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"We would not want them to have to be in this situation," McCree said. McCree said the NRC's upcoming inspections will help the organization decide whether additional regulatory actions are necessary to assure public health and safety. TVA officials blamed the problem on a manufacturer's defect in equipment it doesn't ordinarily inspect. Utility spokesman Ray Golden said the valve failure never caused an accident or threatened public safety. The utility has inspected similar valves at the plant and has not found any problems, he said. TVA officials also said testing showed the stuck valve would have eventually opened, though NRC officials dispute this claim. Past problems have led to increased scrutiny. The Browns Ferry Plant is known in the industry as the site where a worker using a candle to check for air leaks in 1975 started a fire that disabled safety systems. It is similar in design to the reactors that malfunctioned earlier this year at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant in Japan after a powerful earthquake and tsunami. The TVA voluntarily shut down its entire nuclear fleet in 1985 to address safety and performance issues. The Unit 1 reactor at Browns Ferry reopened in 2007. TVA, the county's largest public utility, supplies power to about 9 million people in Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Kentucky, Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.
[Associated
Press;
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