Two Nuclear Power Plants In Florida Are Directly In The Path Of Hurricane Irma

Authored by Michael Snyder via The American Dream blog,

Hurricane Irma is more powerful than all of the other major Atlantic storms this year combined, and it has an eye as large as the entire Detroit metro area. It is being reported that “upwards of 90%” of Barbuda has already been destroyed by the storm, and it is being projected that some areas of Puerto Rico could be without power “for between four and six months”. You may want to view these photos and these videos to get a better idea of the immense destructiveness of this very powerful storm. The latest forecasts have Hurricane Irma making landfall in Florida, but so far the two nuclear power plants in Florida that would be directly in the path of the storm have not even started the process of shutting down

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In anticipation of powerful Hurricane Irma, which projections on Wednesday showed headed straight for South Florida, Florida Power & Light’s two nuclear plants were finalizing staffing plans and cleaning up the grounds.

But neither Turkey Point nor the St. Lucie plant further up the coast had made the call yet to shutting down the plants.

Peter Robbins, spokesman for FPL, said shutting down a reactor is a gradual process, and the decision will be made “well in advance” of the storm making landfall.

Robbins said the plant’s reactors are encased in six feet of steel-reinforced concrete and sit 20 feet above sea level. Turkey Point has backup generators, extra fuel and, as a “backup to the backup,” replacement parts and materials can be flown in from Tennessee.

The St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant is equally protected, Robbins said, and can withstand severe flooding from storm surges. St. Lucie’s nuclear plant survived Hurricanes Frances and Jeanne in 2005 and Wilma the year after.

When the eye of Andrew passed over Turkey Point, some facilities around the reactor buildings took a beating. Ultimately, the state’s oldest nuclear plant suffered $90 million in damages, including to systems that were supposed to be hurricane-proof.

One of the 400-foot smokestacks for the old oil-burning power plant was cracked in half, even though it was rated to survive 235-mph winds. Andrew blew down all but six of the 41 warning sirens within 10 miles of the plant. The storm left the plant running on backup generators for more than a week to cool the shut-down reactor. A main access road was blocked by debris.

“It handled Andrew as it was designed to,” Robbins said. “It’s one of the safest and most robust structures in the state, of not the country.”

ZH: One word comes to mind hearing all this – “contained.”

We all remember what happened with Fukushima, and we definitely do not want to see a repeat on U.S. soil. The Fukushima nuclear disaster changed millions of minds about the safety of nuclear power, and as a member of Congress I will do all that I can to encourage the development of our solar power, wind power and geothermal power capabilities.

Let us hope that Hurricane Irma weakens before it gets to Florida, because the destruction that it is causing right now is off the charts. When it made landfall in Barbuda, there were some wind gusts that were “above 215 mph”

Irma first made landfall in Barbuda — an island with a population of about 1,600 — around 1:47 a.m. ET Wednesday. Local weather stations there captured wind gusts of 155 mph before going silent, indicating the instruments had been blown away. Irma’s sustained winds have been reported at 185 mph, with gusts above 215 mph.

When you have winds that high, there is little that you can do to prepare. According to one top official, “upwards of 90%” of Barbuda has already been destroyed…

At least one death was reported in Barbuda, according to ABS TV Antigua. Charles Fernandez, minister of foreign affairs and international trade for Antigua and Barbuda, told ABS that destruction on Barbuda was “upwards of 90%.”

Irma destroyed government buildings, tore roofs from houses and left northern Caribbean islands without power or communications.

Considering what has already happened in the Caribbean, it astounds me that Miami is not being evacuated yet. If all of these communities in the south Florida area try to wait until the last minute to evacuate, it is going to create a traffic nightmare of epic proportions. According to CNN, we could be looking at “one of the largest mass evacuations in US history”…

Based on Irma’s projected path, which includes Florida’s heavily populated eastern coast, the enormous storm could create one of the largest mass evacuations in US history, CNN senior meteorologist Dave Hennen said. Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties combined have about 6 million people.

Monroe County, home to the Florida Keys, has already ordered mandatory evacuations. Broward County, which includes Fort Lauderdale, issued a mandatory evacuation Wednesday for areas east of Federal Highway.

There is still a chance that the storm may not hit Florida at all, and let us hope that is the case.

Sadly, there are some out there that actually want the storm to hit Florida. In fact, some leftists on Twitter are actually rooting for the storm to destroy President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort.

How can people be so cruel? When I first made the decision to jump into the world of politics, I thought that I would be able to avoid much of the nastiness, but I quickly found out that people are going to call me all sorts of names too. I am starting to understand why it is so hard to get good people to run for office, because there is a great price to be paid for putting yourself out there.

In this situation, my hope is that people down in south Florida won’t wait for a formal evacuation order and will start getting out well ahead of this storm. According to CNBC, Hurricane Irma could cause a quarter of a trillion dollars in damage if it is still a category 5 storm once it reaches Miami…

But if it stays a Category 5 and hits Miami, the $125 billion estimate could be doubled, making it by far the costliest storm ever. At $105.8 billion, Hurricane Katrina in 2005 is currently the leader, though Hurricane Harvey, which struck Houston two weeks ago, could well surpass that total.

Can you imagine what a quarter of a trillion dollars of damage would look like?

And let us not forget that another hurricane is following right behind Irma. This could easily become the worst hurricane season in all of U.S. history, and we still have many more weeks to go before the season is over.

Meanwhile, a disaster of another sort is unfolding out west. Large portions of Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana are literally on fire. One of the reasons why we are having such a huge problem with wildfires out west is because the federal government is not properly managing public lands. So when these fires hit areas controlled by the feds, they tend to burn more intensely than they should. I intend to fight to have control of those lands transferred to state governments, and I hope that you will support my efforts. Here in Idaho, it has been estimated that we have more than a trillion dollars worth of natural resources under our feet, and if we can get full control of our public lands it would end our state budget problems permanently.

Our world is increasingly becoming a very unstable place, and we are certainly seeing evidence of that this month.

Let us hope that things start settling down, but unfortunately I don’t think that is going to happen any time soon…

 

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40 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
September 7, 2017 9:50 am

Seems like a really good idea to me.

What could possibly go wrong?

MuckAbout
September 7, 2017 10:23 am

What could possibly go wrong?
What could possibly go wrong?
What could possibly go wrong?
What could possibly go wrong?
What could possibly go wrong?
What could possibly go wrong?

muck

Stucky
September 7, 2017 10:24 am

Pics now online of the near total destruction of Barbuda …. 95% of dwellings damaged or destroyed ….. no water … 100% of communications destroyed

Holy shit

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Stucky
September 7, 2017 10:31 am

I thought that I knew my geography but until yesterday afternoon I had never heard of Barbuda. Bermuda, yes. Barbados, too.

I thought it was that pirate island from the Johnny Depp series.

So yesterday I stop at a local restaurant to talk with the owner about apples and there is a guy sitting at the bar with a cell phone/hand-held device telling everyone about a video his friend shot in Barbuda and he passes it around and as I am looking at it the exact same footage appears on the TV behind the bar. EXACT, I tell the guy, “Look, their doing your friend’s bit!”

So either the guy was BS’ing everyone and he was just showing the same footage that the MSM had, or it was one hell of a coincidence. He also said that most of the people were going to survive because they would all go to the leeward side of the island and hide behind the tallest mountain which was “3,000 feet tall”. I was extremely skeptical at that point.

I just looked it up and the high point is only 125 feet.

I’m going with the BS angle.

DRUD
DRUD
  hardscrabble farmer
September 7, 2017 11:02 am

“I thought it was that pirate island from the Johnny Depp series.”
Nope, that is Tortuga.

Rdawg
Rdawg
September 7, 2017 10:28 am

“When I first made the decision to jump into the world of politics, I thought that I would be able to avoid much of the nastiness…”

That right there almost made coffee shoot out of my nose!

Big Dick
Big Dick
  Rdawg
September 7, 2017 11:37 am

Guess the truth is the writer as not getting enough money for his blog and wanted on the gravy train in DC. It is questionable whether he is “good people” type of person as he admits the world of politics is a nasty place. Why would a good person want to get into the swamp unless they wanted to be an eating alligator type that does not give a shit about anything else but themselves. Sorry dude you can not have my vote or money to support you or your blog filled with constant fear.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Big Dick
September 7, 2017 12:26 pm

if you or someone else does not get into politics and change the system,are there any alternatives other than violence or acceptance of the status quo?

BB
BB
September 7, 2017 10:33 am

Mad Dog ,you should get into politics.It would be fun.Besides you got nothing better to do. Ok

Rdawg
Rdawg
  BB
September 7, 2017 10:48 am

Nah, I enjoy what I do. Besides, somebody has to pay taxes in order to fund the freeloaders that won’t cover their own surgeries, amiright?

And as an atheist nobody would vote for me anyway. You have to at least pretend you pray to the lawd in these United States in order to placate the faithful.

RiNS
RiNS
  Rdawg
September 7, 2017 1:49 pm

Dawg

You can do it!

Just walk around with a Bible in your hand.
Drop some verse once in a while.

Ya don’t have to believe it, cause folks like beebs can’t tell the difference between you and what passes for the real thing…

comment image

BB
BB
September 7, 2017 10:40 am

Years ago ( 1990 ) I worked a job at the Crystal River Nuclear power plant on the west coast.Only last 3 months.I worked the day shift .Up at 5:30 am and it would already be 85 degrees outside.Hot as Hell.I should have stayed with Duke Power .Young and dumb I looked for Greener pastures.Oh well just another regret .

DRUD
DRUD
September 7, 2017 11:07 am

“Robbins said the plant’s reactors are encased in six feet of steel-reinforced concrete…”

We are an astoundingly short-sighted species:

http://theconversation.com/the-problem-with-reinforced-concrete-56078

I had never put these two together before. Nuclear power plants are all-but-guaranteed to begin failing for a number of reasons over the next half-century or so.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
September 7, 2017 11:07 am

I don’t think I ever knew there was a “Barbuda”. Are we sure about that? Bermuda, sure. Barbuda? I don’t fucken think so. I didn’t just fall off the turnip truck. It’s like Socrates and Sophocles. Pretty sure it’s just one dude.

Gerold
September 7, 2017 11:09 am

Irma’s size dwarfs the state of Florida with a population of 20 million (Miami alone has 6 million.) Even if evacuation had begun a week ago, the highways would grid-lock with broken-down vehicles and empty fuel tanks. Besides, where would 20 million people go?

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Gerold
September 7, 2017 11:17 am

party tonight at my house guys,byob–

Stucky
September 7, 2017 11:28 am
Maggie
  Stucky
September 7, 2017 3:51 pm

The Clinton Foundation probably has feet on the ground to get rebuilding contracts handed out.

TampaRed
TampaRed
September 7, 2017 11:31 am

btw,i just saw the 11am track on irma
one more update and we will be out of the cone here in tampa and miami will only likely be brushed on the left side,which is the weak side of the storm–
this is of course predicated upon it actually making the northward turn–
after hurricane charley in 2004 you can never completely rule out the whims of ma nature–charley was coming up the west coast and was just a few hours away from a projected landfall here in tampa-
in the space of just a few hours the storm made an unexpected hard right and went almost straight in between sanibel and port charlotte and then across the center of the state on an ene track–
on irma’s new course,the entire eastern seaboard better start prepping,including interior states–

http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/refresh/graphics_at1+shtml/145426.shtml?cone

starfcker
  TampaRed
September 7, 2017 3:35 pm

Charley was a nasty little fuck. Here is three minutes of little tiny Cat 4 Charley hell raising with a gas station. Destroyed in minutes, right before your eyes. I was one of the first people into Punta Gorda about an hour after Charlie, it was leveled. Imagine Irma, with six hours of winds 50 mph stronger. Right now, I am the bullseye.

nkit
nkit
September 7, 2017 11:39 am

https://my.sfwmd.gov/sfwmd/common/images/weather/plots/storm_11

nkit
nkit
  nkit
September 7, 2017 11:53 am

comment image

RiNS
RiNS
  nkit
September 7, 2017 1:53 pm

This can’t be good.

comment image

TampaRed
TampaRed
  RiNS
September 7, 2017 2:35 pm

rinzie,it’s not good but it’s better than it was-
most of the power in these storms is on the right side,which even if the storm track did not change ,would keep much of the worst of it offshore–it’s like the difference between devastation and annihilation–
the track has been gradually shifting eastward and may possibly stay completely off the coast-
you guys all along the eastern seaboard and interior states need to start tracking this thing in a serious manner,not just casually-
even if it misses us,it may slam georgia and the carolinas,may go much further north,or hopefully it will bend out to sea and go to your highness the queen as a rainmaker–

starfcker
  RiNS
September 7, 2017 3:45 pm

” this can’t be good.” Especially if your house and business are just north of the “Y” in Hollywood on your map.

Big Dick
Big Dick
  nkit
September 7, 2017 2:10 pm

BEWARE These paths are based on past data fact extrapolated into probability. Just like the stock market. How well has that worked out with the economy in the toilet? Beware if the big right turn does not happen exactly as shown, the west coast of Florida will be the next Barbuda!

Montefrio
September 7, 2017 11:42 am

My daughter lives top-floor seafront in San Juan, Puerto Rico, so I was very concerned, kept in constant touch, given the panic level I’d been reading about. When I first communicated with her, she informed me that their storm-shutters were in place and their cars “evacuated” to higher ground. She also mentioned that she and hubby were going out for a walk, seeing as the storm had just begun. They stayed home and this morning she informed me all was well, but there were lots of downed trees. I hope the same will be true for friends in that area.

Fukushima invariably comes to mind and the nuclear power plant situation is certainly disturbing, even more than the sensationalist journalism that whips folks into a frenzy. Remember Y2K and how the end of the world was coming? Yeah, well…

Good luck to all in the path of this storm!

carnac the insignificant
carnac the insignificant
September 7, 2017 11:48 am

Hope we dont get the radioactive remnants of this storm. At least when we get a shit ton of snow it doesnt roll in at 215 mph.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 7, 2017 12:24 pm

Ho Lee Fukushima!

unit472
unit472
September 7, 2017 12:34 pm

Let’s hope Irma doesn’t make landfall and we can put the blame on the buffoons at the Weather Channel and the cretins at the NHC. Reynolds Wolf, “Doctor” Rick Knabb and forecasters Beven, Brown and Pasch.

No landfall and they are going to be responsible for the costs and they are already enormous. I suspect coastal real estate values in Florida will plummet. Hundreds of thousands of people left stranded on the highways. If I had my way they would forecast the path of the next hurricane from small boats located at 50 mile intervals off the coast. When their boat goes silent we will know the storm has reached them!

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
September 7, 2017 12:35 pm

Stucky…given your religious writtings shouldn’t you have said “Unholy Shit ” ?

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
September 7, 2017 12:39 pm

Well…in SC it isn’t looking good. I’ve got a couple of Yeti tye coolers,a generator,more flashlights than a Boy Scout troop and enough food to feed us for weeks . My only fret is taking a major arsenal with me when and if I leave.

I stayed for Hugo…never again .

I need some suggestions for the front of the house if we get hit hard. You loot,we shoot has been over used.

Penforce
  BUCKHED
September 7, 2017 1:26 pm

Best one I’ve seen. Huge doghouse with attached log chain. Dog food pan with 18 inch diameter. Killer, written in red paint with large paint brush over doorway of doghouse. Visitors would sit in car with windows closed and honk horn.

Montefrio
  BUCKHED
September 7, 2017 1:57 pm

How about a Santa with this in neon, at least while the power lasts: “”Give me the brain-fried, the crack-whore,
You looters looking to get my stuff free,
The wretched refuse of our teeming shore.
Come ye, homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
September 7, 2017 12:42 pm

One last note. I told you folks along time ago about sharing a plane with a gent who was on the Nuke Emergency group . They were tasked after Fukushima to make sure all of the nuke plants would be safe in the event of a natural disaster. Let’s hope his group got the changes in place . Given that it was a gooberment mission I would imagine that the report has just been completed last week .

BB
BB
September 7, 2017 1:45 pm

Mad Dog ,you might have to pay for my surgeries.You or Big Injun Chief.

TJF
TJF
September 7, 2017 1:55 pm

If the grid goes down, then those two nuke plants will have their diesel generators for power. In response to Fukushima, they should also have additional capabilities to ensure they have sufficient power to keep the cores cooled. They are not the thing to worry about. Search for FLEX + NEI if you are interested.

TampaRed
TampaRed
September 7, 2017 2:49 pm

i do not believe that the plants will fail but did any of you catch the location where spare parts will be flown in from?
tennessee,presumably oak ridge–
guess where irma is now headed?
even as a tropical storm she would unleash chaos up in the mountains–

Brian
Brian
September 7, 2017 5:12 pm

The South Texas Project kept operating at 100% through Harvey. Based off what people there said. I would imagine the Florida plants will shutdown cause there will be no need for the power in Miami.
The Rx’s themselves will be fine. It’s the auxiliary gear and grid infrastructure that’s going to be fucked.

Brian
Brian
  Brian
September 7, 2017 6:45 pm

Here is some non-speculative facts from Hurricane Andrew’s impact on Turkey Point.
https://www.osti.gov/scitech/servlets/purl/10158520/?fref=gc&dti=2219189983

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