Exelon: Tritium leak found early

Remediation already under way at Dresden

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Exelon Nuclear is digging deep today for the source of a tritiated water leak at Dresden Generating Station at Morris.

The incident – discovered via a monitoring well on Tuesday, June 2, and officially confirmed Thursday, June 4 – is confined within the station site. This is the second incident of its kind for Dresden, which successfully capped off and replaced a leaking pipe in December 2006.

Other monitoring wells at the plant indicate no tritiated water beyond the plant site, Dresden spokesman Bob Osgood noted today.

“We took immediate action to verify what we found as part of our regular environmental monitoring program,” he said. “Nothing has left the property, testing at the mouth of the river and perimeter of the plant property shows.”

The monitoring well sample tested at tritum levels of 3.2 million picocuries per liter of water, and 17,500 picocuries per liter in adjacent monitoring wells, indicating virtually no spread of tritiated water underground, he said.

“We said, ‘Oh, oh, something’s wrong here,” he said of the monitoring well sample. “So, we did more sampling. The 3.2 million reading we got from a monitoring point that’s tested twice a year. Based on that, we knew this is where we should dig.”

Tritium is a naturally occurring isotope of hydrogen that emits a very low level of radiation, and is found in more-concentrated levels in water used in nuclear generating stations.

Both the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Exelon have gone on record stating public health and safety have not been jeopardized by the release, nor are the safety and welfare of Dresden employees at risk.

The leak is in an area outside the reactor building and near the administration building, where several pipes are located six to seven feet  underground. The pipes move tritiated water from the reactor to large condensate storage tanks.

The well was routinely tested about a month ago, and it was fine, Osgood said. These wells are sampled on a monthly basis.

Osgood said not much tritiated water is in the excavation around the pipes. What’s there is being removed.

“We’re sucking out the water in the excavation and holding that in storage tanks,” he said. “We will process this water like we do all other water. We haven’t yet been able to quantify the amount of water involved, but we know its not too much.”

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