Millstone offers tour ahead of refueling outage

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Sep. 18—As Millstone Nuclear Power Station prepares for a refueling outage, Dominion Energy spokesperson Ken Holt took two Day reporters for a more than three-hour tour Thursday afternoon.

It included the turbine generator building, spent fuel storage, water intake and outtake from Long Island Sound and other parts of the vast facility, which seems to function as a city in itself. Holt noted that security teams, electricians, cafeteria workers, a doctor, nurses and others populate Millstone's 550-acre campus, in addition to plant operators.

Before the tour, he offered an update on operations at Millstone.

There are currently 800 to 1,000 contractors preparing for the planned fall outage. Dominion Energy has not disclosed exactly when the outage will occur, but Holt said the company likely will send a notice the day before. Millstone's two nuclear reactors are partially refueled every 18 months, and the monthlong process typically requires an influx of hundreds of specialized workers, including electricians, pipefitters and others, who typically travel to plants across the country to execute similar operations.

The federal government had committed to take possession of nuclear waste from facilities but later reneged, meaning Millstone stores its used fuel on site. In addition to spent fuel pools, the plant has dry storage in metal canisters encased in concrete, which can be stored safely for decades. Holt said Thursday that Millstone's dry cast storage can accommodate the fuel for 60 years.

It's possible that Millstone could continue operating for 100 years. The federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission is considering expanding license renewal to 100 years of plant operation. Nuclear plants originally were licensed for 40 years, which later was extended another 20 years to 60, and a subsequent renewal brought that number to 80 years.

"If we go for another 20 years with subsequent license renewal, we may need to expand that pad," Holt said. "We basically build little garages that we put these cylinders of fuel into, and if the federal government takes the fuel — there's a couple interim locations in Texas and New Mexico that raised their hands and said, 'Hey, we'd be willing to store fuel here' — as we empty out the garages where the cylinders are, that leaves them open, and we could then put another cylinder in them."

The plant has three units but only two of them are operational; Unit 1 was closed down in the late 1990s, before Dominion Energy took ownership of the property. Holt said the plant has worked more efficiently with two units than it did with all three under Northeast Utilities.