ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL
    BOARD
    November 15, 1971
    in the matter of
    JOINT APPLICATION OF
    )
    PCB 71-20
    COMNONWEALTH EDISON CO. AND
    IOWA-ILLINOIS GAS & ELECTRIC CO.
    (QUAD-CITIES PERMIT)
    Dissenting opinion by Mr. Duinelle:
    The Board, by a 3-1 vote on this date has granted the permit
    for the Quad-Cities reactors to operate. I dissented for the following
    reasons in this order of importance.
    1.
    The lack
    of
    time
    in
    which
    to adequately assess
    the Emergency Core Cooling System (ECCS) testi-
    mony received only eight working hours previous
    to the decisi’on,
    2. The excessive and unnecessary radiation dosage
    to the public
    in the vicinity of the Quad-Cities
    nuclear plant under
    the
    permit.
    3,
    The opinion that the jet diffuser
    will
    serve as
    a barrier to the passage of fish in the Mississippi
    River.
    I. The
    Emergency Core Cooling System
    On Thursday, Novereber 11, the Board heard Dr.
    Henry
    Kendall,
    Chairman
    of
    the Union of Concerned Scientists,
    and a physicist
    at
    the
    Massachusetts institute of Technology, tell why
    his group
    feels
    that present Emergency Core
    Cooling
    System design is not
    adequate.
    His testimony, which
    was
    well researched and
    impressive,
    detailed the
    consequences
    of
    an
    ECCS failure.
    If a Loss of Coolant Accident occurs, the uncovered
    fuel rods
    in the core
    would
    heat
    up,
    distort, rupture
    and
    thus
    block coolant
    flow into the hot spots of the core.
    Metal—water reactions will
    add to
    the
    heat
    present~
    embrittlement ot the cladding
    will
    occur
    and eutectic alloys will form. All of this could lead to an
    irreversible
    reaction-—a molten core at 3,090F. to 5,000Ff which
    would rupture both the inner and outer contaminant vessels and
    release clouds cf radioactive
    gases to the atmosphere.
    Depending
    3.—
    11~

    upon the winds at the time, these lethal clouds could travel over
    highly populated areas and cause lethal doses of radiation within
    a 60-70 mile radius. Hundreds of thousands of people might be
    killed if such a sequence occurred at either Quad—Cities or its
    twin at Dresden (R. 2467—8, 2527—30).
    Commonwealth Edison Company and Iowa-Illinois Gas & Electric
    Company
    (the Utilities) and their vendor, General Electric Company,
    point to the several core cooling or feedwater systems which would
    energize and cool the core before the fatal 60 seconds of uncovered
    core has passed. Accepting as true the uncontroverted testimony
    that
    after the initiation of an incident requiring Emergency Core
    Cooling, 30 seconds elapse before the core sprays are activated,
    leaving only another 30 seconds for the ECCS to do its job
    (R,2475, 2491)
    we
    must
    take
    note
    of
    the import of Dr. Kendall~s
    testimony.
    Dr. Kendall tells us that even if the ECCS system functions
    it may not
    ~
    the excursion and ~
    disaster. The ECCS
    system is like the emergency brake system on our cars. We may
    put it on and the brakes may engage
    but
    just as the mechanical
    momentum impels the car forward so too may the reaction in the
    core be unstoppable and proceed to total core meltdown. That is
    the
    meaning of
    all
    the testimony by Dr. Kendall about test results
    and computer codes and blithe assumptions that are not realistic.
    The next logical question is “What are the chances of a
    Loss-of-Coolant-Accident?” Dr. Kendall puts them at being very
    high when he says “1 expect an incident (of core uncovering) in
    the next few years” CR. 2532)
    .
    If we take a “few years” as
    being three years and compare the seven existing power reactors
    in Illinois soon to be on line (Dresden 3, Quad—Cities 2, Zion 2)
    with the 121 reactors listed by Dr. Kendall (Bd, Ex. ~2 Supp. 2 p.l)
    the chances are simply 7 in 121 that this incident will occur
    in Illinois or a 1:17 chance. These are very high odds. And if
    the “brake” does not work then monumental tragedy may ensue.
    The short time left after Dr. Kendall~s testimony was finished
    was simply not enough to read the Final Safety Analysis Report or
    the Edison report to the Atomic Energy Commission of the previously
    not publicly known ECCS
    activiation
    incident at Dresden 2 on
    June 5, 1970. From these documents, at the very least, a fuller
    picture would have emerged that might have resulted in some core
    temperature restriction or, a speedup in the sensor testing program,
    or both, I had asked to defer consideration of the permit application
    until the next Board meeting a week hence and that motion, by a
    2-2
    vote was lost. With so much at stake the Board should have granted
    the additional study time.
    II. Excessive Radiation Doses to the Public
    The permit as passed by the Board will permit dosages to the
    public living nearby of 80 millirems when full power on both reactors
    3—
    112

    is achieved, supposedly after April 1, 1972, From this date, until
    September 1973, the amended date at which the gas cleaning system
    is to be operative, an approximate 120 millirems dose will be
    delivered to the
    public
    living nearby. In other words, these
    people will receive an unnecessary dose of radiation equal to a
    year’s normal background
    level.
    Put another way, in the year—
    and
    a half of full power, the
    nearby
    public will receive two and
    one half years of radiation. Since most scientists hold that no
    acceptable threshold values exist for unnecessary radiation
    exposure, it follows that
    there
    is some unnecessary risk of induc-
    tion of leukemia, other cancers and genetic defects.
    If it were necessary that this radiation occur then the balance
    might be somewhat easier. The Board could then balance the effects
    from the smoke from the Moline power plant and the leukemia-cancer-
    genetic defects against the necessity for power. But it is wholly
    unnecessary. Edison’s own witness, Mr. Harold Williamson testified
    that fuel rods
    did
    not deteriorate in storage and could be used
    again (Dresden Record, October 19, 1971 p. 75-79)
    .
    All that
    would be necessary for the Utilities to do would be to refuel
    when emissions exceeded 25,000 pCi/sec. per reactor at full load,
    retain the “dirty” fuel, load with new fuel, and use the “dirty”
    fuel after September 1973 when the off-gas control system would
    be operative. The only cost to the Utilities would be the interest
    on the fuel rod investment plus the cost of the additional down
    time required for refueling. Since we have been told by Edison
    that it took the unusual step of completely refueling Dresden 2
    after the June 5, 1970 incident,refueling as a precaution is cer-
    tainly possible and indeed has been done in the past.
    I would have retained the 25,000 pCi/sec. limit on the uncon-
    trolled Quad—Cities reactors as a maximum, similar to the limit we
    set on the Dresden 3 reactor in March 1971. I think the Board has
    now set a precedent, in permitting 80,000 pCi/sec~ for a single
    Quad—Cities reactor (more than a 200 increase) that will haunt
    the Board.
    The Board next week may decide a further order on
    Dresden 3 and the pressure will be on to relax the limit in that
    permit and to go ~iith the looser (and “dirtier”) Quad-Cities level.
    III. The Jet Diffuser as a Barrier to Fish
    The Board has given its permission to the Utilities to use a
    jet diffuser to dissipate the heat from their operation. The
    effluent is permitted to be 23°F. above river temperature. It
    has not been proven to me that fish will in fact go through the
    diffuser’s considerable turbulence (which is the reason for its
    effectiveness as a heat spreader)
    .
    Just because there may be
    interstices of cool water between the individual hot plumes does
    not mean that a fish will seek them out any more than a horse may
    willingly run between burning trees in a forest fire. Furthermore,
    the jets will create some underwater noise and fish are notoriously
    3—
    113

    sensitive to noise. What is called for and what is lacking, are
    actual experiments with full-width diffusers to determine if
    fish will
    in fact willingly go through them. The Board should
    not permit a barrier to be constructed and then be under
    the
    considerable pressure of making worthless this
    substantial
    invest-
    ment if it is
    shown to greatly
    impair natural fish movement.
    IV. Conclusion
    Between the November 11 testimony of Dr. Kendall and the
    Board action of Novembet 15 the Chicago Daily News (November 13)
    ran a perceptive editorial as follows:
    Nuclear power dilemma
    From the testimony adduced so far there appears no
    reason to deny the Comrnohwealth Edison Co. a permit
    to build its projected new Quad Cities nuclear plant
    at Cordova, Edison, speaking through Asst. to the
    President Byron Lee, told the Illinois Pollution
    Control Board that at
    no
    time during a pre—operational
    accident at the Dresden plant in June, 1970, was there
    any hazard to the public. At that time a safety valve
    was accidentally opened by a “spurious” electronic
    signal. The steam turbine and reactor were shut
    down instantly. Had the
    water level receded enough
    to expose the reactor fuel core, the core could have
    overheated and sent radioactive gas clouds over the
    adjacent countryside.
    Members of the Union of Concerned Scientists have
    testified that, while “fail—safe” mechanisms operated
    in this case, the sum—total of existing precautions
    are not sufficient to ensure such an accident will not
    recur and “lead to complete core uncovery”.
    It
    questions the feasibility of proceeding with
    new
    plants of the Dresden design until and unless greater
    safety can be built into the designs.
    Corn Ed says that this is the only
    time a safety valve
    has failed to function properly, and there is no
    reason to suppose that if it ever did fail again,
    the built—in precautions wouldn’t operate as they
    did in this case.
    Wrapped up in this single example is the~whole dilemma
    facing government, industry and the public: Granting
    the deadly potentials of the fuels used in nuclear power
    plants, how safe is “safe enough?”
    3—
    114

    There can hardly be any turning back from the course
    of development charted by the power companies. In-
    creasingly, the public is bejng locked into absolute
    dependency upon the power from the great nuclear
    plants that
    are mushrooming adjacent to the principal
    lakes and rivers. In Illinois the Pollution Control Board
    and
    nationally
    the Atomic Energy Commission have the
    job of making as certain as possible that the risk
    of contamination is kept
    at the
    absolute minimum. In
    a situation where disasters can result either from too
    little or too much caution, the public can only hope
    that their judgment is good.
    The Board by its Dresden decision in March 1971 and under
    Title VI-A of the Environmental Protection Act has responsibilities
    in the area
    of nuclear plant regulation. With these tesponsibilities
    comes the ~job of making as certain
    as possible
    that the risk of
    contamination is kept at the absolute minimum”. I feel that we
    should
    have done more in this proceeding to be”certain”.
    J~///~
    22/~-
    ~~/Jacob D. Dumelle
    I, Christan Moffett, Acting Clerk of the Illinois Pollution
    Control Board, hereby certify that the above Dissenting
    Opinion
    was submitted on the/9__day of November, 1971.
    Christan Moffett, Aci~’ Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    3— 115

    Back to top