Stage 2 alert declared at PPL plant
LUZERNE COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA - Pennsylvania Power and Light declared a Stage 2 “Alert” event at its Susquehanna 1 nuclear plant located near Berwick, PA in Luzerne County roughly 120 miles north of Philadelphia.
PPL advised the Stage 2 Alert resulted from a Freon leak in one of its primary cooling systems used to provide air conditioning to a Unit 1 operating building.
Officials said they don't know how the leak started but they added the building does have a back-up cooling system so it is able to operate as it should. The Stage 2 Alert caused evacuations of the workers in that part of the plant and required notification of 19 surrounding towns and municipality officials that an event was taking place within the nuclear complex. The alert was ended August 10, 11:35 PM as officials advised the leak had been stopped and Freon gas used in the cooling system had been successfully transferred into on site holding tanks.
PPL officials insisted throughout the Stage 2 that the public was not in any danger and that the Unit 1 reactor continued to operate at normal capacity. Joseph J. Scopelliti, community relations manager for the Susquehanna plant stated, “There have been no injuries. All plant workers have been safely accounted for.”
There are four mandated classifications of alerts when something goes wrong at a nuclear plant. One, the notification of unusual event two, an alert which involves notification to surrounding communities, three, a site area emergency and four, a general emergency. The stage 3 and 4 notifications directly involve the public living within a certain radius of the nuclear plant.
The Stage 2 event alert comes on the heels of a July shutdown of the same Unit 1 reactor to make repairs caused by a one million gallon water leak which flooded operating areas of the plant. The reactor was shut down on July 16th and did not come back on line until August 4th, a period of 20 days. Operators shut down Unit 1 after water from the Susquehanna River flooded into the turbine building basement from hatches that provide access to its condenser according to company release. This part of the plant operating system uses river water to cool down steam leaving the turbine before it returns to the river.
Regarding the July incident, PPL Susquehanna Plant Manager Jeff Helsel said, "While the unit was shut down we made repairs to the circulating water system and assessed the equipment in the turbine building basement,”. He further stated, "The equipment was repaired as needed and thoroughly tested to ensure that the unit is ready to run safely and reliably."
The Unit 1 reactor is now 27 years old having begun commercial operation in 1983 and has been recently upgraded to increase its generating capacity now making it the largest water boiler nuclear plant in the nation. PPL has announced planned upgrades to its Unit 2 reactor and in 2008 filed for a third nuclear plant called Bell Bend near the current Susquehanna nuclear units.
PPL has recently announced large electricity price increases to its customer base as state price caps expire at the end of 2010.
Related News
![](https://electricityforum.com/uploads/news-items/industrial_machines_working_in_coal_mine_1531375863.webp)
Australia PM rules out taxpayer funded power plants amid energy battle
MELBOURNE - Australian Taxpayers won't directly fund any new power plants despite some Coalition MPs seizing on a new report to call for a coal-fired power station.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission recommended the government give financial certainty to new power plants, guaranteeing energy will be bought at a cheap price if it can't be sold.
It's part of a bid to cut up to $400 a year from average household power prices.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the finance proposal had merit, but he ruled out directly funding specific types of power generation.
"We are not in the business of subsidising one…