ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
July
9,
1981
IN THE MATTER OF:
410(c) PETITION FOR DRESDEN
)
PCB 79—134
NUCLEAR GENERATING STATION
MS. SUSAN
D.
PROCTOR OF ISHAM, LINCOLN AND BEALE APPEARED ON
BEHALF OF
PETITIONER.
MS. MARY
V. REHMAN APPEARED ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT.
OPINION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J.D.
Dumelle):
This case
is before the Board pursuant to Rule 410(c)
of
Chapter
3:
Water Pollution.
In its petition of June 29,
1979
and its amended petition of December 30,
1980 Commonwealth Edison
requests that the Board allow the following thermal standard to
apply to Edison’s Dresden nuclear power plant:
During the period June 15 through September 30, the temperature
of the plant discharges shall not exceed 32.2°C (90°F)
more than 10
of the time in the period and never will
exceed 33.9°C (93°F).
Such operation would result
in periodic violations of
Rule 203(i)(3) and
(4)
of Chapter
3 which allows an excursion
above 32.2° (90°F) as measured at the boundary of a 26—acre
mixing zone for 1
of the hours
in any
12 month period.
The
proposed amendment does not include a mixing zone, but allows
the 32.2°C (90°F) standard to be exceeded approximate 3
of
the hours during any 12 month period.
Hearing was held on May
5,
1981.
Several witnesses testifiel
on behalf of Edison, but no witnesses testified on behalf of
the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
(Agency) nor
was any evidence introduced.
No members of the public were
present.
On May 26,
1981 the Agency filed a recommendation that
the proposed alternate thermal standard be allowed for one year
subject to certain conditions.
These conditions would require
various studies to be performed such that the Agency could
better determine whether a permanent alternate standard is
warranted.
The Agency also stated that the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (USEPA), which must also accept any alternative
standard pursuant to Section 316(a)
of the Clean Water Act
(CWA) would not object to the Agency’s recommended procedure.
On June
5,
1981 Edison responded to the Agency’s recommenda-
tion by strongly maintaining that the proposed standard should
be made permanent rather than temporary.
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—2—
Dresden Station is a nuclear powered
stearri electric
generating
facility that utilizes three boiling water reactors.
Condenser cooling water
for all three
tiriits
is withdrawn from
the
Kankakee and Des Plaines Rivers and ultimately discharged
to the
Illinois River, which is formed by the confluence of
the
Kankakee
and Des Plaines Rivers.
Unit
1, which has
a generating capacity of 207 megawatts
electric power
(MWe) began chemical cleaning decontamination on
October 31,
1978 and is anticipated to be restarted no
~oones-
than June of 1986.
Units
2 and 3 each have a net generating
capacity of 794 MWe and began operating on August 11,
1970
and
October 30,
1971,
respectively.
Each uses a heat dissipation
system consisting of
a cooling pond,
spray modules and cooling
canals.
The cooling systems can be used for three modes of
operation:
direct open cycle, indirect open cycle and closed
cycle
(see pp.
16—20 of “316(a)—410(c) Demonstration for the
Dresden Nuclear Generating Station,” hereinafter “Demonstration
Document”).
Until September 3,
1971, Unit
2 was operated in an indirect
open cycle mode for cooling purposes.
Before Unit
3 began
commercial operation it was periodically operated in that mode
until the cooling pond was opened on September
3,
1971.
Under
such operation water withdrawn from the Kankakee and Des
Plairies
Rivers is circulated through the condensers and discharged
directly
to the Illinois River
(Dent.
Doc.
pp.
18—19).
From September
3,
1971 until October of
1974,
Units
2 and 3 were operated in an indirect open cycle mode which
routes the water through a two mile
long spray canal containing
floating spray modules and into a 1,275 acre cooling pond which
retains the water
for 2.8 days prior
to discharge to the Illi~oi3
River
(Dent. Doc. pp.
18—19).
After October of 1974,
both units were primarily operated
in a closed cycle mode.
In this mode condenser water is recircu-
lated after passage through the spray canals and cooling pond,
with a small portion blowndown to the Illinois River
(Dent.
Doc.
pp.
18—19).
Under the proposed standard Dresden Station would be operated
in the indirect open cycle mode from June 15 through September 30
and under current NPDES permit conditions during the remainder
of the year.
As such it would violate 42CFR423..13(l)
and
(m) which requires an essentially closed—cycle cooling system
by July
1,
1981.
However, under Section 316 of the CWA a
point source is entitled to an alternate standard if “shellfish,
fish,
and wildlife” are sufficiently protected.
A similar
showing can be made for exemption from Rule 410(c) of Chapter
3.
Edison believes that testimony and the Demonstration
Document support a finding that the alternate stanard would
result in overall environmental benefits.
Consultants
to the
study testified that:
43—4
1.
Indirect open cycle operation benefits water quality
in the Illinois River by reducing B0D5 most of the
time, reducing ammonia levels,
adding dissolved oxygen
and by reducing coliform bacteria and~toxic,heavy
metals
(Drs. Ewing and l3rill at p.
1.);
2.
All of the possible operation modes would have a
negligibly small
impact on phytoplar~.kton,periphyton
and zooplankton populations
(Verduin at pp.
1,2,6,
9—11);
3.
Species composition of macroinvertebrates will remain
essentially unchanged though there may be some slight
increase in tubificids and possibly chironids
(Lauer
at pp.
1—2);
4.
The expected thermal
impact on fish
would
be considerably
reduced under indirect open cycle
versus the direct
closed
cycle mode of operation.
No thermal mortality
should result and behavioral
avoidance of thermally
sensitive species should lead those
fish to the
environmentally acceptable waters
of the nearby
Kankakee River.
E’inally, the thermal plume is expectet3
to spread over the surface during summer low—flow
periods such that cool, bottom waters should prevail
(Dr. Gammon at pp.
6-8),
and
5,
The indirect open cycle mode would be beneficial th
the fish community of the cooling
pond,
might make
it acceptable as a fish nursery and thereby benefit
the fish communities of the kankakee,
bee Plajnee
and Illinois Rivers.
Against this testimony
is the Agency~sopinion that more
studies are necessary~
No counter testimony was presented nor
was any reason given
for
disputing the accuracy of the testir~ony,
except that the lack of prior appreciable harm was based on infor-
mation from September
of
1971
until October of i~74during which
times Units
2
and
3 were operated in the indirect open cycle mode,
However,
the testimony indicates that the conclusions reached
were
based not only on data
from that
time period,
but
also
en data
developed and analyzed between
1974
and
the date of the completion
of the Demonstration Document.
The
Board
finds that the evidence submitted indicates that
the environmental impact of the proposed alternate standard on the
Illinois River is at worst minimal and
may,
in fact,
he beneficial.
Therefore, the Board grants ~dison~srequest for the alternate
standard.
Testimony at
hearing
~waslargely presented in document form
as exhibits.
These will be referred to by the name of
the
authors and page numbers.
43—5
—4—
However, the Board
further finds that an updated
study
of
the actual
impact
of
such operation
is preferable to studies
which are
up to ten years old
or projections based on modeling
of
a flow situation
as complex as that
affected by the Dresden
Station,
Therefore,
and
since Edison
has agreed,
the Board
will follow the recommendation of the Agency
to the extent
of requiring that Edison conduct monitoring studies during
the summer of 1981.
This opinion constitutes the
Board’s findings
of fact
and conclusions
c~
law in this matter.
ORDER
Pursuant to
Ru:Le 410(c)
of Chapter
3:
Water Pollution,
it
is
hereby ordered that
hhe Dresden Nuclear Generating
Station shall
he operated in accordance with the following limitation
in lieu of
Rules 203(i)(3) and ~4) of Chapter
3;
During the period June 15 through September
30,
the
temperature of the plant
discharges
shall not exceed 32.2°C(90°W)
more than 10
of the time in the period and never will
exceed
33.9°C(93°F)
It is further ordered that:
1~
At all times other than those indicated above
the Dresden Station shall be operated in accordance with
Rule 203(i)(3) and
(4)
of Chapter
3:
Water Pollution.
2. Commonwealth Edison shall conduct monitoring
studies
in conformity with Edi~on’~two documents
submitted to the Agency on May
23,
1980 entitled
“Proposed Hydrothermal Study Plan for 9ummer
19~0”and
“Proposed 1980 Environmental Program~~
as modified by
Agency suggestions as set forth in its ~ecommendatthn
submitted on May
26,
1981.
3,
The Illinois Environmental Protection ~gency
shall modify Commonwealth EdiSon’s
~4PDES
permit for
the Dresden Station
in a manner Consistent with this
Opinion and Order
IT
IS SO ORDLRED~
Mr. Anderson abstained.
I, Christen
L,
Moffett, Clerk of the
tilitmis Pollution
Control Board, hert~ycertify
tl)at the above Opinion and
Order wer~
adopted
on
the
J~
day ot
~
1981 by
a vote
ol’
~
/
/
Illinois Pollution
C~ntrol
floard
43—6