Friday, November 30, 2007

FPL and Nuclear Power, county department heads fail the public, by gimleteye

On December 20th, Miami Dade County Commissioners will hold a special hearing whether or not to grant an “unusual” use permit to Florida Power and Light, to build two new nuclear reactors at its Turkey Point nuclear facility.

Why is this December 20th hearing important?

It will be the last occasion that your local elected representatives will have sole authority, with no input from other jurisdictions like the state or Nuclear Regulatory Commission, to halt FPL from moving other necessary permitting steps forward.

Why is it necessary to stop FPL now?


It is necessary to stop FPL now because the company has utterly failed to provide detail related to the two key aspects of its proposal of critical concern to the health, welfare and safety of Miami Dade county residents.

The first aspect has to do with water. Some of you may recall news that the county recently reached an agreement with the state of Florida, after years of negotiations, for a 20 year permit for future water use. The permit is tied to Miami Dade county’s promise to re-use its waste water stream, because the Biscayne aquifer is tapped out.

The new nuclear reactors proposed by FPL need between 60 and 90 million gallons per day of water for cooling purposes. In its “unusual” use permit, the corporation offers no details at all, where that volume of water will come from.

The second aspect has to do with the fact that FPL is planning to build a 300 acre footprint for the new facility to a height of 20 feet from sea level. The question where the fill will come from, at that volume required to put the new nuclear reactors 20 feet into the air, is not addressed at all in the permit application—despite clear environmental issues.

Why can’t FPL provide details, now?

The company says that it needs local approvals in order to go forward with a $100 million investment in the big engineering firm, Bechtel, to get the details. The company says these details will be provided during the state licensing process.

But there is no law or statutory reason that says the county must give a free pass to FPL, and it shouldn’t.

So why, then, in the absence of any detail on the two most critical issues to the public, did county managers simply wave the permit request through to the county commission?

Representatives on the Development Impact Committee said that they were assured by “conditions” agreed to by FPL, that the public’s interest would be protected. Those conditions, of course, were designed and drafted and re-drafted by FPL lobbyists—not county department heads.

So really, what was on display this week was the indistinguishable relationship between industry and your government.

It is not very often that one gets to see the picture so clearly and in such bright definition. Of course, there were no reporters from the mainstream media in attendance. And anyhow, when was the last time you read a story about the collusion of industry and government to conspire against the interests of citizens and taxpayers?

One supposes that government agencies protect the interests of people. But that is not what happened at the Development Impact Committee review, which voted unanimously to recommend to the county commission approval of the FPL permit request.

In an opinion piece recently published by the San Francisco Chronicle, Jon Block, nuclear energy and climate change project manager at the Union of Concerned Scientists, writes, "The most sensible strategy to reduce global warming is to quickly deploy the cleanest, fastest, lowest risk solutions first. Conservation and increased efficiency by energy producers and consumers are the cheapest and quickest measures by far."

The fact is that FPL and Florida's utilities have not lobbied for conservation policies at the state legislature. If anything, the electric utilities in Florida have been obstructionists.

Block continues, "Prudence dictates that we pursue many options to reduce global warming. As a part of that effort, nuclear power research should continue, but with a focus on enhancing safety security and waste disposal."

Call your county commissioner. Go to the December 20th public hearing at County Hall. Express your view that the prudent course of action is to deny FPL’s unusual permit request until the corporation tells the public the details that it has conveniently omitted.

For allowing this to move forward, without details, county department heads should be rebuked.

7 comments:

Geniusofdespair said...

A friend, let's call her Suzanne, because that is her name said she can't be bothered with local politics. Well, Suzanne, you have two children. Do you care about 4 nuclear reactors in your backyard? You can focus on federal issues all you want but the local stuff counts too! This blog by Gimleteye is an example of why you have to pay attention to the local... I hope you read this! Your pal Genius

Anonymous said...

I would think cooling would be done the same way it is currently done with salt water and cooling canals. I don’t think FPL would use fresh water. I would also assume that it would be a closed water cooling system vs. an evaporation type system with cooling towers. If you were to look at other FPL plants both fossil and nuc’s you will not find many with evaporative cooling. Closed water systems consume much less water than evaporative systems. This is only my view based on what I have seen FPL do in the past.

As I added to a previous post: See the following links to see how power plants affect water usage. From The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/stories/2007/11/17/power_1118.html?cxntlid=inform

http://www.ajc.com/search/content/news/stories/2007/11/18/power1118.html

Anonymous said...

I would like to see an evacuation plan for the Florida Keys. What will happen to the people there if there is an accident?

Anonymous said...

Take the fastest boat to Cuba.

Anonymous said...

Gimleteye,
Are you certain the vote was unanimous? One of the members who voted for this item told me that the chairperson of the DIC actually voted against it. Imagine that. The chairperson is from the county manager's office, right? If this is true, it means that the sole representative from the county manager's office (who outranks all the department heads and is their boss) actually voted against the department heads. I guess the manager's office agrees with you that all their department heads let us down. For shame. So why doesn't the manager or mayor do something about this? They hire and fire the department heads right?

Anonymous said...

Tell us please what department heads voted for this thing? What about DERM? What about Water and Sewer? Did they vote?

Geniusofdespair said...

This was on a list serve about the plant:

Nobody has even mentioned that there is still
no solution to the high level nuclear waste problem after more than half a
century of nuclear power. Does FPL plan to store all this spent nuclear fuel on
site adjacent to Biscayne Bay? If not, where? I guess we need to leave our
children some problems to solve. What does it matter that this one has to be
sequestered from the environment for tens of thousands of years? After all,
don't our kids need a challenge? J.