Business & Tech

Pilgrim Nuclear Shut Down After Leaky Safety Valve Found

Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station has been shut down for 24 hours early Tuesday morning to repair a minor leak in one of the plant's four safety valves according to an Entergy spokesman.

Entergy spokesman Rob Williams says there is no danger to workers or the public after Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station was shut down early Tuesday morning due to a leak in a safety relief valve.

According to a release, the valve, one of four, provides "overpressure protection for the plant’s reactor coolant system by opening when required to discharge reactor steam into the suppression pool, a large, donut-shaped reservoir of water located at the bottom of the reactor building. The plant’s technical specifications required that a shutdown be initiated within 24 hours because of the leakage."

The leak was captured inside the plant as designed and was not a threat to workers or the public. The repair work on the valve could not be done while the plant was operating. Station personnel are working around the clock to perform the needed repairs and restart the unit.

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The leak was detected Monday and an NRC resident inspector was at Pilgrim to monitor the shutdown, which took place without any complications. "Our inspectors will also follow repairs to the valve and the return of the plant to service once those are satisfactorily completed," Williams stated.

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