Nuclear plant raises concerns, naturally
Nov 7 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Asjylyn Loder St. Petersburg
Times, Fla.
Some of Florida's dwindling untouched resources, home to endangered species
and the gulf's delicate fisheries, may be harmed by Progress Energy's
planned nuclear power plant, a state report warns.
The Levy County plant will be built next to a state preserve that provides a
home to endangered animals like the red-cockaded woodpecker, the report
said. It will draw as much as 120-million gallons of water a day from the
Cross Florida Barge Canal, evaporate a third of it for cooling, and pump the
warm, salty remainder into waters near the Big Bend Aquatic Seagrasses
Preserve. It will be built on a 3,100-acre property that is 39 percent
wetlands.
The state report, responding to Levy County's plans to change its
growth-management plan, provides an early outline of the plant's potential
environmental impacts.
Levy County has yet to adopt the changes, and will work with the state and
the utility to address the state's concerns, said Levy County Commission
Chairman Sam Yearty.
"I feel like it's a good plant," Yearty continued. "I think it'll be good
for the county. It's just a process we have to go through."
Progress Energy spokesman Buddy Eller said that it's still early in a long
and complex approval process. A back-and-forth with regulators is "to be
expected," Eller said. He said he's confident that the utility will win
approval.
Environmentalists worry that the new plant will irreparably harm one of the
last nearly pristine areas of Florida.
"There are significant environmental issues with this site that have been
glossed over at this point, and there needs to be a lot more conversation
about it," said Joe Murphy of the Gulf Restoration Network.
Murphy worried that Progress will hack through forest preserves to make way
for transmission lines, and permanently damage delicate fisheries. "Is the
Nature Coast going to become Florida's 'Energy Sacrifice Coast?' " he asked.
The early volley of environmental concerns came from the Florida Department
of Community Affairs in a Sept. 28 response to Levy County's drafted changes
to its growth plan. The department included comments from the Department of
Environmental Protection, the Suwannee and Southwest Florida Water
Management districts and the Withlacoochee Regional Planning Council.
The environmental protection department wanted assurances that the plant's
water-cooling system will not damage the ecosystem near the Withlacoochee
River or harm sea grass. The department was also concerned about the plant's
potential impact on the Goethe State Forest. The 42,000-acre preserve
borders on its northern edge. It was bought by the Florida Forever program
for a total of $64-million, the program's second-largest acquisition.
The plant site, formerly timberland, has been heavily forested and used by
hunters. It doesn't provide a pristine habitat to begin with, Eller said.
Progress officials said its design will mitigate any damage to wildlife: The
plant will be built on 300 acres in the middle of the 3,100-acre tract, with
buffers extending nearly a mile in every direction. "Low profile" cooling
towers won't interfere with migratory birds. And cooling water will be
pumped 5 miles into the gulf.
Progress plans to build up to two nuclear reactors, and estimated in late
2006 that one reactor could cost up to $3.5-billion.
Many in Levy County favor the plant because it will provide jobs in an
economically depressed corner of the state and boost the county's tax rolls.
By Progress Energy's estimates, the Levy plant will create 3,000
construction jobs and 500 permanent jobs, provide a direct and indirect
economic impact of $139.9-million per year, and boost real estate values. It
will pay tens of millions of dollars in taxes.
The mayor of nearby Inglis, Carolyn Risher, is already looking forward to
paving some of the town's roads with the tax windfall. In Yankeetown,
speculation is that Progress will help them build a much-needed sewage
treatment plant.
Danny Roderick, Progress Energy's vice president of nuclear projects and
construction, said the utility has no plans to build a sewage treatment
plant or pay for any specific local projects. County officials will divvy up
the tax revenue as they see fit.
Murphy, who lives in Hernando County about an hour south of the plant, said
too many people see the plant as a boon. In a remote and thinly populated
rural county desperate for jobs and tax money, Progress Energy's plans might
not get the scrutiny it deserves, he said.
Levy County Commissioner Nancy Bell, a self-described "?'60s flower child,"
said she still has some reservations about nuclear power, particularly the
lack of any clear plan to deal with the industry's radioactive waste.
But the risks of global warming outweigh her reservations about nuclear.
"I think there's a lot of us that feel that way. It's been a long time since
the old days of picking up signs and marching, and there's a lot that's
changed with nuclear power." |