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Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

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Page 1: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Nuclear Power

Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Page 2: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

The Facts:

• Located on 239 acres in Buchanan, NY– 35 miles North of NYC, 25 miles from AHS

• Two operating reactors built in 1974 and 1976– Licenses expire in 2013 and 2015

• Of the 31 states with nuclear capacity, NY ranks 4th

• Ranks 67th of the 100 largest US nuclear power plants• Employs 1500 people

Page 3: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY
Page 4: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Nuclear Share of Electricity Generation in 2014

Source: www.iaea.org 2015

Page 5: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Source: www.nrc.gov February 2015

Page 6: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY
Page 7: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Source: www.iaea.org 2015

Page 8: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Containment Building

Fuel

Control Rods

Turbine &Generator

Power Lines

Cooling Tower

Reactor

Condenser

Cooling Loop

Nuclear Power Plant Schematic

Page 9: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Parts of a Nuclear Power Plant

• Containment Structure:

• Fuel:

• Control Rods:

• Turbine & Generator:

• Cooling Loop & Tower:

Made of very thick steel and concrete – built to contain any radiation

Fissionable uranium or plutonium

Made of a material such as graphite, which readily absorbs neutrons – raised or lowered to regulate fissioning

Steam turns the turbine, which is used to generate electricity

Cools used steam and sends it back to the reactor to be reused

Page 10: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Power Generation Process

Fuel rods undergo fission

Heat energy is created

Control rods are raised and lowered in order to

regulate fission

Heat energy turns water Into steam

Turbine is turned, generating electricity

Electricity is transmitted

over power lines

Steam is cooled and condensed back in to

water

Page 11: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Nuclear Power Pros and Cons

Pro Con

Little Pollution – No release of greenhouse gases, no ozone depletion or acid rain

Abundant Fuel – Uranium and plutonium are much more available than fossil fuels

High Energy Output – More energy is created from less fuel, compared to coal or oil

Waste Disposal – Radioactive waste must be safely disposed of

Safety – An accident could be catastrophic

Page 12: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

Waste Disposal

• When fuel rods no longer have enough fissionable material left they still contain many decay products– What type of radiation does Kr emit?

• Exposure to radiation is dangerous to humans, so nuclear waste must be buried underground until is has decayed in to something harmless – this can take thousands of years.

Beta

Page 13: Nuclear Power Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan, NY

How Dangerous is Nuclear Power? US Coal Mining 1931-1995 33,134

Oil / Gas Industry 1992-1995 719

Chemical Manufacturing 1992-1995 201

US Automobile 1899-1995 2,903,036

Smoking per year 419,000

US Civil Aviation 1938-present +54,000

US Nuclear Power Historical 0

Fatality Comparison Statistics

In 2011 a tsunami and earthquake devastated the Fukushima nuclear power plant in Japan. Two workers

were killed in an explosion caused by a build-up of hydrogen and several

hundred died as an indirect result of the disaster. But so far there have been no reports of radiation-related deaths.

Source: energyforhumanity.org September 2014