Title: Nuclear Power Plant Shut Down
1Nuclear Power Plant Shut Down
2Nuclear Plant Scenario
Background
Most Dangerous Reactors A Compendium of Reactor
Risk Assessments
Ignalina Units 1 2...
Units 1 2
Reactors remain unstable and difficult to
control and rely heavily on operator intervention
to keep things from going out of kilter.
3Ignalina Plant
- Output of each
- 4,800 thermal megawatts
- 1,500 electrical megawatts
- Produce 60-80 of Lithuanias electricity
4Lithuanian Population within 30 km
54,000 Inhabitants
30km
28,000 Animals
5Daugavpil, Latvia is 20 km from plant (Population
130,000)
20km
6Emergency Levels
Local emergency - within structures
Plant emergency - within the sanitary zone
General emergency - beyond the sanitary zone
7International Nuclear Event Scale
Level 1- Anomaly...variation from permitted
procedures
Level 2 - Incident
Level 3- Serious Incident...very small release
of radioactivity
Level 4 - Accident Without Significant
Off-Site Risks
Level 5 - Accident with Off-Site Risks...limited
release of radioactivity local countermeasures
Level 6 - Serious Accident...significant release
of radioactivity full implementation of local
countermeasures
Level 7 - Major Accident...major release of
radioactivity widespread health and
environmental effects
8International Nuclear Event Scale
Level 1- Anomaly
Level 2- Incident
Level 3- Serious Incident
Level 4 - Accident Without Significant
Off-Site Risks
Three-Mile Island
Level 5 - Accident with Off-Site Risks
Level 6 - Serious Accident
Chernobyl
Level 7 - Major Accident
9Chernobyl Timeline
Fallout Reaches Sweden Poland
Explosion
Fire Fighters Arrive
Fallout Reaches UK
Start of Safety Test
Fallout Reaches Belarus Baltics
0123
Reactor Entombment
0130
1986
April 25
April 26
April 28
May 2
10Global Coverage
- Normandy 1944 - 30 journalists
- Grenada 1983 - 500 journalists
- DESERT STORM 1991 - 1600 journalists
- Hurricane Andrew (Florida) 1992 - 1500 journalists
31 Satellite Transmission Trucks
11Likelihood of Outside Support
- The higher the proportion of victims.
- The more socially random the impact.
- The more sudden the change for the worse.
- The more the victims are blameless.
- The greater the sufferers are an identification
group.
- The greater the communications about losses
- suffered by victims, the more identification.
Adopted from Allen H. Barton, Social
Organization Under Stress
12Public Affairs Lessons from Three Mile Island
Incident
Before you start something, you should have a
goal.
Guard against influence from agencies not part of
your plan.
Isolate your decision makers from the media.
Do not overreact to the situation.
Tell the truth.
Maintain maneuvering room.
Avoid trivia and trivial problems.
13International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Conventions
Notification
- Notify those states that are or may be affected
- ...nature, time, and location.
- Provide information to minimize radiological
- consequences.
Assistance
- Overall direction, control, coordination, and
- supervision shall be the requesting state.
14Notification Channels
Power plant
Civil Security Department
Non-Governmental Organizations
International Atomic Energy Agency
Member/Affected States
World Meteorological Organization
Food and Agriculture Organization
UN High Commission for Refugees (above 250,000)
World Health Organization
UN Environment Program
15May 5
Event
1600 Local - Lithuanian officials notify Latvia
that Ignalina has been shut down by automatic
reactor safety systems (reactor trip).
Initial assessment is a normal functioning of
plants emergency systems. The cause of trip
under investigation.
1630 -Latvian reports of a widespread electrical
blackout (within Latvia) triggered by the
unexpected shutdown of Ignalina.
16Nuclear Plant ScenarioWorkshop 1
- Evaluate situation
- Identify information and resource requirements
and potential sources - Prepare recommendations for government action, to
include a public relations plan
17Event Update
1600 Local - Automatic reactor trip.
1630 -Blackout in Latvia
2000 -Lithuania reports contact with Ignalina
lost, radiation monitors between Ignalina and
Daugavpil indicate higher than normal readings,
and a general emergency is declared
At least a class 5 event
May 5
18Nuclear Plant ScenarioWorkshop 2
- Evaluate situation
- Identify information and resource requirements
and potential sources - Prepare recommendations for government action, to
include a public relations plan - Identify changes from Workshop 1 and discuss
reasons for changes
19Nuclear Plant Scenario
- Scenario-a series of events at the Ignalina
nuclear power plant in neighboring Lithuania that
affect Latvia - Objectives
- To understand events, and actions in response
to those events, in the context of a free (and
global) press - To reinforce major teaching points for crisis
management (recognition of crisis, information
requirements, resources, need for common
understanding, legal authority)