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Opinion: Now More Than Ever, Indian Point Must Close

4 Comments

  • Dave Kaspersin
    Posted May 8, 2020 at 11:33 am

    While I agree that Indian Point needs to close, we need to remember that the Grid is very weak. “The truth is the PSC knows without the Nuclear plants, the Grid will fail. “In North Greenbush, Rensselaer County: The New York Independent System Operator, which oversees the state’s electrical grid, says there will be plenty of power for the next 10 years, the Albany Times Union reports. NYISO tempers its optimism by noting that if environmental policies change, or if one of the two Indian Point nuclear reactors downstate is shut down, the outlook could change.” Many coal fired plants have been shut down. The RG$E Russell and Bee Bee Stations, are being torn to the ground right now. Both could have been converted to gas, which would have helped. With out Ginna, Monroe County will go dark !”

  • Dave Kaspersin
    Posted May 8, 2020 at 11:36 am

    The real reason Lake Ontario is too high ! The regulations imposed by the IJC starting in the late 1950s and modified by the current plan are man interfering with nature. The lake is maintained at an high level to benefit electric production and shipping and to minimize flooding and ice damage on the St Lawrence River. Yes there has been an unusually high level of snow and rain, but regulation (man attempting to control nature) are at the root of the problem. Current high rainfall is just a scapegoat that politicians and the IJC have blamed. Anyone who doesn’t believe this needs to do the research on lake level, high and low, before regulation and after. Old Fort Niagara has stood at the mouth of the Niagara river at Lake Ontario for several hundred years, going thru several high water events. This year has been the worst, because after 60 years of regulation the lake average regulated depth as crept slowly higher. Add unusual rainfall and you get flooding and an easy scapegoat.

  • Brian Campbell
    Posted June 1, 2020 at 3:47 pm

    There has always been a very cozy relationship between the NRDC, Riverkeeper, and the PSC. Remember Dale Bryk and her sidekick Miles Farmer came from the NRDC and got senior positions in the Cuomo administration ( Both recently left,no public explanation given). Remember also the September 25, 2019 presentation given by Tom Congdon, PSC’s Chief-of-Staff at an Indian Point Closure Task force meeting. There Condgon put up the chart that falsely said that RE +EE could replace Indian Point, by the time they were shut down. Why did the PSC feel compelled to put up this chart when IP2 was scheduled to be closed a few months later? I believe they did this to give cover to Riverkeeper who had been pushing for the CHPE (Canadian hydro-power) to replace IP. Well, the CHPE project never got started and the IP2 closure date was looming. Along comes the PSC with an alternative scheme to replace IP and soon thereafter Riverkeeper publicly dumps the CHPE project because it claimed that harmful dams would have to be built in Canada to make the CHPE project happen ( Don’t know if this is true). Riverkeeper extols the virtues of the PSC (Congdon) presentation in public statements, explaining why they no longer supported CHPE?

  • Herschel Specter
    Posted June 1, 2020 at 7:05 pm

    Riverkeeper has consistently misrepresented the facts. Last November Paul Gallay promised that Indian Point 2 would be replaced by renewable energy and energy efficiency by its closure date. This has not happened. Indian Point 2 has been replaced by fracked gas, the very thing Riverkeeper claims to be opposed to. Now Richard Webster comes along and misquotes the PSE Brief which clearly stated “…it is possible that a portion of the plant’s generation might be temporarily replaced with gas generation rather than renewables”. A recent critique investigated just how long “temporarily” might be and concluded that, even if every on-shore and off-shore wind turbine and every solar panel in the state were used to replace IP as quickly as possible, it would take over 8 years to do this. In the meanwhile using gas to make up for the electricity shortfall would release about 35 million metric tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
    Riverkeeper never explains why replacing one non-carbon source of electricity with another non-carbon source is good environmental practice, especially since today renewable energy and energy efficiency are displacing gas. Instead they continue to foster baseless claims like having to evacuate 50 miles in an accident. Experts state that a two mile evacuation plus downwind sheltering would result in zero or near zero offsite radiological consequences if an accident occurred. Riverkeeper needs to relocate from Ossining close to Indian Point if they fear earthquakes. Indian Point is designed to handle very strong earthquakes and safely shut down. Any earthquake as large as Indian Point’s design basis earthquake might just collapse their Ossining office, along with all the other damage and fatalities it would cause. Indian Point’s containment building is very robust, it would be the last building standing.
    Riverkeeper owes the public an explanation. What did they know and when did they know it? Riverkeeper, Entergy, and NY State were “three men in a room”, when in 2017 the Closure Agreement was drawn up which precisely identified, to the day, when Indian Point 2 was to close. Was it an amazing co-incidence that the construction of the gas plant replacement for Indian Point 2, the Cricket Valley plant, came on line immediately after Indian Point 2 closed? Did Riverkeeper always know that gas would replace Indian Point?

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