The Kairaku Jigoku no Toriko (2019)only thing that separates Florida's Turkey Point nuclear plant from the ocean is a thin squiggle of land that doesn't seem to offer much protection.
There's a reason the place is so close to the water. Such plants need loads of H2O for constant cooling. But that need also means that, periodically, you'll come across a story about a potentially catastrophic storm whirling toward Turkey Point's nuclear facilities.
Turkey Point and its northern neighbor at St. Lucie, which is also perched precariously on a thin spit of land, have survived frightening hurricanes before. However, the storm currently blitzing toward Florida has the potential to be unlike any those facilities have seen.
SEE ALSO: Tropical Storm Harvey is the strongest to hit the US in 12 yearsHurricane Irma is a Category 5 storm, though it may have weakened a bit to Category 4 by the time it hits Florida, should it get there. Its winds have already howled at 185 miles per hour for a longer sustained period than any other Atlantic basin hurricane on record. It has killed at least nine people, and crushed Barbuda to the point that the island is reportedly unrecognizable.
This is the storm for which officials at Turkey Point and St. Lucie are preparing, and, despite Irma's enormity, such preparation is far from wholly new. Turkey Point's reactors rest inside six feet of concrete strengthened with steel, according to The Miami Herald. Though the plant is right next to the water, the reactors rest 20 feet above sea level, the better to avoid the swell of ocean water that comes with hurricanes.
The facilities are equipped with replacement generators and they have plans drawn up to fly replacement parts to the facility in case even those generators fail. Officials at Florida Power & Light, which operates the nuclear plants at Turkey Point and St. Lucie, are watching Irma's trajectory, and a spokesperson told the Heraldthey're ready to shut down the reactors well ahead of the storm's arrival, if it does indeed head their way.
Officials did the same thing 25 years ago, on Aug. 24, 1992, when Hurricane Andrew passed over the facility as a Category 5 storm. That preparation, along with the thick concrete walls, stopped Andrew's 175 mile-per-hour winds from doing any damage to the reactors. Nevertheless, Turkey Point still sustained $90 million in damage, according to The Herald.
The facility had to rely on backup power for five days. The storm damaged Turkey Point's security system and wrecked its fire safety equipment. Andrew reportedly flattened nearly all of the facility's warning sirens. Anyone trying to get to parts of Turkey Point found tree trunks and downed poles blocking their path. Even some of the structures designed to survive hurricane-force storms took a hit.
Turkey Point is, after all, built to survive what officials believe to be the worst possible hurricane ocean surge if it came during the highest possible tide, and then some.
However, because of sea level rise, the plant faces a potentially bigger test with Irma compared to Andrew, since seas are higher now than they were in 1992. The National Hurricane Center is currently forecasting storm surge flooding of between 10 to 15 feet above ground level for Turkey Point, which -- though the forecast is subject to revision as the storm approaches -- is just a few feet below the height of critical infrastructure at the plant.
In addition, Hurricane Irma will be approaching southern Florida from the south, rather than the east, which will cause a potentially higher storm surge to batter the facility. If it hits at its current intensity, it would have stronger winds, although it is forecast to weaken somewhat before making landfall.
The problem with worst-case scenarios is that a "worst-case" is framed by the limits of information and imagination. The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan was also built to withstand what officials believed to be the worst-imaginable scenario, but it didn't survive the tsunami that hit in 2011.
Officials in the United States have much more warning about Irma than officials in Japan had in 2011. Hopefully that will prove to be enough to keep Florida's nuclear plants safe.
The Morning News Roundup for July 14, 2014The Morning News Roundup for June 20, 2014Happy Birthday, Czesław Miłosz!Islands in the StreamThe Morning News Roundup for July 7, 2014The Many Poses of Marcel MarceauThe Morning News Roundup for Friday, June 27, 2014The Discovery of Oneself: An Interview with Daniel Mendelsohn by Ioanna KohlerThe Morning News Roundup for July 23, 2014See the Patents for the First Successful TypewriterThe Morning News Roundup for July 11, 2014An Exhilarating HeadThe Morning News Roundup for June 30, 2014Both Sides of Your Brain, Both Sides of the Pond by The Paris ReviewThe Morning News Roundup for July 14, 2014The Sartorial Kafka by Dan PiepenbringThe Sartorial Kafka by Dan PiepenbringUnder the VolcanoThe Morning News Roundup for June 25, 2014Comfort Food by Sadie Stein Joe Biden outshines the sun by putting on Ray Dude makes terrible mistake, gets a Cleveland Indians 'Champs' tattoo 8 tips for an American who wants to marry Prince Harry Chicago Cubs gave fans this hilarious 'excuse note' for Game 7 Clever Kickstarter board game teaches activists the skills they need for victory No, Tristan Thompson did not get a Khloe Kardashian back tattoo Twitter MD for South East Asia and MENA Parminder Singh quits It's a snake eat snake world out there, as this guy's photos clearly show Grandpa cracks open 32 A bank just took one major step towards gender inclusivity classpass learns the hard way you can’t just ‘figure out the business model' Hey Obama, here's how to troll Trump like a pro Watch a wiggly baby rhino take its very first bath Brexit just got a whole lot more interesting A Cubs fan paid $47,000 for two World Series Game 7 tickets A boom in startup investing is breeding conflicts in Silicon Valley boardrooms How you can help Indigenous activists fight the Dakota Access Pipeline The world's first zero NASA reveals why New Delhi is blanketed with deadly smog Anthony Rizzo was all of us watching Game 7 of the World Series
3.3288s , 10138.3203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Kairaku Jigoku no Toriko (2019)】,Pursuit Information Network