APNewsBreak: Nuclear commission considers fewer inspections
The recommendations, made public Tuesday, include reducing the time and scope of some annual inspections at the nation's 90-plus nuclear power plants. Some other inspections would be cut from every two years to every three years.
Some of the staff's recommendations would require a vote by the commission, which has a majority of members appointed or reappointed by President
The nuclear power industry has prodded regulators to cut inspections , saying that the nuclear facilities are operating well and that the inspections are a financial burden for power providers. Nuclear power, like coal-fired power, has been struggling in market completion against cheaper natural gas and rising renewable energy.
While Tuesday's report made clear that there was considerable disagreement among the nuclear agency's staff on the cuts, it contended the inspection reduction "improves efficiency while still helping to ensure reasonable assurance of adequate protection to the public."
Commission member
"NRC shouldn't perform fewer inspections or weaken its safety oversight to save money," Baran said.
Baran urged the commission to put the inspection rollbacks up for a broader public discussion before deciding.
"It affects every power reactor in the country," he said. "We should absolutely hear from a broad range of stakeholders before making any far-reaching changes to NRC's safety oversight program."
The release comes a day after Democratic lawmakers faulted the NRC's deliberations, saying they had failed to adequately inform the public of the changes under consideration.
"Cutting corners on such critical safety measures may eventually lead to a disaster that could be detrimental to the future of the domestic nuclear industry," Rep.
Asked for comment Tuesday, NRC spokespeople pointed to the staff arguments for the changes in the report. Trimming overall inspections "will improve effectiveness because inspectors again will be focused on issues of greater safety significance," staffers told commission members in the recommendations.
"That completely ignores the cause-and-effect relationship between inspections and good performances," Lyman said.
Loebsack, Carter Reintroduce Legislation to Ensure Patients Have Access to Quality Dental and Optometric Care
Survey: As Recession Fears Loom, Middle-Class Anxiety Grows
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News