Saturday, September 19, 2020

SOUTH KOREA

Six reactors shut down due to salinity during recent typhoons

 9 YEARS AFTER FUKUSHIMA

  • Investigators say issue was preventable and should have been foreseen

Posted on : Sep.11,2020 






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Busan’s Kori-3 and Kor-4 reactors shut down amid Typhoon Maysak on Sept. 3. (Yonhap News)

The recent shutdown of six nuclear reactors at South Korea’s Kori and Wolsong nuclear power plants during the typhoons Maysak and Haishen resulted from the failure of power supply equipment, which was caused by salinity carried on the gale, according to an independent investigation by South Korea’s nuclear operator. This was an issue that should have been foreseen and forestalled at a coastal nuclear plant, which is likely to raise concerns about the safety of nuclear power.

Four nuclear reactors (Shin Kori-1, Shin Kori-2, Kori-3, and Kori-4) automatically shut down at night on Sept. 3 and early in the morning on Sept. 4 while Typhoon Maysak was overhead. Then on the morning of Sept. 7, two more nuclear reactors (Wolsong-2 and Wolsong-3) were brought to a halt because of Typhoon Haishen.

On Sept. 9, Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power (KHNP) provided the following explanation of the cause of the shutdown at these reactors. “The powerful winds and waves whipped up by the typhoon caused a large amount of salinity to enter the power supply equipment at the power plant. That in turn caused breakdowns, triggering breakers that are in place to protect the generating equipment.”

The KHNP’s explanation can be regarded as recognition that the design and operation of nuclear power plants are vulnerable to the extreme weather events that are brought by climate change. Considering that all of Korea’s nuclear plants are located near the coast, precautions should have been taken against salinity in the plants’ design and operation. A protracted suspension of the external power supply could cause a meltdown of the nuclear fuel rods, which is what happened during the nuclear disaster at Fukushima in Japan.

The KHNP placed the blame on the typhoon, which turned out to be stronger than expected. “The facility was designed with insulation because of its coastal location, but the wind was so strong that foam from the waves reached the hills on the other side of the reactor. The exposed equipment was vulnerable,” a KHNP spokesperson said.

“Equipment outside of nuclear reactors uses waterproof parts as a precaution against rainwater or saltwater. Even if salinity is the cause, as the KHNP claimed, the real problem might be poor-quality parts and slapdash construction,” said Han Byeong-seop, director of the Institute for Nuclear Safety.

Shortly after the nuclear disaster in Fukushima in 2011, the South Korean government ordered the KHNP to implement 46 measures aimed at countering extreme natural disasters. The project was divided into phases that were supposed to be completed by 2015. But three of the measures remain incomplete: namely, installing watertight doors and waterproof pumps, installing exhaust or decompression equipment on the containment vessel, and improving anti-flooding measures in the main steam safety valve room and the emergency pump room.

By Kim Jeong-su, senior staff writer @hani.co.kr

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