Any concern about Irene´s Hurricane and nuclear power plants or another nuclear facilities?

This is the expected track and floods for the next days...

Irene will likely hit Eastern North Carolina, but the storm is going northwards after that, and may deliver an extremely destructive blow to the mid-Atlantic and New England states. I am most concerned about the storm surge danger to North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, and the rest of the New England coast. Irene is capable of inundating portions of the coast under 10 - 15 feet of water, to the highest storm surge depths ever recorded. I strongly recommend that all residents of the mid-Atlantic and New England coast familiarize themselves with their storm surge risk. The best source of that information is the National Hurricane Center's Interactive Storm Surge Risk Map, which allows one to pick a particular Category hurricane and zoom in to see the height above ground level a worst-case storm surge may go. If you prefer static images, use wunderground's Storm Surge Inundation Maps. If these tools indicate you may be at risk, consult your local or state emergency management office to determine if you are in a hurricane evacuation zone. Mass evacuations of low-lying areas along the entire coast of New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia are at least 50% likely to be ordered by Saturday. The threat to the coasts of New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Maine is less certain, but evacuations may be ordered in those states, as well. Irene is an extremely dangerous storm for an area that has no experience with hurricanes, and I strongly urge you to evacuate from the coast if an evacuation is ordered by local officials. My area of greatest concern is the coast from Ocean City, Maryland, to Atlantic City, New Jersey. It is possible that this stretch of coast will receive a direct hit from a slow-moving Category 2 hurricane hitting during the highest tide of the month, bringing a 10 - 15 foot storm surge.

Figure 1. The scene in Nassau in the Bahamas at daybreak today. Image credit: Wunderblogger Mike Theiss.

Irene a Category 3 over the Bahamas, headed northwest
Hurricane Irene tore through the Bahama Islands overnight, bringing hurricane-force winds, torrential rains, and storm surge flooding to Crooked Island, Long Island, Rum Cay, and Cat Island, which all took a terrific pounding. Eleuthera and Abaco Island will receive the full force of Irene's eyewall today, but the eyewall will miss capital of Nassau. Winds there were sustained at 41 mph, gusting to 66 mph so far this morning, and I expect these winds will rise to 50 - 55 mph later today. Wunderblogger MIke Theiss is in Nassau, and will be sending live updates through the day today. Winds on Grand Bahama Island in Freeport will rise above tropical storm force late Thursday morning, and increase to a peak of 45 - 55 mph late Thursday afternoon. Grand Bahama will also miss the brunt of the storm. Irene is visible on Miami long-range radar, and the outer bands of the hurricane are bringing rain to Southeast Florida this morning.

Irene is currently undergoing an eyewall replacement cycle, where the inner eyewall collapses, and a new outer eyewall forms from a spiral band. During this process, the hurricane may weaken slightly, and it may take the rest of today for a new eyewall to fully form. Satellite imagery shows a lopsided pattern to Irene, with less cloud cover on the storm's southwest side. This is due to upper level winds from the southwest creating about 10 - 20 knots of wind shear along the storm's southwest side. We can hope that the shear will be strong enough to inject some dry air into the core of Irene and significantly weaken it today, but I put the odds of that happening at only 10%. The most likely scenario is that Irene will complete its eyewall replacement cycle later today or on Friday, then begin intensifying again. Wind shear is expected to stay moderate, 10 - 20 knots, for the next three days, ocean temperatures are a very warm 29°C, and Irene has an upper-level high pressure system on top of it, to aid upper-level outflow. None of our intensity forecast models show Irene growing to Category 4 strength, though the last 4 runs of the ECMWF global model--our best model for forecasting track--have intensified Irene to a Category 4 hurricane with a 912 - 920 mb pressure as it crosses over Eastern North Carolina.

Track forecast for Irene
The models have edged their tracks westwards in the last cycle of runs, and there are no longer any models suggesting that Irene will miss hitting the U.S. The threat to eastern North Carolina has increased, with several of our top models now suggesting a landfall slightly west of the Outer Banks is likely, near Morehead City. After making landfall on the North Carolina coast Saturday afternoon or evening, Irene is likely to continue almost due north, bringing hurricane conditions to the entire mid-Atlantic coast, from North Carolina to Long Island, New York. This makes for a difficult forecast, since a slight change in Irene's track will make a huge difference in where hurricane conditions will be felt. If Irene stays inland over eastern North Carolina, like the ECMWF and GFDL models are predicting, this will knock down the storm's strength enough so that it may no longer be a hurricane once it reaches New Jersey. On the other hand, if Irene grazes the Outer Banks and continues northwards into New Jersey, like the GFS model is predicting, this could easily be a Category 2 hurricane for New Jersey and Category 1 hurricane for New York City. A more easterly track into Long Island would likely mean a Category 2 landfall there.

Category 2 landfalls may not sound that significant, since Hurricane Bob of 1991 made landfall over Rhode Island as a Category 2, and did only $1.5 billion in damage (1991 dollars), killing 17. But Irene is a far larger and more dangerous storm than Bob. The latest wind analysis from NOAA/HRD puts Irene's storm surge danger at 4.8 on a scale of 0 to 6, equivalent to a borderline Category 3 or 4 hurricane's storm surge. Bob had a much lower surge potential, due to its smaller size, and the fact it was moving at 32 mph when it hit land. Irene will be moving much slower, near 18 mph, which will give it more time to pile up a big storm surge. The slower motion also means Irene's surge will last longer, and be more likely to be around during high tide. Sunday is a new moon, and tides will be at their highest levels of the month during Sunday night's high tide cycle. Tides at The Battery in New York City (Figure 3) will be a full foot higher than they were during the middle of August. Irene will expand in size as it heads north, and we should expect its storm surge to be one full Saffir-Simpson Category higher than the winds would suggest.

Figure 2. Predicted tides for the south shore of New York City's Manhattan Island at The Battery for Sunday, August 28 and Monday, August 29. High tide is near 8pm EDT Sunday night. Tidal range between low and high tide is 6 feet on Sunday, the highest range so far this month. A storm surge of 10 feet would thus be 10 feet above Mean Lower Low Water (MLLW, the lowest tide of the year), but 16 feet over this mark if it came at high tide. Image credit: NOAA Tides and Currents.

Irene's storm surge potentially extremely dangerous for the mid-Atlantic coast
Irene's large size, slow motion, arrival at high tide, and Category 3 strength at landfall in North Carolina will likely drive a storm surge of 8 - 10 feet into the heads of bays in Pamlico Sound, and 3 - 6 feet in Albemarle Sound. As the storm progresses northwards, potential storm surge heights grow due to the shape of the coast and depth of the ocean, though the storm will be weakening. If Irene is a Category 1 storm as it crosses into Virginia, it can send a storm surge of 4 - 8 feet into Chesapeake Bay and Norfolk. I give a 50% chance that the surge from Irene in those locations will exceed the record surges observed in 2003 during Hurricane Isabel. The region I am most concerned about, though, is the stretch of coast running from southern Maryland to Central New Jersey, including Delaware and the cities of Ocean City and Atlantic City. A Category 1 hurricane can bring a storm surge of 5 - 9 feet here. Irene's large size, slow movement, and arrival at the highest tide of the month could easily bring a surge one Category higher than the storm's winds might suggest, resulting in a Category 2 type inundation along the coast, near 10 - 15 feet. This portion of the coast has no hurricane experience, and loss of life could be heavy if evacuation orders are not heeded. I give a 30% chance that the storm surge from Irene will bring water depths in excess of 10 feet to the coasts of Maryland, Delaware, and New Jersey.

Figure 3. The height above ground that a mid-strength Category 2 hurricane with 100 mph winds would push a storm surge along the Maryland, Delaware, and New Jersey coasts in a worst-case scenario. The image was generated using the primary computer model used by the National Hurricane Center (NHC) to forecast storm surge--the Sea, Lake, and Overland Surge from Hurricanes (SLOSH) model. The accuracy of the SLOSH model is advertised as plus or minus 20%. This "Maximum Water Depth" image shows the water depth at each grid cell of the SLOSH domain. Thus, if you are inland at an elevation of ten feet above mean sea level, and the combined storm surge and tide (the "storm tide") is fifteen feet at your location, the water depth image will show five feet of inundation. This Maximum of the "Maximum Envelope of Waters" (MOM) image was generated for high tide and is a composite of the maximum storm surge found for dozens of individual runs of different Category 2 storms with different tracks. Thus, no single storm will be able to cause the level of flooding depicted in this SLOSH storm surge image. Consult our Storm Surge Inundation Maps page for more storm surge images of the mid-Atlantic coast.

Figure 4. The height above ground that a mid-strength Category 2 hurricane with 100 mph winds would push a storm surge along the New Jersey coast in a worst-case scenario. Water depths could reach 6 - 8 feet above ground level in Ocean City and Atlantic City, and up to 16 feet along less populated sections of the coast.

Irene's storm surge may flood New York City's subway system
The floodwalls protecting Manhattan are only five feet above mean sea level. During the December 12, 1992 Nor'easter, powerful winds from the 990 mb storm drove an 8-foot storm surge into the Battery Park on the south end of Manhattan. The ocean poured over the city's seawall for several hours, flooding the NYC subway and the Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corporation (PATH) train systems in Hoboken New Jersey. FDR Drive in lower Manhattan was flooded with 4 feet of water, which stranded more than 50 cars and required scuba divers to rescue some of the drivers. Mass transit between New Jersey and New York was down for ten days, and the storm did hundreds of millions in damage to the city. Tropical Storm Floyd of 1999 generated a storm surge just over 3 feet at the Battery, but the surge came at low tide, and did not flood Manhattan. The highest water level recorded at the Battery in the past century came in September 1960 during Hurricane Donna, which brought a storm surge of 8.36 feet to the Battery and flooded lower Manhattan to West and Cortland Streets. However, the highest storm surge on record in New York City occurred during the September 3, 1821 hurricane, the only hurricane ever to make a direct hit on the city. The water rose 13 feet in just one hour at the Battery, and flooded lower Manhattan as far north as Canal Street, an area that now has the nation's financial center. The total surge is unknown from this greatest New York City hurricane, which was probably a Category 2 storm with 110 mph winds. NOAA's SLOSH model predicts that a mid-strength Category 2 hurricane with 100-mph winds could drive a 15 - 20 foot storm surge to Manhattan, Queens, Kings, and up the Hudson River. JFK airport could be swamped, southern Manhattan would flood north to Canal Street, and a surge traveling westwards down Long Island Sound might breach the sea walls that protect La Guardia Airport. Many of the power plants that supply the city with electricity might be knocked out, or their docks to supply them with fuel destroyed. The more likely case of a Category 1 hurricane hitting at high tide would still be plenty dangerous, with waters reaching 8 - 12 feet above ground level in Lower Manhattan. Given the spread in the models, I predict a 20% chance that New York City will experience a storm surge in excess of 8 feet that will over-top the flood walls in Manhattan and flood the subway system. This would most likely occur near 8 pm Sunday night, when high tide will occur and Irene should be near its point of closest approach. Such a storm surge could occur even if Irene weakens to a tropical storm on its closest approach to New York City.

Figure 5. The height above ground that a mid-strength Category 2 hurricane with 100 mph winds would push a storm surge in a worst-case scenario in New York City.

Figure 6. Flooded runways at New York's La Guardia Airport after the November 25, 1950 Nor'easter breached the dikes guarding the airport. Sustained easterly winds of up to 62 mph hit the airport, pushing a large storm surge up Long Island Sound. The storm's central pressure bottomed out at 978 mb. Image credit: Queens Borough Public Library, Long Island Division.

The rest of New England
The entire New England coast is at high danger of receiving its highest storm surge in the past 50 years from Irene, though the exact locations of most danger remain unclear. If North Carolina takes a bullet for us and reduces Irene below hurricane strength before the storm reaches New England, the surge will probably not cause major destruction. But if Irene misses North Carolina and arrives along the New England coast as a hurricane, the storm surge is likely to cause significant damage. I urge everyone along the coast to familiarize themselves with their storm surge risk and be prepared to evacuate should an evacuation order be issued.

Links
For those of you wanting to know your odds of receiving hurricane force or tropical storm force winds, I recommend the NHC wind probability product.

Wunderground has detailed storm surge maps for the U.S. coast.

The National Hurricane Center's Interactive Storm Surge RIsk Map, which allows one to pick a particular Category hurricane and zoom in, is a good source of storm surge risk information.

Wunderblogger MIke Theiss is in Nassau, and will be sending live updates through the day today.

Landstrike is an entertaining fictional account of a Category 4 hurricane hitting New York City.

Elsewhere in the tropics
Tropical Depression Ten in the far Eastern Atlantic will not be a threat to any land areas over the next seven days, and will probably move too far north to ever be a threat to land.

Portlight mobilizes for Irene
The Bahamas have been hit hard by Irene, and unfortunately, it appears that the Northeast U.S. may have its share of hurricane victims before Irene finally dissipates. My favorite disaster relief charity, Portlight.org, is mobilizing to help, and is sending out their relief trailer and crew to the likely U.S. landfall point. Check out this blog to see what they're up to; donations are always needed.

Jeff Masters

Excuseme... The source of

Excuseme...
The source of the previous message.
http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=1899

Rapidly intensifying

Rapidly intensifying Hurricane Irene heading for Brunswick nuclear plant in North Carolina — Could become massive Category 4, up to 155 mph
August 23rd, 2011 at 12:25 PM

Irene could become massive Category 4 hurricane, MSNBC, August 23, 2011:

Florida would be first U.S. area to feel it, landfall in Carolinas likely

The rapidly intensifying Irene that’s already cut a destructive path through the Caribbean is the first hurricane to seriously threaten the U.S. in almost three years [...]By Thursday, as it roars toward the U.S. coast over warm open waters, it could become a Category 4, NHC hurricane specialist John Cangialosi said late Monday. Winds in such a storm can blow from 131 to 155 mph. By contrast, Hurricane Katrina was a Category 3 when it hit New Orleans in 2005 [...]

Current projections have Irene tracking off Florida’s coast on Friday and then making landfall in the Carolinas on Saturday or Sunday. [...]
Bad Building at Brunswick, Union of Concerned Scientists, July 11, 2011:

The improperly installed bolts and support may have allowed the emergency diesel generator building to collapse had there been an earthquake or a hurricane. The emergency diesel generators probably would have been broken by the building’s collapse. Since the normal power supply for the plant may also have been disabled by the earthquake or hurricane, the building’s collapse may have left the plant without any power except that from batteries. Plants like Brunswick are designed to survive on battery power for only a few hours. It would have taken considerably longer to repair crushed emergency diesel generators.

http://images.meteociel.fr/im

Palm Beach camera in

Palm Beach camera in live...

great images about the hurricane.
http://www.earthcam.com/usa/florida/palmbeach/

PSEG preps N. Jersey nuclear

PSEG preps N. Jersey nuclear plants ahead of Irene
Thu Aug 25, 2011 4:02pm GMT
NEW YORK Aug 25 (Reuters) - Public Service Enterprise Group (PEG.N: Quote) is taking preliminary safety precautions at their nuclear power plants along the Delaware River in preparation for Hurricane Irene, expected to pass along the U.S. Northeast coast sometime over the weekend.
The Category 3 storm with sustained winds of 115 miles per hour (185 kmph), was at 11:00 a.m. EDT (15:00 GMT), located about 75 miles (115 km) north-northeast of Nassau, Bahamas, and about 645 miles (1040 km) south of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. [ID:nL4E7JP3Q9]

PSEG operates the two-unit 2,300-megawatt combined Salem nuclear power plant and the 1,061-megawatt Hope Creek plant, all in Hancocks Bridge, New Jersey, 18 miles south of Wilmington, Delaware.

"Walk downs are being conducted for objects that could become airborne," said Skip Sindoni, a spokesman for PSEG.

The Delaware River level outside the plants is generally at 89 feet, Sindoni said. If the water in the river rises due to flooding from Irene to 99.5 feet, then the company will take the Hope Creek plant offline. If the water rises to 100.5 feet, both Salem plants will be taken offline.

The plants were built to withstand tornado force winds of a combined 360 miles per hour, that is a tornado moving at 70 miles per hour with a 290-mile-per-hour rotation, Sindoni said.

Still, if Hurricane Irene's winds are expected at greater than 74 miles-per-hour -- a Category 1 storm on the Saffir-Simpson scale -- PSEG said it would need to take the plants offline two hours before those winds arrive.

(Reporting by Jeanine Prezioso; Editing by David Gregorio)

Nuclear power plants prepare

Nuclear power plants prepare for expected hurricaneAug 25, 2011
By Brian Wheeler
Associate Editor

Hurricane Irene continued to make its way toward the East Coast of the United States at press time on August 25 and was expected to make landfall over the weekend. As the storm approached, nuclear power plants in the expected path have begun preparations.

Hurricane Irene is expected to make landfall just days after Dominion Power’s (NYSE: D) two pressurized water reactors at the 1,800 MW North Anna plant in Virginia shut down automatically following a 5.8 earthquake. Dominion Virginia Power spokesperson David Botkins said that with an in-house team of meteorologists that study weather models, it allows Dominion to have a long lead time for preparations.

“Models change hourly and models change daily so there is a lot of fine tuning and sophistication that goes into it right up to impact,” he said. “

Dominion’s meteorologists work with logistical experts to plan and begin pre-deployment exercises to respond as quickly and safely as possible.

“We just went through a very rigorous exercise in June to get ready for this very thing,” said Botkins.

A spokesperson at Progress Energy (NYSE: PGN) said the company’s plan calls for preparations to occur beginning about 120 hours before the storm’s anticipated landfall. As of the morning of August 25, a number of nuclear power plants appeared to be within the storm’s projected path: Brunswick, Harris, Indian Point, Pilgrim, Millstone, Surry, Seabrook, Vermont Yankee, Limerick, Calvert Cliff, Peach Bottom, Three Mile Island, Susquehanna and Salem. Of those, the plants further inland and to the north would likely see less impact, according to weather models from the Weather Channel.

Progress Energy owns and operates two plants in North Carolina within the projected path of the storm: the single unit, 900 MW Harris nuclear plant and the two-unit, 1,875 MW Brunswick nuclear power plant near Southport.

“One of the realities of having as much coastal service area as we have is the annual threat of major storms,” said Progress spokesperson Mike Hughes in an email to Power Engineering magazine. “That said, we practice and refine the comprehensive storm plan with each drill and each real event.”

The Brunswick plant is the only nuclear plant in their fleet that may see hurricane-force winds. But based on the current forecast, Hughes said, Progress does not expect hurricane-force winds at the plant.

Hughes said that if hurricane-force winds are expected at Brunswick, operators would bring the plant to shutdown two hours before the expected arrival of the hurricane winds.

Brunswick is designed for water levels 22 feet above sea level. Its flood protection is based on what Hughes called “the most severe storm tides at the site associated with probable maximum hurricane winds” up to 128 MPH.

After dealing in 2005 with Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, Entergy (NYSE: ETR) is familiar with the damage that hurricanes can leave behind. After Katrina, 37,000 square miles, roughly one third of Entergy’s service territory, was affected. The Mississippi-based utility is again making preparations for Irene to pass near its Indian Point Energy Center in New York. The two-unit 2,069 MW nuclear power plant sits on the east bank of the Hudson River 38 miles north of New York City and is projected to be affected by the storm as it is weakening. Entergy spokesperson Jerry Nappi said plant personnel are monitoring the storm track and potential for hurricane and high winds.

“If winds in excess of 100 mph approach 320 nautical miles from the plant, operators take action to begin shutting the plant down prior to the 100 mph winds reaching the site,” he said.

Progress has mutual assistance pacts with other utilities across the Southeastern Electric Exchange and had informed them of the possibility of needing additional resources. Progress also has the ability to deploy crews from unaffected areas, if needed, and has teams ready to travel from South Carolina and central North Carolina regions. Dominion is also able to move resources across jurisdictional boundaries, as needed, into the area that could be most affected by Hurricane Irene.

Nuclear plants in the path

Nuclear plants in the path of Irene:

Surry
Salem
Oyster Creek
Calver Cliffs
Indian Point
Milstone
Pilgrim
Vermont Yankee
Sea Brook

What I find wonderful about

What I find wonderful about clean, safe and cheap nuclear power, is that every tornado, wildfire, flood, earthquake or hurricane, we're flirting with potential disaster on a scale never before possible.

UNUSUAL EVENT – TRANSFORMER EXPLOSION NEAR TURBINE BUILDING

UNUSUAL EVENT – TRANSFORMER EXPLOSION NEAR TURBINE BUILDING

Event Notification Report for August 29, 2011, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission:

Facility: CALVERT CLIFFS
Region: 1 State: MD
Event Date: 08/27/2011
Event Time: 23:02 [EDT]
Last Update Date: 08/28/2011
Emergency Class: UNUSUAL EVENT
10 CFR Section:
50.72(a) (1) (i) – EMERGENCY DECLARED
50.72(b)(2)(iv)(B) – RPS ACTUATION – CRITICAL
[...]
Event Text
UNUSUAL EVENT – TRANSFORMER EXPLOSION NEAR TURBINE BUILDING

“At 2248 on 8/27/2011, the Unit 1 Reactor experienced an automatic trip due to loss of load. This trip occurred due to a phase to phase short on the main generator output step-up transformer that resulted from a large section of turbine building siding breaking loose in high winds from Hurricane Irene and impacting the transformer. This impact resulted in an explosion (briefly until the trip removed power from the impact area) which met emergency action level declaration criteria A.U.6.2.2, ‘Unanticipated explosion within Protected Area resulting in visible damage to permanent structures or equipment.’ The Unusual Event was declared at 2302, 8/27/2011. Follow-up investigation determined no fire resulted from the explosion.

“Following the trip, Emergency Procedure, EOP-0, ‘Post Trip Immediate Actions’ was implemented. All safety functions were met during EOP-0 indicating an uncomplicated reactor trip response, allowing transition to EOP-1, ‘Reactor Trip,’ at 2300, 8/27/2011. During implementation of EOP-1, it was noted that #14 Containment Air Cooler had stopped running, as had #21 and #24 Containment Air Coolers on Unit 2. This was investigated and it was determined they had stopped running due to an instantaneous voltage drop that had occurred on the site distribution system during the phase to phase short event. This short duration voltage drop caused the Containment Air Coolers’ controller to drop out and secure them. They were restarted without issue.

“At 2400, 8/27/2011, numerous alarms on the 1A DG started to be received. These were investigated and it was found that water was intruding down the DG exhaust piping resulting in a DC ground. Based on these indications the 1A DG was declared inoperable and appropriate technical specifications implemented.”

[...]