Early Bird
Member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2005
- RO Number
- 19193
- Messages
- 10
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/04/nyregion/04indian.html
The ruling concerned the cooling system at Indian Point Units 2 and 3, which were commissioned in the early 1970s. Both take in enormous volumes of river water - a combined 2.5 billion gallons a day, or more than twice the average daily water consumption of all of New York City - and use it to create steam for turbines and to cool the reactors. The water is then pumped back into the Hudson, 20 or 30 degrees hotter.
Sucking so much water causes plankton, eggs and larvae to be drawn into the plant's machinery, or entrained, and the water pressure also causes fish to be trapped, or impinged, against intake screens, the state said.
http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100404/NEWS/4040341
"That power is replaceable," said Alex Matthiessen, president of environmental group Riverkeeper. "The evidence for why the plant doesn't meet state water-quality standards is overwhelming," he said, adding Indian Point accounts for the deaths of about a billion fish a year.
"Given that Entergy is seeking an additional 20-year license...and the previous history of unauthorized 'take' of...sturgeon, it is reasonable to conclude the Indian Point facilities continue to cause mortality to the sturgeon in the Hudson River," staff wrote. "The taking...is unlawful. The Department has determined that (the reactors) are not in compliance."
http://www.lohud.com/article/201004...dian-Point-operations-harming-endangered-fish
Sucking so much water causes plankton, eggs and larvae to be drawn into the plant's machinery, or entrained, and the water pressure also causes fish to be trapped, or impinged, against intake screens, the state said.
http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100404/NEWS/4040341
"That power is replaceable," said Alex Matthiessen, president of environmental group Riverkeeper. "The evidence for why the plant doesn't meet state water-quality standards is overwhelming," he said, adding Indian Point accounts for the deaths of about a billion fish a year.
"Given that Entergy is seeking an additional 20-year license...and the previous history of unauthorized 'take' of...sturgeon, it is reasonable to conclude the Indian Point facilities continue to cause mortality to the sturgeon in the Hudson River," staff wrote. "The taking...is unlawful. The Department has determined that (the reactors) are not in compliance."
http://www.lohud.com/article/201004...dian-Point-operations-harming-endangered-fish