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"Generators are big machines," she said. "It happens frequently that resources are unable to start up or have to power down." Dave Lochbaum, director of the Union of Concerned Scientists' nuclear safety project, said he believes the partial Millstone shutdown is the first involving a nuclear plant pulling water from an open body of water. A few nuclear plants that draw water from inland sources have powered down due to excessively warm water, he said. Browns Ferry nuclear plant in Alabama, for example, reduced power for 50 days in the summer of 2010 and fewer than 10 days last year, said Ray Golden, spokesman for the Tennessee Valley Authority, which operates the plant. No power reductions were needed this year because the plant cools the water, he said. Lochbaum said the Union of Concerned Scientists believes climate change is the reason why rivers, lakes and Long Island Sound are hotter. "It is evidence of global warming with problems both obvious and subtle," he said. But Krista Lopykinski, a spokeswoman for Exelon Corp., which operates six nuclear plants in Illinois, said seeking state authorization to operate at an unchanged or higher level in response to elevated lake and river temperatures is "pretty common." "It happens every summer," she said. Still, Exelon asked for federal approval -- the first time in 12 years -- to continue operating when water in its cooling pond at an Illinois nuclear plant topped 100 degrees last month.
[Associated
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