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Entergy Announces Independent Safety Evaluation At Indian Point

Indian Point Energy Center (IPEC).
by Staff Writers
White Plains NY (SPX) Mar 25, 2008
In an effort to provide public assurances about the operation and protection of New York's largest nuclear power facility, Entergy Nuclear has announced the start of a fully independent examination of safety, security and emergency preparedness at its Indian Point Energy Center (IPEC) in Buchanan.

The Independent Safety Evaluation (ISE) will be conducted by a distinguished independent panel of experts selected for their unique qualifications and independence of relationships with Entergy which would compromise their judgment. The ISE would supplement extensive evaluations already regularly conducted by the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission through its reactor oversight process.

"Although repeated and continuous NRC assessments have concluded Indian Point is safe, we hope this independent evaluation will be another step in building public confidence in Indian Point's safety and security, and serving as a vital role in New York's energy future," said Michael Kansler, president and chief nuclear officer of Entergy Nuclear.

"We are taking the extra step of performing an independent safety evaluation to reassure the public that Indian Point is a safe and secure facility with acceptable plans in place to address an emergency."

The decision to perform an ISE came after the company listened to various constituencies and policymakers and conducted numerous focus groups in an effort to understand the concerns associated with Indian Point.

The safety elements include evaluation of:

- Implementation of nuclear safety requirements, conservative decision making, regulatory compliance, and identification and resolution of safety problems.

- Conduct of operations, engineering, maintenance, management, and plant material condition.

The security evaluation would include Indian Point's capability to deal with credible security events, including ones involving terrorist attacks.

The emergency preparedness evaluation includes:

- Accident response and accident management capability.

- Interface with and support of offsite emergency management.

A formal written report will be produced and made available to the public on a schedule to be determined by the ISE panel. The co-chairs of the panel were appointed by J. Wayne Leonard, chairman and chief executive officer of Entergy Corporation, the parent of Entergy Nuclear, with the complete understanding that they would be independent of the company and have total autonomy to conduct a thorough investigation.

The members were selected by the co-chairs and will operate completely independently of the company, which will not be represented on the panel.

Entergy is funding the cost of the evaluation because the company does not believe it should be the public's responsibility to pay for an ISE through taxpayer dollars. In addition, panel selection criteria include absence of relationships with Entergy or other circumstances that could unduly influence a member's judgment on matters reviewed.

The ISE panel, which has more than 250 years of industry and academic expertise, will be co-chaired by Drs. James T. Rhodes and Neil E. Todreas.

Dr. Rhodes is the retired chairman, president and chief executive officer of the Institute of Nuclear Power Operations, a leading industry standards group, and a former president and chief executive officer of Virginia Electric and Power Company. He has more than 40 years of experience in the energy industry.

Dr. Todreas is the Korea Electric Power Corporation Professor of Nuclear Engineering and a professor of nuclear science and engineering and mechanical engineering emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has served at MIT for 38 years, including an eight-year period from 1981-1989 as head of the Nuclear Engineering Department. He has been co-director of the MIT Nuclear Power Reactor Safety summer course since 1975.

He is the recipient of the American Nuclear Society Thermal-Hydraulic Technical Achievement Award and its Arthur Holly Compton Award in Education. He has also received the Henry DeWolf Smyth Nuclear Statesman Award from the American Nuclear Society and the Nuclear Energy Institute.

The independent panel's evaluation will begin on March 27 with a visit to IPEC. After that, it is anticipated that the panel will meet, visit and inspect Indian Point on the schedule determined by panel members.

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Turkey invites bids to build first nuclear power plant
Ankara (AFP) March 24, 2008
Turkey's energy minister on Monday invited bids for the construction of country's first nuclear power plant, which is to be built on the Mediterranean coast despite strong opposition from environmentalists.







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