Masthead Corporate Logo
Subscribe eNewsletter Magazines

Power Group Online Article

| Add RSS Feed

Spain seeks big fines over leak at nuclear plant

19 August 2008 - Spain's nuclear watchdog agency proposed a fine of up to €22.5m ($33m) over a leak at a power plant, accusing operators of waiting three weeks to report it and downplaying the amount of contamination released.

The riverside Asco plant experienced a leak in November, but plant operators did not detect it until March and then waited to notify regulators on 4 April, according to the Nuclear Safety Council.

The agency said the risk to humans and the environment was minimal, but that the plant's operators had nonetheless violated monitoring and incident-reporting rules.

It also said Asco, owned by utility Endesa, had grossly underreportedIthe amount of contamination released.

The agency proposed six sanctions against the plant, which is located on the Ebro River, 44 miles (28 kilometres) upstream from the Mediterranean Sea.

It is up to the Industry Ministry will decide whether to fine the company, and if so how much. The punishment could total €22.5m.

In April, the council upgraded its classification of the leak from Level 1, the lowest on a scale of one to seven, to Level 2.

Spain has seven nuclear power plants operating. The Socialist government says it will let them run until their licenses expire, then decommission them.




| Add RSS Feed


 
Return to Previous Page

 
Power Engineering Webcasts




Save Time and Money with Safe Bolting
July 30, 2009






Integrating Fuel Flexibility into Boilers, Burners, Furnaces and Gas Turbines
July 28, 2009






Reduce Combustion Design Costs Through Accurate Chemistry Simulation
Original broadcast on
May 19, 2009



More

Sponsored White Papers Library
Recently Added White Papers

Using Advanced Simulation for Faster, Less Costly Lean Blow Off Analysis (05/29/2009, Reaction Design)

Simulating Fuel Flexibility and Combustion Performance (05/04/2009, Reaction Design)

Advanced Energy Solutions: Helping Industrial Power Generators Improve Efficiency and Reduce Emissions (04/08/2009, Honeywell)

Accurate Chemistry Simulation Enables Clean Combustion Design for Power Generation Systems (04/01/2009, Reaction Design)

How Automation Technology Can Improve Performance of Your Power Plant (08/25/2008, Honeywell)

More

 







 


Subscribe eNewsletter Magazines