Earthquake Readiness Of U.S. Nuclear Power Plants Unclear
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Heaven soon
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Aug 30, 2011, 2:55:44 PM8/30/11
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to Heavensoon
Earthquake
Readiness Of U.S. Nuclear Power Plants Unclear
The question — what size earthquakes can U.S.
nuclear power plants withstand — seems urgent in
light of this week's surprising magnitude-5.8 quake on
the East Coast. Alas, there's no simple answer and
that worries industry critics. Earthquakes are
routinely measured by magnitude, or energy released.
But the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)requires
the nation's 104 nuclear reactors to withstand a
predicted level of ground motion, or acceleration —
something called g-force. What does that mean,
magnitude-wise? "I don't have what that
translates into … unfortunately," NRC spokesman
David McIntyre says. The agency released a statement
Thursday to clarify its "earthquake measurements
and design criteria," but it does not say what
ground motion each reactor can handle. This muddiness
heightens the concerns of industry critics, who have
urged stricter safety rules after reactors at Japan's
Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant nearly melted down
due to a magnitude-9.0 earthquake and tsunami on March
11. "The Virginia earthquake is now our local 911
call to stop delaying the implementation of stricter
safety standards," Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass.,
wrote in a letter this week to the NRC