South Carolina

A leak shut down a nuclear plant for weeks. Here’s the latest on repairs at the SC plant.

SCE&G’s V.C. Summer nuclear site in South Carolina. The company abandoned plans in 2017 to build two reactors to complement one operating since the 1980s. The original reactor is in the foreground.
SCE&G’s V.C. Summer nuclear site in South Carolina. The company abandoned plans in 2017 to build two reactors to complement one operating since the 1980s. The original reactor is in the foreground.

The V.C. Summer atomic power plant, which has been shut down since early November because of a pipe leak, is expected to begin producing energy in a few days.

Dominion Energy says it has fixed the small leak in a pipe valve that allowed radioactive water to drip out. The company declined to say when the plant would be fully operational, but spokesman Ken Holt said that can take several days.

The plant was at 17 percent power Wednesday, he said.

Holt, who said Dominion is still investigating the cause, said water that leaked was part of the reactor cooling system. While the water came in contact with nuclear fuel in the reactor, the water never escaped the plant’s containment building and into the environment, Holt said.

He characterized the valve leak as ‘”uncommon’’ but not unexpected. The nuclear leak occurred in piping that links the nuclear reactor with the power plant’s steam generators. Hundreds of pipes are in that part of the nuclear plant.

“There is always some level of leakage when you are operating, but it is contained and monitored, and when it rises to a certain level, you may take action to stop it,’’ Holt said.

A nuclear safety watchdog has criticized Dominion for not issuing a public notice about the leak, but both the company and the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission say the amount was so small it did not require notice.

The V.C. Summer Nuclear plant is about 25 miles northwest of Columbia in Fairfield County. It was licensed in the early 1980s. At one point, Dominion’s predecessor, SCE&G, partnered with state owned Santee Cooper to build two more reactors there. But the companies walked away from the project in 2017, citing high costs and troubles with its chief contractor, Westinghouse.

This story was originally published November 20, 2019 at 5:54 PM with the headline "A leak shut down a nuclear plant for weeks. Here’s the latest on repairs at the SC plant.."

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Sammy Fretwell
The State
Sammy Fretwell has covered the environment beat for The State since 1995. He writes about an array of issues, including wildlife, climate change, energy, state environmental policy, nuclear waste and coastal development. He has won numerous awards, including Journalist of the Year by the S.C. Press Association in 2017. Fretwell is a University of South Carolina graduate who grew up in Anderson County. Reach him at 803 771 8537. Support my work with a digital subscription
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