Lusby, MD โ€“ While it received a mostly favorable report from the federal agency that oversees its operation, Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant in Lusby has received criticism from a watchdog group unimpressed with its capability to respond to recurring events interrupting its operations.

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) reported March 4 on its โ€œend-of-cycle performance reviewโ€ of the plantโ€™s two reactor units. โ€œThe NRC determined that overall, Calvert Cliffs Unit 1 operated in a manner that preserved the public health and safety and met all cornerstone objectives,โ€ stated Ho K. Nieh, the NRCโ€™s director of Reactor Projects Division. The plantโ€™s second unit โ€œwas within the regulatory response column of the NRCโ€™s reactor oversight process action matrixโ€ due to the finding of โ€œlow to moderate safety significance in the emergency preparedness cornerstone.โ€

Nieh indicated the plantโ€™s operators were written up for inaccurate effluent radiation monitor thresholds incorporated in its standard emergency action level scheme. Concerns with the monitoring of the data have prompted additional NRC oversight.

The watchdog group, the Union of Concerned Scientists, noted in their report that โ€œtwice within the past five years, precipitation leaked into the Calvert Cliffs Nuclear [Power] Plant and shorted out electrical power supplies, causing one reactor to automatically shut down and components to malfunction that should have protected the second reactor from automatically shutting down. Precipitation occurs all across the U.S. and its dozens of nuclear power plants, but noneโ€”except Calvert Cliffsโ€”have experienced multiple reactor shutdowns due to similar intrusions of moisture. In other words, other plant owners have successfully prevented even one intrusion event while Calvert Cliffs has been unable to prevent repeated events.โ€

The group was also critical of the NRC for not properly enforcing its own regulation requiring plant operators to fix such a problem โ€œin a timely and effective manner. If the NRC enforced this regulation, it would not take several more rainfalls to find and fix all the holes in the roof and unsealed openings in the walls at Calvert Cliffs.โ€

โ€œOur corrective action program ensures that we identify and address potential issues before they impact safe and reliable operations,โ€ said Lacey Dean, a spokeswoman for Exelon, the plantโ€™s operator. โ€œThe NRCโ€™s supplemental inspection report confirms that the condition was fully addressed and that our actions and responses were appropriate.โ€

Contact Marty Madden at marty.madden@thebaynet.com