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Environment
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Filed with: Ameren, General Electric,
Pinnacle West
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Interim Storage Risk Reduction
WHEREAS:
As long as the Callaway nuclear power plant operates, it will continue
generating radioactively and thermally hot, irradiated fuel rods that
must be cooled, after removal from the Reactor Vessel, and placed in wet
storage in the on-site Spent Fuel Pool for at least five years before
they can be moved.
In 2002 the President and the Congress approved the siting of a federal
underground repository for irradiated fuel rods at Yucca Mountain, Nevada.
The repository is not yet finally designed or licensed; its construction
will not be completed until at least 2010. The nuclear industry describes
Yucca Mountain as one single site where all the nation's irradiated fuel
rods could be consolidated. However, since the irradiated rods of each
plant must be kept at that plant's site temporarily, submerged in water,
highly radioactive rods will continue to be scattered at operating plants
nationwide as long as nuclear plants continue operating. The irradiated
fuel rods must be kept isolated from the biosphere for hundreds of thousands
of years.
Capacity at Yucca Mountain is limited by law. Older irradiated fuel rods
now being stored at reactors older than Callaway will have priority for
disposal space. There may not be room for a sizable amount of Callaway's
fuel rods in this first national repository.
The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission has granted the Company permission
to store far more irradiated rods in the Callaway Spent Fuel Pool than
was intended in the pool's initial design. Robert Alvarez, a former Energy
Department senior policy advisor, told a Senate hearing, "An attack
against a spent fuel pool could drain enough water to cause a catastrophic
radiological fire that cannot be extinguished." He cited a 1997 analysis
that said such a fire could contaminate up to 188 square miles.
On February 7, 2002, Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge said that structural
changes may be necessary to fortify nuclear plants against September 11
kinds of attacks, and other threats not previously considered. He said,
"there may ultimately be some actual bricks and mortar adjustments
that are made to some of these facilities."
Construction on-site at the Callaway Plant of a fortified bunker or other
structure (below- or partially below-grade), that can be concealed from
off-site locations and be safeguarded, may be essential for the interim
storage on-site of Callaway's irradiated fuel rods.
RESOLVED:
In light of heightened public safety concerns, we request that the Company
prepare a report, at reasonable cost, that outlines the current vulnerability
and substantial risks of the interim storage of irradiated fuel rods at
the Callaway Plant and that proposes measures to reduce those risks. A
copy of the report, omitting proprietary and security information, should
be available to shareholders on request by August 2003.
SUPPORTING STATEMENT:
Ameren remains morally responsible and financially liable for Callaway,
for securing its radioactive wastes, and for protecting its workers and
the public into the indefinite future. We believe this study is essential
for realistic and responsible economic and ethical planning.
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