Politics & Government

NRC Watches Isaac

The NRC is watching Hurricane Isaac as it churns through the Gulf of Mexico towards Louisiana.

Lara Uselding Public Affairs Officer Region IV, NRC

As Tropical Storm Isaac develops off the Gulf coast, one only hopes that it will lessen in force and simply bring much needed rains. But the reality is that NRC staff prepares for adverse conditions β€” to include hurricane force winds in excess of 75 mph β€” and takes action before the storm even hits the ground.

As recently as yesterday, when nuclear power plants were busy taking severe weather precautions, such as tying down loose equipment, removing debris that could become projectiles, and topping off water and fuel tanks, the NRC ramped up staff to assist the resident inspectors at three plants.

Find out what's happening in Plymouthfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Currently, Waterford and River Bend in Louisiana, and Grand Gulf in Mississippi have an additional six NRC inspectors who will ride out the storm inside the plant alongside the plants’ emergency and operations personnel. Additional staff are ready and waiting to relieve this group, and will be monitoring plant activities to ensure safe operations on a 24/7 basis.

As news agencies report on Isaac’s projected path, the NRC Region IV incident response team in Arlington, Texas, monitors the National Weather Service and uses specially created software to monitor wind speeds at the plants. This team went to work at noon today and will provide continuous coverage throughout the night as it stays in touch with the resident inspectors, FEMA, state and other federal partners.

Find out what's happening in Plymouthfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

We will keep you posted about the plants’ status after the eye of the storm makes landfall.

http://public-blog.nrc-gateway.gov/2012/08/28/nrc-watching-isaac/

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