Illinois nuke plant radiation release said safe
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[February 03, 2012]
CHICAGO (AP) -- The trace amount of
radioactive tritium released in steam to cool a reactor during a
shutdown at an Illinois nuclear plant was not enough to present a
danger to the public, according to the first estimates by the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
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Preliminary calculations indicate that the radiation dose
from Monday's release at the Byron Generating Station was less than
0.001 percent of the commission's annual dose limit of 100 millirems.
That amount is thought to be safe to workers and the public, agency
spokeswoman Viktoria Mitlyng said. "That is a very, very, very
small amount," Mitlyng said, much less than the dose from a dental
X-ray (0.5 millirem) or a smoke detector (0.008 millirem). Exposure
to radiation increases a person's lifetime risk of cancer, so
minimizing exposure is a good idea.
Final data on the tritium release will be available to the public
after the commission conducts a special investigation into how some
equipment responded to the outage, Mitlyng said.
Exelon Energy was still working Thursday to get the reactor back
online at the facility about 95 miles northwest of Chicago, said
spokesman Paul Dempsey.
Monday's outage started when an electrical insulator, a piece of
protective equipment that helps regulate the flow of electricity in
the plant's switchyard, failed and fell off the metal structure to
which it was attached. That interrupted power and caused the reactor
to automatically shut down as a precaution.
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Tritium, a radioactive form of hydrogen, is relatively
short-lived and penetrates the body weakly through the air, compared
with other radioactive contaminants.
The amount released Monday was estimated to be less than escaped
in a 2010 steam release at the Braidwood nuclear plant about 50
miles southwest of Chicago, Mitlyng said.
[Associated Press]
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
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