Fuel pool

Wikipedia

All the fuel has been removed from the Vermont Yankee reactor, and is now in the fuel pool. Please keep that in mind as you read the rest of this blog post.I have heard that the opponent's meeting tonight in Brattleboro has been cancelled due to weather.A recent letter in the Greenfield, MA, Recorder claimed that Vermont Yankee is Still a Public Safety Threat . The first sentence of her letter says:Ms. Kosterman is concerned with the spent fuel pool, the fact that Vermont Yankee is downsizing its staff, and the end of some types of planning and notification for the Emergency Planning Zone. Of course, she mentions the terrible situation of the Fukushima spent fuel pools where...well, actually, nothing happened at the Fukushima fuel pools, but she doesn't mention that.A quote from Kosterman's letter:She recommends writing the NRC during the decommissioning comment period, and asking them to deny any request by Entergy that lowers the company's expenses for safety-related funding.Well, yeah sure. That was a letter from a member of the local anti-nuclear campaign. Surely the state government takes a more realistic view?Don't bet on it.As I described in a recent post, the NRC allowed Vermont Yankee to downsize their data systems and staffing, now that the reactor is de-fueled. The state is officially worried about this. An article by John Herrick in Vermont Digger quotes Chris Recchia, Commissioner of the Vermont Department of Public Service, as follows:Apparently the state feels it needs and deserves real-time data on the fuel pool.On February 19, in Brattleboro, the NRC will hold a meeting on the Vermont Yankee decommissioning report. (I recommend the Entergy's VY Decommissioning web site for access to all reports .) The opponents are gearing up for this meeting by hosting two preparatory meetings, one in Brattleboro on Monday February 9 (I have heard this meeting has been cancelled due to weather), and one in Montpelier on Wednesday February 11.The opponents don't seem to know that the reactor is shut down. A quote from the Montpelier meeting announcement:Hey guys....news flash! The reactor doesn't have fuel in it! The fuel has been removed! The reactor is no morethan any other large inert piece of metal. Sigh. Sometimes, "respecting your opponents" can be uphill work.With or without my respect, the opponents are getting ready to confront the NRC again. Leslie Sullivan Sachs, a leader of an anti-nuclear campaign, wrote this letter to The Commons: You Don't Need to be a Rocket Scientist . Her letter focuses on being heard at the February 19 NRC meeting on Vermont Yankee decommissioning.Another nuclear opponent, Clay Turnbull, wrote a comment on Sach's letter. Turnbull felt it was important to say that the February 19 NRC meeting will not be the last chance to take an important part in Vermont Yankee decommissioning. Here's part of Turnbull's comment on the Sachs letter (I can't seem to link directly to the comment.)Howard Shaffer also has a comment on the Sachs letter. His comment is excellent and worth reading.I don't think the anti-nuclear groups are equally afraid of a closed plant and an operating plant. However, I do think theyafraid of losing their funding. Because, after all, if you successfully "eliminate the danger" by closing the plant, people may begin to direct their donations and their activism elsewhere. To maintain funding, you have to say that the plant is still very dangerous.If a plant being decommissioned is as dangerous as an operating plant, then the fear goes on. And with the fear (with any luck), maybe their donations will go on, too.