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Browns Ferry Unit 1 Restarts!

Did you check out the power status of the plants on the Nuclear Street home page today? Will then you missed the 1% power noted for the Browns Ferry Unit 1. Yes, it is back online! Here is the press release from TVA:

 

The Tennessee Valley Authority restarted Unit 1 at the Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant in North Alabama today, completing one of the most extensive recovery efforts in the nuclear industry for an operating plant.

TVA received permission from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission May 15 to restart the reactor. TVA told the NRC on May 9 that it has the ability to operate and maintain all three units at Browns Ferry safely, that work to restart and operate Unit 1 is complete and that pre-start up testing was successful.

The restart completes the recovery effort within the five-year plan approved by the TVA Board in 2002, and at the projected cost of about $1.8 billion.

“Returning Browns Ferry Unit 1 to our nuclear fleet gives TVA another dependable, safe and emissions-free source of generation to help meet the growing demand for power in the Tennessee Valley,” said TVA President and CEO Tom Kilgore. “The successful recovery of TVA’s third unit at Browns Ferry is a result of the commitment, determination and attention to detail of the people who did the work. I offer my sincere thanks and congratulations to all TVA employees and contractors who helped bring this important project to a successful conclusion.”

Operators began the deliberate, controlled process of restarting the reactor on Monday, May 21, and a self-sustaining nuclear reaction was achieved at 12:28 am CDT on Tuesday, May 22. Operators will gradually increase power in the reactor over the next several days and will test secondary plant systems to ensure they operate as designed.

TVA will continue to conduct tests on the reactor and the other plant systems during the next several weeks, including a series of brief connections to the power grid, followed by deliberate “automatic” trips, or shutdowns, to ensure that safety systems operate correctly.

Following these and other tests, the unit will be reconnected to the TVA power system for the final time. The tests are part of a program designed to bring the plant safely to power production. TVA conducted similar power-ascension tests during the successful restart and subsequent safe operation of Browns Ferry units 2 and 3.

“All three units at Browns Ferry are essentially alike now,” said TVA Acting Chief Nuclear Officer Preston Swafford. “We have new or refurbished equipment that is operated in the same manner on all three units, and our ongoing operations, maintenance, training and oversight programs can focus on sustaining high-quality performance to ensure the safe and reliable operation of Browns Ferry.”

TVA completed more than 4 million work hours preparing the engineering and design and more than 15 million work hours modifying, replacing, and refurbishing systems and components to ensure Browns Ferry Unit 1 can produce electricity safely and reliably to meet the growing need for power in the Tennessee Valley.

TVA installed modern digital instrumentation and controls, modern power supplies, replaced 200 miles of electrical cable and eight miles of pipe, replaced or refurbished the unit’s large pumps and motors and conducted more than 1,200 tests that showed Unit 1 meets the design and regulatory requirements for safe operation.

Browns Ferry is located on Wheeler Reservoir in Athens, Ala. All three units are capable of producing more than 1,155 megawatts of electricity each, enough for each unit to supply power to approximately 650,000 homes. TVA also operates two units at Sequoyah Nuclear Plant in Soddy Daisy, Tenn. and one unit at Watts Bar Nuclear Plant in Spring City, Tenn.

TVA shut down all three Browns Ferry reactors in 1985 to address management and operational concerns. Browns Ferry units 2 and 3 were returned to service in 1991 and 1995, respectively. The recovery of Unit 1 used lessons learned from the restarts of units 2 and 3, and Unit 1 has the same upgrades and improvements made on the other two units.

In May 2002, the TVA Board approved returning Unit 1 to service, calling it the best business decision to meet the Tennessee Valley’s long-term power needs. The Board based its decision on improved nuclear performance, increased power demand in the Valley, a positive evaluation of the environmental impact, and a detailed scoping, estimating and planning effort for the Unit 1 restart.

Published May 23 2007, 07:34 AM by Highrad
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Comments

 

UraniumHotspot said:

This reactor being back up is not the GRAND NEWS you hail it to be.  The NRC wants to hail nuclear, and is in the process of wrongfully rubber stamping the license renewal of 104 again reactors in the name of a Nuclear Renaissance...why? Because DOE, NEI and the NRC know that Wall Street is not interested unless nuclear can maintain market share during the transition to a new generation of reactors, so in the name of profits, the NRC is playing Russian Roulette with the health and safety of nuclear host communities, and ignoring our wishes.  Let me guess, you are ones of those that think tritium leaking out of over ten percent of these aging reactors is no big deal, presents no immediate risk.

I know the lies.

May 28, 2007 10:58 PM
 

Nworker said:

I see UraniumHotspot is at it again...more whining. You need to come out of the dark ages.

May 31, 2007 3:55 PM

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About Highrad

Cam Abernethy is the founder of Nuclear Street. Nuclear Street was developed out of my frustration of the lack of publicly available information to industry suppliers, professionals, and utilities on activities and interests in the Nuclear Power Industry. Sure the utilities and some of the larger industry companies have internal "members only" networks such as INPO and EPRI to share information but there is a big gap between the plants & utilities and the vast majority of industry contractors & suppliers. Our goal is to help bridge that gap. I hope you find this site useful and I welcome your input and comments!
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