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U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

Office of Public Affairs, Region IV
611 Ryan Plaza Drive, Suite 400, Arlington TX 76011
www.nrc.gov


No. IV-01-012   March 23, 2001
CONTACT: Breck Henderson
Phone: 817-860-8128
Cellular: 817-917-1227
E-mail: OPA4.Resource@nrc.gov

NRC, NPPD TO MEET FOR REGULATORY CONFERENCE ON POTENTIAL YELLOW FINDINGS AT COOPER NUCLEAR STATION


The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff will meet Thursday, March 29, with officials of Nebraska Public Power District, which operates the Cooper Nuclear Station near Brownville, Neb., for a regulatory conference. The purpose of the conference is to discuss apparent violations involving the installation of electrical connections to operate in a harsh environment.

The conference will begin at 1 p.m. on Thursday, at NRC's Region IV office in Arlington, Texas. The public is invited to observe the meeting, but participation will be limited to the NRC and NPPD. NRC officials will be available to answer questions afterward.

The NRC has characterized the apparent violation to be discussed as having substantial safety significance, and has designated it a potential "yellow" finding. Under the NRC's new reactor oversight process, inspection findings are evaluated under a significance determination process and assigned a color that indicates safety significance. Findings with very low safety significance are labeled "green." "White" findings have low to moderate importance to safety and may require additional NRC inspection. "Yellow" findings have substantial safety significance, and "red" findings high safety significance. A more detailed explanation of the NRC's new reactor oversight process can be found on the NRC's website at www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ROP/description.html.

In a nuclear plant, electrical cables to pumps, valves and other electrically-powered equipment often must be spliced together. Splices, or electrical connections, require that the insulation protecting the copper conductors be removed; however, these connection points need to be protected against grounding in the high moisture and high temperature environment that could occur in the plant during a serious accident. To replace the lost insulation, electrical connections are sealed with various types of protective materials. The materials and methods of application used to seal electrical connections must be designed and tested to certify that they provide protection against high moisture, high temperature and high radiation conditions.

In March last year, near the end of a refueling outage, plant workers and NRC inspectors found that the protective coverings on as many as 2,000 electrical connections in the Cooper plant may not have been properly installed in a configuration that was tested and certified for the expected harsh environment. As a result, the NRC determined that it could not be certain the connections were protected, nor that important safety equipment would function in the event of an accident. The plant remained shutdown from April 18 to May 26 while new protective coatings, properly qualified to provide protection in a harsh environment, were applied to required electrical connections. The plant returned to normal operation May 26. An inspection report completed in December identified the problem as an apparent violation with substantial safety significance. That report is available on the NRC Web site at www.nrc.gov/NRR/OVERSIGHT/ASSESS/REPORTS/cns_2000007.pdf .

A regulatory conference is being held to provide NPPD officials an opportunity to present information to the NRC that will help it to reach a final determination of the significance of the inspection findings. In addition to determining the significance of the findings, the NRC may also find that a violation of NRC requirements occurred requiring corrective action by the plant's managers.


NRC news releases are available through a free listserv subscription at the following Web address: http://www.nrc.gov/public-involve/listserver.html. The NRC Home Page at www.nrc.gov also offers a Subscribe to News link in the News & Information menu. E-mail notifications are sent to subscribers when news releases are posted to NRC's Web Site.



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