*** Welcome to piglix ***

Rancho Seco

Rancho Seco Nuclear Generating Station
Rancho Seco Nuclear Generating Station.jpg
Rancho Seco Nuclear Generating Station is located in California
Rancho Seco Nuclear Generating Station
Location of Rancho Seco Nuclear Generating Station
Country United States
Location Herald, California
Coordinates 38°20′43″N 121°7′18″W / 38.34528°N 121.12167°W / 38.34528; -121.12167Coordinates: 38°20′43″N 121°7′18″W / 38.34528°N 121.12167°W / 38.34528; -121.12167
Status Decommissioned
Commission date April 17, 1975
Decommission date 2009
Construction cost

$375 million in 1974 dollars

($1.46 billion in 2016 dollars)
Operator(s) SMUD 1974-present
Nuclear power station
Reactor type Pressurized water reactor
Reactor supplier Babcock & Wilcox
Power generation
Thermal capacity 1 x 2772 MWth
Nameplate capacity 913 MW
Capacity factor <40%

$375 million in 1974 dollars

The Rancho Seco Nuclear Generating Station is a decommissioned nuclear power plant built by the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) in Herald, California.

In 1966, SMUD purchased 2,100 acres (850 ha) in southeast Sacramento County for a nuclear power plant, which was built in Herald, 25 miles (40 km) south-east of downtown Sacramento.

In the early 1970s, a small pond was expanded to a 160-acre (65 ha) lake to serve as an emergency backup water supply for the station. The lake has always received its water from the Folsom South Canal and has no relationship with the power plant's daily water supply. Surrounding the lake is 400 acres (160 ha) of recreational area originally operated by the County of Sacramento for day-use activities.

The 2,772 MWt Babcock & Wilcox pressurized water reactor (913 MWe) achieved initial criticality on 16 September 1974 and entered commercial operation on 17 April 1975.

On 20 March 1978 a failure of power supply for the plant's non-nuclear instrumentation system led to steam generator dryout. (ref NRC LER 312/78-001). In an ongoing study of "precursors" that could lead to a nuclear disaster if additional failures were to have occurred, in 2005 the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission concluded that this event at Rancho Seco was the third most serious safety-related occurrence in the United States (Behind the Three Mile Island accident and the cable tray fire at Browns Ferry).

The plant operated from April 1975 to June 1989 but had a lifetime capacity average of only 39%; it was closed by public vote on 7 June 1989 after multiple referenda that resulted from a long record of multiple annual shut-downs, cost over-runs, mismanagement, multiple accidents that included radioactive steam releases, restarts after unresolved automatic shut-downs, and regular rate increases that included a 92% increase over one 3-year span.


...
Wikipedia

...