US AP: Regulators monitor cleanup of 400,000 gallon radioactive water leak in Minnesota - While Xcel reported the leak of water containing tritium to state and federal authorities in late November, the spill had not been made public before Thursday.

Regulators monitor cleanup of 400,000 gallon radioactive water leak in Minnesota
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Steve Karnowski
2023-03-16 23:25:35GMT

ST.. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Minnesota regulators said Thursday they’re monitoring the cleanup of a leak of 400,000 gallons of radioactive water from Xcel Energy’s Monticello nuclear power plant, and the company said there’s no danger to the public.

“Xcel Energy took swift action to contain the leak to the plant site, which poses no health and safety risk to the local community or the environment,” the Minneapolis-based utility said in a statement.

While Xcel reported the leak of water containing tritium to state and federal authorities in late November, the spill had not been made public before Thursday. State officials said they waited to get more information before going public with it.

“We knew there was a presence of tritium in one monitoring well, however Xcel had not yet identified the source of the leak and its location,” Minnesota Pollution Control Agency spokesman Michael Rafferty said.

“Now that we have all the information about where the leak occurred, how much was released into groundwater, and that contaminated groundwater had moved beyond the original location, we are sharing this information,” he said, adding the water remains contained on Xcel’s property and poses no immediate public health risk.

The company said it notified the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the state on Nov. 22, the day after it confirmed the leak, which came from a pipe between two buildings. Since then, it has been pumping groundwater, storing and processing the contaminated water, which contains tritium levels below federal thresholds.

“Ongoing monitoring from over two dozen on-site monitoring wells confirms that the leaked water is fully contained on-site and has not been detected beyond the facility or in any local drinking water,” the Xcel Energy statement said.

When asked why Xcel Energy didn’t notify the public earlier, the company said: “We understand the importance of quickly informing the communities we serve if a situation poses an immediate threat to health and safety. In this case, there was no such threat.” The company said it focused on investigating the situation, containing the affected water and figuring out next steps.

The Monticello plant is about 35 miles (55 kilometers) northwest of Minneapolis, upstream from the city on the Mississippi River.

Tritium is a radioactive isotope of hydrogen that occurs naturally in the environment and is a common by-product of nuclear plant operations. It emits a weak form of beta radiation that does not travel very far and cannot penetrate human skin, according to the NRC. A person who drank water from a spill would get only a low dose, the NRC says.

The NRC says tritium spills happen from time to time at nuclear plants, but that it has repeatedly determined that they’ve either remained limited to the plant property or involved such low offsite levels that they didn’t affect public health or safety. Xcel reported a small tritium leak at Monticello in 2009.

Xcel said it has recovered about 25% of the spilled tritium so far, that recovery efforts will continue and that it will install a permanent solution this spring.

“While this leak does not pose a risk to the public or the environment, we take this very seriously and are working to safely address the situation,” Chris Clark, president of Xcel Energy–Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota, said in the statement. “We continue to gather and treat all potentially affected water while regularly monitoring nearby groundwater sources.”

Xcel Energy is considering building above-ground storage tanks to store the contaminated water it recovers, and is considering options for the treatment, reuse, or final disposal of the collected tritium and water. State regulators will review the options the company selects, the MPCA said.

Japan is preparing to release a massive amount of treated radioactive wastewater into the sea from the the triple reactor meltdowns 12 years ago at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. The water contains tritium and other radioactive contaminants.
 
Sucks a leak happened like this, at least the response to the issue isn't horribly bad like in a few other places.
 
Japan is preparing to release a massive amount of treated radioactive wastewater into the sea from the the triple reactor meltdowns 12 years ago at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. The water contains tritium and other radioactive contaminants.
Do people really not understand that the oceans are really, really fucking big? That the radioactive materials will be dispersed in short order and have no net long term effect on anything? You have to get to street shitter levels of contamination before it becomes noticeable.
 
Do people really not understand that the oceans are really, really fucking big? That the radioactive materials will be dispersed in short order and have no net long term effect on anything? You have to get to street shitter levels of contamination before it becomes noticeable.
The problem with oceans and releasing shit chemicals into them is that is gets concentrated into shit like fish and shellfish that people eat. Japan especially has issues with this, some company was dumping lead into the ocean, and it bio-accumulated into the local fish population and ended up giving half the town brain-damage.
 
The problem with oceans and releasing shit chemicals into them is that is gets concentrated into shit like fish and shellfish that people eat. Japan especially has issues with this, some company was dumping lead into the ocean, and it bio-accumulated into the local fish population and ended up giving half the town brain-damage.
It can have short term issues in local regions, yes, but if it is small enough and you're not dumping it into your fishing zones you should be fine. It's not quite the same as lead and most first world countries have absolutely shit records with lead for some reason. I'm starting to think Boomers remember eating paint chips as children and just like the taste.
 
They already filed a permit application for stormwater construction discharges and were approved. If you construct anything on site you'll need a construction stormwater permit if the disturbance meets the minimum requirements, tanks to store 400k gallons and water from other sources (groundwater, rain) certainly would. I think the "we're considering" is just to cover in case the overall plan has to be revamped, but its certainly a good sign that the regulatory agencies will work with them to prevent offsite impact.

Approval Letter:
3831692.jpg
Stormwater Construction Permit (1st page):
3831693.jpg
 
I miss when radiation was cool and gave us giant things and super powers instead of cancer and death.

50's radiation was the best
My grandpa had a bunch of old issues from Popular Mechanics and such. When I was a wee lad I loved reading about all the nuclear powered cars, ships, airplanes, and households the future surely held. Who doesn't want a fission reactor to power their car, or in their attic? NUCLEAR SCIENCE!!!
 
My grandpa had a bunch of old issues from Popular Mechanics and such. When I was a wee lad I loved reading about all the nuclear powered cars, ships, airplanes, and households the future surely held. Who doesn't want a fission reactor to power their car, or in their attic? NUCLEAR SCIENCE!!!
I can only hope that by the 2070's our power-armored troopers have finally dealt with the Chinese menace once and for all with the power of plasma.
 
Radioactive water leaks at Minn. nuclear plant for 2nd time
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Associated Press Staff
2023-03-24 04:17:41GMT

MONTICELLO, Minn. (AP) — Water containing a radioactive material has leaked for a second time from a nuclear plant near Minneapolis and the plant will be shut down, but there is no danger to the public, the plant’s owner said Thursday.

A leak of what was believed to be hundreds of gallons of water containing tritium was discovered this week from a temporary fix at the Monticello Nuclear Generating Plant, where 400,000 gallons (1.5 million liters) of water with tritium leaked in November, Xcel Energy said in a statement Thursday.

The plant about 38 miles (61 kilometers) northwest of Minneapolis is scheduled to power down Friday so permanent repairs can begin, the company said.

There was a monthslong delay in announcing the initial leak that raised questions about public safety and transparency, but industry experts said there was never a public health threat.

The new leak, announced a day after Xcel Energy says it was discovered, was found to be coming from a temporary fix to the original leak, the company said in a statement. This time, the leak is anticipated to be in the hundreds of gallons.

“While the leak continues to pose no risk to the public or the environment, we determined the best course of action is to power down the plant and perform the permanent repairs immediately,” said Chris Clark, president of Xcel Energy–Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota. “We are continuing to work with and inform our state, federal, city and county leaders in the process.”

After the first leak was found in November, Xcel Energy made a short-term fix to capture water from a leaking pipe and reroute it back into the plant for re-use. The solution was designed to prevent new tritium from reaching the groundwater until installation of a replacement pipe during a regularly scheduled outage in mid-April, the company said.

However, monitoring equipment indicated Wednesday that a small amount of new water from the original leak had reached the groundwater. Operators discovered that, over the past two days, the temporary solution was no longer capturing all of the leaking water, Xcel Energy said.

The leaked water remains contained on-site and has not been detected in any local drinking water, Xcel Energy said.

Tritium is a radioactive isotope of hydrogen that occurs naturally in the environment and is a common by-product of nuclear plant operations. It emits a weak form of beta radiation that does not travel far and cannot penetrate human skin, according to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and Minnesota Department of Health released a statement Thursday saying they were told of the new leak Thursday afternoon and that it is ongoing. The agencies said they will continue to monitor groundwater samples and will inform the public if there is an imminent risk.

Minnesota regulars said last week that Xcel Energy voluntarily notified state agencies and reported the leak of tritium to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission soon after it was confirmed in November. The amount of leaked material never reached a threshold requiring public notification and they waited to make a public announcement until they had more information, officials said.

Edwin Lyman, director of nuclear power safety with the Union of Concerned Scientists, told The Associated Press last week that a significant health risk only would occur if people consumed fairly high amounts of tritium. That risk is contained if the plume stays on the company’s site, which Xcel Energy and Minnesota officials said is the case.
 
When journos don't include information like the concentration of the radionuclides in the water, you should assume they're just trying to sell ads with sensationalism. Tritium's barely radioactive and it doesn't bioaccumulate like the nastier metal nuclides. You'll get heavier exposure from eating bananas and deer than you'll ever get from this, but get ready for retards holding geiger counters to their well water and shocked they're seeing decay gammas from the dissolved radon/thoron daughters.
The real scam here is nuclear plants avoiding new regulations by continuously applying for waivers to extend their operating lives in increments of five or ten years. Plants have been grandfathered for decades using this one simple trick.
Turkey Point had a 30 year license extension, it would have been good until 2050 until it was canceled due to rising sea level concerns. You can track the renewal process of every operational reactor here. The reason for it is because the new gold-standard for reactors plants, the AP-1000, been a nightmare for anyone trying to build one.
It bankrupted Westinghouse and VC Summer had to halt construction. Vogtle, after years and something like triple what it was supposed to cost, just got their AP-1000's initial criticality a few weeks ago. Several plants built pads for them, but are not going to do any further construction.
 
Tritium out of all radioactive elements is one of the most gay little elements, only outdone by Bismuth which in its metallic form is rainbow colored. It means pretty much nothing for contamination.
 
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@High Level Rad Waste You mean I won't get to see Bob Dylan turn into the Incredible Hulk? On a more serious note, there is probably more tritium in your watch than in a cup of that water.

I was gonna say Prince, but he's dead, and he and Dylan are the only 2 famous people I can think of from Minnesota. Well, aside from Twin Cities rappers of much more limited fame.
 
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@High Level Rad Waste You mean I won't get to see Bob Dylan turn into the Incredible Hulk? On a more serious note, there is probably more tritium in your watch than in a cup of that water.

I was gonna say Prince, but he's dead, and he and Dylan are the only 2 famous people I can think of from Minnesota. Well, aside from Twin Cities rappers of much more limited fame.
Maybe the radiation will mutate Bob Dylan so he can actually sing.
 
Do people really not understand that the oceans are really, really fucking big? That the radioactive materials will be dispersed in short order and have no net long term effect on anything? You have to get to street shitter levels of contamination before it becomes noticeable.
Thats literally the argument they used during the industrial revolution to justify dumping mercury waste into the ocean

Look how that turned out. Shit like this is how you end up with large parts of the ocean the food chain being contaminated with radioactive isotopes. We already have mercury and PCBs to deal with, the last thing we need is radioactive seafood
 
Thats literally the argument they used during the industrial revolution to justify dumping mercury waste into the ocean

Look how that turned out. Shit like this is how you end up with large parts of the ocean the food chain being contaminated with radioactive isotopes. We already have mercury and PCBs to deal with, the last thing we need is radioactive seafood
Exactly how big do you think the Oceans are in gallons? Exactly how big is 400,000 gallons in comparison?
 
If herbicides and birth control turned the turned the friggin frogs gay, what's this gonna do?
 
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