fbpx
Wikipedia

Cooper Nuclear Station

Cooper Nuclear Station (CNS) is a boiling water reactor (BWR) type nuclear power plant located on a 1,251-acre (506 ha) site near Brownville, Nebraska between Missouri River mile markers 532.9 and 532.5, on Nebraska's border with Missouri. It is the largest single-unit electrical generator in Nebraska.

Cooper Nuclear Station
The reactor complex on June 20, 2011 during the 2011 Missouri River Floods
CountryUnited States
LocationNemaha County, near Brownville, Nebraska
Coordinates40°21′43″N 95°38′29″W / 40.36194°N 95.64139°W / 40.36194; -95.64139
StatusOperational
Construction beganJune 1, 1968
Commission dateJuly 1, 1974
Construction cost$1.152 billion (2007 USD)[1]
Owner(s)Nebraska Public Power District
Operator(s)Nebraska Public Power District
Nuclear power station
Reactor typeBWR
Reactor supplierGeneral Electric
Cooling sourceMissouri River
Thermal capacity1 × 2419 MWth
Power generation
Units operational1 × 769 MW
Make and modelBWR-4 (Mark 1)
Nameplate capacity835 MW
Capacity factor94% (2021)
75.30% (lifetime)
Annual net output6880 GWh (2021)
External links
WebsiteCooper Nuclear Station
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Description

CNS is owned and operated by the Nebraska Public Power District (NPPD), a political subdivision of the state of Nebraska.

The facility is named after Humboldt natives Guy Cooper Jr., and Guy Cooper Sr.[2] The senior Cooper's father, O. A. Cooper, built the first electrical plant in Humboldt in 1890; the two Guy Coopers served a total of 27 years on the board of NPPD and its predecessor agency, Consumers Public Power District.[3]

CNS was first put into operation in July 1974 and generates approximately 800 megawatts (MWe) of electricity. The plant consists of a General Electric BWR/4 series reactor plant and a Westinghouse turbine generator. The plant has a Mark I containment system.

In 1998, CNS was the first plant in the United States to load nuclear fuel containing uranium that had been provided under the Megatons to Megawatts Program, in which uranium removed from nuclear weapons of the former Soviet Union was turned into low-enriched uranium and then into fuel.[4]

In September 2008, NPPD applied to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for a renewal of the operating license for CNS, extending it for an additional twenty years.[5] In November 2010 CNS received its license renewal, which was the 60th renewal license to be issued by the NRC.[6]

In late 2003 NPPD signed a contract with Entergy Nuclear for management support services. An agreement was approved in January 2010 by NPPD to extend Entergy's management support services until January 2029. The original contract between the companies, signed in 2003, was for the remaining years of the plant's original operating license, which ran until January 18, 2014. In March 2022 NPPD announced that the Entergy contract would be terminated.[7]

Electricity Production

Generation (MWh) of Cooper Nuclear Station[8]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual (Total)
2001 570,854 511,780 276,090 550,990 566,188 512,170 552,287 542,855 532,491 557,507 33,329 0 5,206,541
2002 495,158 519,785 564,856 548,906 374,079 534,267 547,998 556,080 538,948 566,632 509,234 561,208 6,317,151
2003 570,858 371,269 0 100,096 473,604 0 515,736 549,216 467,125 483,390 478,233 482,806 4,492,333
2004 570,190 518,699 568,879 542,943 541,962 537,929 551,689 554,465 536,463 325,798 399,430 523,326 6,171,773
2005 212,974 168,277 586,909 504,109 581,006 539,729 560,062 560,750 462,607 578,778 565,803 570,917 5,891,921
2006 585,258 458,742 557,176 558,161 503,285 546,692 560,098 559,952 529,890 351,432 112,345 587,445 5,910,476
2007 551,175 528,415 581,860 560,976 497,995 553,996 562,389 556,546 556,189 581,260 556,135 584,312 6,671,248
2008 581,610 536,581 520,326 171,925 218,031 552,091 565,277 504,174 565,840 590,080 569,225 588,920 5,964,080
2009 587,498 504,938 435,330 568,654 583,854 561,883 576,686 572,285 435,733 0 317,583 590,135 5,734,579
2010 564,779 524,026 577,947 561,764 578,078 522,580 574,869 571,820 566,039 589,289 570,669 591,023 6,792,883
2011 588,152 528,133 222,112 0 404,967 564,552 569,259 570,471 564,037 591,506 571,226 593,689 5,768,104
2012 577,696 544,833 579,827 564,716 580,394 538,895 562,325 539,821 551,599 221,146 11,227 544,797 5,817,276
2013 585,509 526,150 586,081 568,988 583,935 534,493 540,960 572,432 553,501 589,858 570,476 591,639 6,804,022
2014 589,912 531,095 533,966 560,710 542,331 453,919 576,061 568,559 455,723 0 512,176 592,883 5,917,335
2015 587,113 533,977 589,883 564,689 532,358 538,878 574,358 574,340 563,194 590,591 567,743 583,647 6,800,771
2016 589,449 541,857 586,184 564,671 581,592 551,925 566,791 558,693 386,444 0 396,322 601,428 5,925,356
2017 600,284 535,812 594,643 572,954 548,837 566,137 575,530 581,200 569,647 598,546 567,434 601,713 6,912,737
2018 600,802 520,240 470,665 575,176 543,813 459,047 574,976 574,741 484,688 0 230,947 597,045 5,632,140
2019 599,741 535,889 594,028 571,805 588,606 562,395 577,309 578,535 568,007 599,121 576,456 599,708 6,951,600
2020 599,017 555,268 589,733 576,023 588,370 562,035 569,903 556,024 415,826 73,061 520,871 582,420 6,188,551
2021 593,104 537,796 593,538 572,048 581,317 557,635 572,827 571,013 564,009 590,923 549,176 597,236 6,880,622
2022 595,610 528,070 587,760 565,386 578,905 551,877 540,847 474,456 405,669 8,556 4,837,136
2023

Surrounding population

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission defines two emergency planning zones around nuclear power plants: a plume exposure pathway zone with a radius of 10 miles (16 km), concerned primarily with exposure to, and inhalation of, airborne radioactive contamination, and an ingestion pathway zone of about 50 miles (80 km), concerned primarily with ingestion of food and liquid contaminated by radioactivity.[9] In 2010, the population within 10 miles of Cooper was 4,414; the population within 50 miles was 163,610. Cities within the 50-mile radius include Nebraska City, with a population of 7,289, located 25 miles (40 km) from the plant.[10][11]

Seismic risk

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's estimate of the risk each year of an earthquake intense enough to cause core damage to the reactor at CNS was 1 in 142,857, according to an NRC study published in August 2010.[12][13]

Events

At 0402 CDT on June 19, 2011 a Notification of Unusual Event (the lowest of NRC emergency classifications) was declared due to the elevation of the Missouri River reaching 899.1 feet above mean sea level. This is above the Emergency Action Level HU1.5 elevation of 899 feet. Later, the Missouri River reached 900.6 feet on 6/23/2011 while elevation of 902 feet is the alert level for the plant.[14][15] The plant left the emergency status at 9:47 a.m., July 12 after the river dropped to 895.8 feet—3 feet below the emergency status level.[16] The nearby Fort Calhoun Nuclear Generating Station also faced flooding during this period.

On March 15, 2019, another Unusual Event low-level emergency was declared at Cooper due to flooding, with a forecast crest that exceeds the 2011 flooding.[17]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "EIA - State Nuclear Profiles". www.eia.gov. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  2. ^ "Cooper Nuclear Station". 2008-11-21 at the Wayback Machine Nebraska Public Power District. Retrieved 2011-05-04.
  3. ^ "A Closer Look at Cooper Nuclear Station". Nebraska Public Power District brochure; online at Iowa Homeland Security & Emergency Management website. Retrieved 2011-05-04.
  4. ^ DeVolpi, Alexander; Minkov, Vladimir E.; et al. (2005). Nuclear Shadowboxing: Legacies and Challenges. Vol. 2. Kalamazoo, Mich.: DeVolpi. p. VII-54. ISBN 0-9777734-1-8.
  5. ^ "Cooper Nuclear Station". License Renewal Application. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). October 22, 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-25.
  6. ^ "Nuclear power plant receives 20-year operating license renewal". Power-Gen Worldwide. PennWell Corporation. November 30, 2010. Archived from the original on January 31, 2013. Retrieved 2010-12-02.
  7. ^ "News Release: NPPD mutually agrees to end services contract with Entergy". www.nppd.com. Retrieved 2022-08-06.
  8. ^ "Electricity Data Browser". www.eia.gov. Retrieved 2023-01-05.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-10-02. Retrieved 2013-12-13.
  10. ^ Dedman, Bill (April 14, 2011), Nuclear neighbors: Population rises near US reactors, NBC News, http://www.nbcnews.com/id/42555888 Accessed 2011-05-01.
  11. ^ Drozd, David. "Nebraska Incorporated Place Census Populations with Changes and Percent Changes: 1980 to 2010". 2012-04-02 at the Wayback Machine Center for Public Affairs Research, University of Nebraska—Omaha. Retrieved 2011-05-04.
  12. ^ Dedman, Bill (Mar 17, 2011). "What are the odds? US nuke plants ranked by quake risk". NBC News. Retrieved 2011-04-19.
  13. ^ Hiland, Patrick (Sep 2, 2010). (PDF). NRC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 19 Apr 2011.
  14. ^ Kehoe, Benjamin (Jun 20, 2011). "Unusual event declared due to Missouri river flooding". United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, NRC. Retrieved 2011-06-23.
  15. ^ . Nebraska Public Power District, NPPD. June 2011. Archived from the original on 2011-06-21. Retrieved 2011-06-23.
  16. ^ "Cooper Nuclear Station no longer at emergency status | Local | journalstar.com".
  17. ^ Gardner, Nancy; Chris Peters (March 16, 2019). "Cooper Nuclear Station still operating but preparing for shutdown as Missouri River hits record levels". Omaha World-Herald.

External links

cooper, nuclear, station, boiling, water, reactor, type, nuclear, power, plant, located, acre, site, near, brownville, nebraska, between, missouri, river, mile, markers, nebraska, border, with, missouri, largest, single, unit, electrical, generator, nebraska, . Cooper Nuclear Station CNS is a boiling water reactor BWR type nuclear power plant located on a 1 251 acre 506 ha site near Brownville Nebraska between Missouri River mile markers 532 9 and 532 5 on Nebraska s border with Missouri It is the largest single unit electrical generator in Nebraska Cooper Nuclear StationThe reactor complex on June 20 2011 during the 2011 Missouri River FloodsCountryUnited StatesLocationNemaha County near Brownville NebraskaCoordinates40 21 43 N 95 38 29 W 40 36194 N 95 64139 W 40 36194 95 64139StatusOperationalConstruction beganJune 1 1968Commission dateJuly 1 1974Construction cost 1 152 billion 2007 USD 1 Owner s Nebraska Public Power DistrictOperator s Nebraska Public Power DistrictNuclear power stationReactor typeBWRReactor supplierGeneral ElectricCooling sourceMissouri RiverThermal capacity1 2419 MWthPower generationUnits operational1 769 MWMake and modelBWR 4 Mark 1 Nameplate capacity835 MWCapacity factor94 2021 75 30 lifetime Annual net output6880 GWh 2021 External linksWebsiteCooper Nuclear StationCommonsRelated media on Commons edit on Wikidata Contents 1 Description 2 Electricity Production 3 Surrounding population 4 Seismic risk 5 Events 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External linksDescription EditCNS is owned and operated by the Nebraska Public Power District NPPD a political subdivision of the state of Nebraska The facility is named after Humboldt natives Guy Cooper Jr and Guy Cooper Sr 2 The senior Cooper s father O A Cooper built the first electrical plant in Humboldt in 1890 the two Guy Coopers served a total of 27 years on the board of NPPD and its predecessor agency Consumers Public Power District 3 CNS was first put into operation in July 1974 and generates approximately 800 megawatts MWe of electricity The plant consists of a General Electric BWR 4 series reactor plant and a Westinghouse turbine generator The plant has a Mark I containment system In 1998 CNS was the first plant in the United States to load nuclear fuel containing uranium that had been provided under the Megatons to Megawatts Program in which uranium removed from nuclear weapons of the former Soviet Union was turned into low enriched uranium and then into fuel 4 In September 2008 NPPD applied to the U S Nuclear Regulatory Commission NRC for a renewal of the operating license for CNS extending it for an additional twenty years 5 In November 2010 CNS received its license renewal which was the 60th renewal license to be issued by the NRC 6 In late 2003 NPPD signed a contract with Entergy Nuclear for management support services An agreement was approved in January 2010 by NPPD to extend Entergy s management support services until January 2029 The original contract between the companies signed in 2003 was for the remaining years of the plant s original operating license which ran until January 18 2014 In March 2022 NPPD announced that the Entergy contract would be terminated 7 Electricity Production EditGeneration MWh of Cooper Nuclear Station 8 Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual Total 2001 570 854 511 780 276 090 550 990 566 188 512 170 552 287 542 855 532 491 557 507 33 329 0 5 206 5412002 495 158 519 785 564 856 548 906 374 079 534 267 547 998 556 080 538 948 566 632 509 234 561 208 6 317 1512003 570 858 371 269 0 100 096 473 604 0 515 736 549 216 467 125 483 390 478 233 482 806 4 492 3332004 570 190 518 699 568 879 542 943 541 962 537 929 551 689 554 465 536 463 325 798 399 430 523 326 6 171 7732005 212 974 168 277 586 909 504 109 581 006 539 729 560 062 560 750 462 607 578 778 565 803 570 917 5 891 9212006 585 258 458 742 557 176 558 161 503 285 546 692 560 098 559 952 529 890 351 432 112 345 587 445 5 910 4762007 551 175 528 415 581 860 560 976 497 995 553 996 562 389 556 546 556 189 581 260 556 135 584 312 6 671 2482008 581 610 536 581 520 326 171 925 218 031 552 091 565 277 504 174 565 840 590 080 569 225 588 920 5 964 0802009 587 498 504 938 435 330 568 654 583 854 561 883 576 686 572 285 435 733 0 317 583 590 135 5 734 5792010 564 779 524 026 577 947 561 764 578 078 522 580 574 869 571 820 566 039 589 289 570 669 591 023 6 792 8832011 588 152 528 133 222 112 0 404 967 564 552 569 259 570 471 564 037 591 506 571 226 593 689 5 768 1042012 577 696 544 833 579 827 564 716 580 394 538 895 562 325 539 821 551 599 221 146 11 227 544 797 5 817 2762013 585 509 526 150 586 081 568 988 583 935 534 493 540 960 572 432 553 501 589 858 570 476 591 639 6 804 0222014 589 912 531 095 533 966 560 710 542 331 453 919 576 061 568 559 455 723 0 512 176 592 883 5 917 3352015 587 113 533 977 589 883 564 689 532 358 538 878 574 358 574 340 563 194 590 591 567 743 583 647 6 800 7712016 589 449 541 857 586 184 564 671 581 592 551 925 566 791 558 693 386 444 0 396 322 601 428 5 925 3562017 600 284 535 812 594 643 572 954 548 837 566 137 575 530 581 200 569 647 598 546 567 434 601 713 6 912 7372018 600 802 520 240 470 665 575 176 543 813 459 047 574 976 574 741 484 688 0 230 947 597 045 5 632 1402019 599 741 535 889 594 028 571 805 588 606 562 395 577 309 578 535 568 007 599 121 576 456 599 708 6 951 6002020 599 017 555 268 589 733 576 023 588 370 562 035 569 903 556 024 415 826 73 061 520 871 582 420 6 188 5512021 593 104 537 796 593 538 572 048 581 317 557 635 572 827 571 013 564 009 590 923 549 176 597 236 6 880 6222022 595 610 528 070 587 760 565 386 578 905 551 877 540 847 474 456 405 669 8 556 4 837 1362023Surrounding population EditThe Nuclear Regulatory Commission defines two emergency planning zones around nuclear power plants a plume exposure pathway zone with a radius of 10 miles 16 km concerned primarily with exposure to and inhalation of airborne radioactive contamination and an ingestion pathway zone of about 50 miles 80 km concerned primarily with ingestion of food and liquid contaminated by radioactivity 9 In 2010 the population within 10 miles of Cooper was 4 414 the population within 50 miles was 163 610 Cities within the 50 mile radius include Nebraska City with a population of 7 289 located 25 miles 40 km from the plant 10 11 Seismic risk EditThe Nuclear Regulatory Commission s estimate of the risk each year of an earthquake intense enough to cause core damage to the reactor at CNS was 1 in 142 857 according to an NRC study published in August 2010 12 13 Events EditAt 0402 CDT on June 19 2011 a Notification of Unusual Event the lowest of NRC emergency classifications was declared due to the elevation of the Missouri River reaching 899 1 feet above mean sea level This is above the Emergency Action Level HU1 5 elevation of 899 feet Later the Missouri River reached 900 6 feet on 6 23 2011 while elevation of 902 feet is the alert level for the plant 14 15 The plant left the emergency status at 9 47 a m July 12 after the river dropped to 895 8 feet 3 feet below the emergency status level 16 The nearby Fort Calhoun Nuclear Generating Station also faced flooding during this period On March 15 2019 another Unusual Event low level emergency was declared at Cooper due to flooding with a forecast crest that exceeds the 2011 flooding 17 See also Edit Energy portal Nuclear technology portalPort of OmahaNotes Edit EIA State Nuclear Profiles www eia gov Retrieved 3 October 2017 Cooper Nuclear Station Archived 2008 11 21 at the Wayback Machine Nebraska Public Power District Retrieved 2011 05 04 A Closer Look at Cooper Nuclear Station Nebraska Public Power District brochure online at Iowa Homeland Security amp Emergency Management website Retrieved 2011 05 04 DeVolpi Alexander Minkov Vladimir E et al 2005 Nuclear Shadowboxing Legacies and Challenges Vol 2 Kalamazoo Mich DeVolpi p VII 54 ISBN 0 9777734 1 8 Cooper Nuclear Station License Renewal Application U S Nuclear Regulatory Commission NRC October 22 2008 Retrieved 2008 11 25 Nuclear power plant receives 20 year operating license renewal Power Gen Worldwide PennWell Corporation November 30 2010 Archived from the original on January 31 2013 Retrieved 2010 12 02 News Release NPPD mutually agrees to end services contract with Entergy www nppd com Retrieved 2022 08 06 Electricity Data Browser www eia gov Retrieved 2023 01 05 NRC Backgrounder on Emergency Preparedness for Nuclear Power Plants Archived from the original on 2006 10 02 Retrieved 2013 12 13 Dedman Bill April 14 2011 Nuclear neighbors Population rises near US reactors NBC News http www nbcnews com id 42555888 Accessed 2011 05 01 Drozd David Nebraska Incorporated Place Census Populations with Changes and Percent Changes 1980 to 2010 Archived 2012 04 02 at the Wayback Machine Center for Public Affairs Research University of Nebraska Omaha Retrieved 2011 05 04 Dedman Bill Mar 17 2011 What are the odds US nuke plants ranked by quake risk NBC News Retrieved 2011 04 19 Hiland Patrick Sep 2 2010 Memorandum Safety Risk Assessment Results for Generic Issue 199 Implications of Updated Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Estimates in Central and Eastern United States on Existing Plants PDF NRC Archived from the original PDF on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 19 Apr 2011 Kehoe Benjamin Jun 20 2011 Unusual event declared due to Missouri river flooding United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission NRC Retrieved 2011 06 23 Flood Facts and Information June 2011 Nebraska Public Power District NPPD June 2011 Archived from the original on 2011 06 21 Retrieved 2011 06 23 Cooper Nuclear Station no longer at emergency status Local journalstar com Gardner Nancy Chris Peters March 16 2019 Cooper Nuclear Station still operating but preparing for shutdown as Missouri River hits record levels Omaha World Herald External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cooper Nuclear Station Nebraska Public Power District Cooper Nuclear Station Nebraska Public Power District NPPD Archived from the original on 2008 11 21 Retrieved 2008 11 25 Cooper Nuclear Station Entergy Nuclear Archived from the original on 2008 12 21 Retrieved 2008 11 25 Nebraska Nuclear Profile Energy Information Administration U S Department of Energy DOE September 29 2008 Retrieved 2010 12 01 Cooper Boiling Water Reactor Operating Nuclear Power Reactors U S Nuclear Regulatory Commission NRC February 10 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 02 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cooper Nuclear Station amp oldid 1160857547, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.