point could allow  enough radiation to escape to threaten public safety.





 October 28, 2010
October 28, 2010
