Saturday, May 23, 2009

Chalk River Reactor shut down for a month; AECL

What! Harper isn't firing anyone for shutting the facility down? The Chalk River reactor is long past its useful life. The whole Canadian govt. nuclear progam is a shambles as plans to build replacements the Maple reactors were shelved after great cost and botched startups. MDS Nordion which buys the isotopes but had enough sense not to try to buy the reactor should sue the government. Perhaps the Canadian government could lure some nuclear reactor experts from Iran. No doubt Israel and the US would help finance their relocation!

Chalk River reactor shut down for a month: AECL


By Canwest News ServiceMay 19, 2009 8:01 AM



The Chalk River nuclear facility, located about 200 km west of the Ottawa River, is mainly used for research and the production of radio isotopes for use in medical procedures.
Photograph by: Wayne Cuddington, Ottawa Citizen
A power outage in eastern Ontario last week could lead to a shortage of medical isotopes after a nuclear reactor was turned off at Chalk River Laboratories, Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. said.
In a statement released Monday evening, AECL said the National Research Universal reactor at the Chalk River, Ont., facility, about 180 km west of Ottawa, was “safely shut down” on Thursday due to a “shortage in electrical power.”
The following day, a leak of heavy water, or water that acts as a stabilizer during nuclear fission, was found in the NRU reactor, the statement said. The heavy water has been contained and poses “no threat to workers, the public, the environment or nuclear safety related to this event.”
The AECL said it estimates the NRU reactor will be out of service for a month while repairs are made to fix the leak. Because of the stoppage, the AECL said isotope shortages will occur as early as May 23.
The 52-year-old Chalk River facility produces about half of the world’s medical isotopes.
The isotopes are used to screen for illnesses such as cancer and heart disease.
In 2007, the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission shut down the reactor for four weeks after a routine maintenance check found safety provisions at the plant were lacking.
The decision to suspend operations caused a critical shortage of life-saving medical isotopes and prompted the government to persuade Parliament to override the nuclear regulator and allow the reactor to be restarted.
CNSC president Linda Keen was fired in January 2008 by the Harper government for authorizing the shutdown.
In December 2008, a small heavy-water leak shut down the reactor for three days before being restarted.
With files from the Ottawa Citizen
© Copyright (c) Canwest News Service

The Chalk River nuclear facility, located about 200 km west of the Ottawa River, is mainly used for research and the production of radio isotopes for use in medical procedures.
Photograph by: Wayne Cuddington, Ottawa Citizen

No comments: