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For Immediate Release
March 23, 2009
Clearwater Files New Indian Point Environmental and Public Health Contention
Safe Use of Hudson River for Drinking Water Questioned
Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, Inc.s Petition to File a New
Contention Based Upon New Information
Hudson River Sloop Clearwater Inc.s Motion for Leave to File a New
Contention Regarding Environmental Impacts and Public Health Impacts of
Indian Point on the Hudson Water as a Source of Drinking Water Supply
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY - Hudson River Sloop Clearwater filed a new contention
with the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board last week focusing on United
Water New Yorks application to build a desalination plant to extract
water from the Hudson River for use as municipal drinking water for
Rockland County. This contention states that as a result of United
Waters application, Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Entergy) and
the staff of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) must re-assess
the environmental impacts of the Indian Point Nuclear Power Plant
license renewal application (LRA).
Clearwaters contention faults Entergys environmental report included
in their Indian Point LRA for failing to make a complete and thorough
analysis of the impacts of license renewal upon the Hudson River as a
source of drinking water and the potential for future degradation of the
river as a drinking water source.
United Water New Yorks proposed desalination plant, which will be
located in the Town of Haverstraw, Rockland County and produce potable
water from the Hudson River, will initially withdraw between 170 and 300
gallons of water per minute from the river in a pilot plant operation,
but once the full-sized desalination facility is completed 10 million
gallons of water per day will be extracted from the Hudson River, thus
providing up to 7.5 million gallons of usable water for Rockland
County.
The desalination plant, which is to be located 3.5 miles downstream and
due southwest of Indian Point, will use reverse osmosis to filter water
from the Hudson River, a process that does not effectively remove
radioactive isotopes like tritium, cesium-137 and strontium-90all of
which are presently detected in the groundwater at Indian Point at
concentrations many times the Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) allowed
by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Even though several water authorities in the mid-Hudson region already
extract water from the Hudson River to meet municipal demand, the
impacts of license renewal on the water quality of these water supplies
are not assessed or even mentioned in Entergys environmental report.
Both Entergy and the NRC staff have repeatedly dismissed the impacts of
groundwater contamination because they claim no one takes drinking water
from groundwater under the plant or the Hudson River into which it is
flowing, said Manna Jo Greene, environmental director at Clearwater.
They did this without considering the potential for radioactive
isotopes to be transported by the river. Now that United Water has
proposed treating Hudson River water for Rockland, they must reconsider
their position on this.
Because the Hudson River is a tidal estuary, it is capable of
transporting potentially harmful substances upriver, as well as
downriver and cross-river. Clearwaters contention notes that the
distances that radioactive isotopes or other toxic substances released
from Indian Point may travel must be evaluated. Additionally, the
impacts of the radioactive waste products created by the desalination
process must be assessed. The fraction of the radioisotopes that can be
extracted are proposed to be treated at a wastewater treatment plant not
normally designed for that purpose, thus creating a more concentrated
hazardous product that will require further disposal steps.
Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, Inc.s Petition to File a New
Contention Based Upon New Information
Hudson River Sloop Clearwater Inc.s Motion for Leave to File a New
Contention Regarding Environmental Impacts and Public Health Impacts of
Indian Point on the Hudson Water as a Source of Drinking Water Supply
Contact:
Tom Staudter
Communications Director
Hudson River Sloop Clearwater
845-454-7673 x112
toms@clearwater.org |
Photos: Andrew Lenec/Clearwater |
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