Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station

Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station is a nuclear and gas-fired power plant located on a 3,300-acre (1,300 ha) site two miles east of Homestead, Florida, United States, next to Biscayne National Park located about 25 miles (40 km) south of Miami, Florida near the southernmost edge of Miami-Dade County. The facility is owned by Florida Power & Light.

Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station
Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station in Homestead, Florida
Map
Official nameTurkey Point
CountryUnited States
LocationHomestead, Florida, U.S.
Coordinates25°26′3″N 80°19′50″W / 25.43417°N 80.33056°W / 25.43417; -80.33056
StatusOperational
Construction beganUnit 3–4: April 27, 1967
Commission dateUnit 1: April 1967
Unit 2: April 1968
Unit 3: December 14, 1972
Unit 4: September 7, 1973
Unit 5: May 2007
Construction costUnits 3–4: $1.013 billion (2007 USD)[1]
Unit 5: $200 million (2007 USD)[2]
Owner(s)Florida Power & Light
Operator(s)Florida Power & Light
Nuclear power station
Reactor typePWR
Reactor supplierWestinghouse
Thermal power station
Primary fuelNatural gas
Secondary fuelDistillate fuel oil
Tertiary fuelResidual fuel oil
Turbine technologySteam turbine (Units 1–2, Unit 5), gas turbine (Unit 5)
Cooling sourceCanal system (Units 1–2)
Canal system (Units 3–4)
Mechanical Draft 22-cell cooling tower (Unit 5)
Combined cycle?No (Units 1–2)
Yes (Unit 5)
Thermal capacity2 × 2644 MWth (nuclear)
Power generation
Units operational2 × 802 MW (nuclear)
1 × 1150 MW (CCGT)
Make and model2 × WH 3-loop (DRYAMB)
4 × 170–180 MW GE 7FA gas turbines
4 × Nooter gas-fired heat recovery steam generators
1 × 470 MW steam turbine
Units planned2 × 1117 MW AP1000
Units decommissioned2 × 404 MW Foster-Wheeler fuel oil/natural gas/used oil/propane steam turbines
Nameplate capacity2754 MW (1604 MW nuclear, 1150 MW CCGT)
Capacity factor74.71% (2017, 90.51% nuclear, 52.65% CCGT)
Annual net output13,904 GWh (2021 - Nuclear)
5,431 GWh (2021 - CCGT)
External links
WebsiteTurkey Point Nuclear Plant
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Including the two nuclear reactors, Turkey Point operates three power-generating units. It comprises two retired 404 megawatt fuel oil/natural gas/used oil/propane-fired generation units (Units 1 and 2), two 802 MWe Westinghouse pressurized water reactors (Units 3 and 4), and a 1,150 MW combined-cycle gas-fired Unit 5.[3] It serves the entire southern portion of Florida. With a combined operational capacity of 2754 MW, the site is the third largest generating station in Florida and the eleventh largest power plant in the United States.[4]

The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission has authorized its staff to issue combined licences for Florida Power and Light to build and operate two Westinghouse AP1000 reactors at its Turkey Point site.[5]

Construction edit

The two pressurized water reactors were completed in 1972 and 1973.[6]

Expansion edit

In 2002, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) extended the operating licenses for both nuclear reactors from forty years to sixty years. In 2006, Florida Power & Light (FPL) informed the NRC that they planned to apply for new units to be built at Turkey Point. FPL filed an initial proposal for increased capacity with the Florida Public Service Commission in October 2007.[7] The proposal was approved by the PSC in March 2008.[8]

FPL also planned to spend about $1.5 billion to increase the capacity of its existing four reactors at Turkey Point and the St. Lucie Nuclear Power Plant by a total of about 400 MW by 2012.[9]

On June 30, 2009, FPL submitted a Combined Construction and Operating License (COL) application for two 1,117-MWe Westinghouse AP1000 reactors (Units 6 and 7).[10] FPL had considered building two 1,550-MWe GE ESBWR reactors.[3] Construction was expected to begin in 2012, with the new units going online in 2017 and 2019. FPL estimated the total overnight costs of the power plants, including first fuel load, at $6.8–$9.9 billion, and the total project cost at $12.1–$17.8 billion.[11]The COLs for units 6 and 7 were authorized by the NRC in April 2018.[12]

Criticism of expansion edit

The expansion received criticism from some South Florida mayors over concerns about water usage, insufficient evacuation zones and increased risks from rising sea levels. However, the mayor of Homestead, the closest community to the FPL facilities, support it.[13]

Electricity Production edit

Generation (MWh) of Turkey Point Nuclear Generation Station (Nuclear Only)[14]
YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual (Total)
20011,028,970906,4121,047,6761,047,6761,008,4981,039,397988,861911,0701,033,977522,6481,056,8861,040,05411,632,125
20021,074,567957,010944,157860,1651,005,008952,6671,113,0381,029,094995,8351,033,7841,032,9521,075,20712,073,484
20031,004,383874,861555,963981,4701,002,4201,008,6441,034,6231,011,900997,385569,042939,7341,027,62111,008,046
20041,082,3371,004,4241,073,6281,029,183897,705927,9201,028,5621,022,239920,897527,908511,232780,50210,806,537
2005913,433960,892975,070613,091528,896704,986769,9971,023,7001,014,634712,457796,1781,025,24510,038,579
20061,072,761937,361615,305832,169994,4931,014,3671,048,6831,030,5881,013,0791,005,524519,531879,53710,963,398
20071,075,874917,7911,060,4061,011,8651,049,013731,540934,8321,036,810526,504761,2851,045,0761,075,90811,226,904
20081,082,163878,513979,115517,859830,864986,1211,043,844899,3681,020,8801,001,8051,049,5051,082,82811,372,865
20091,083,583957,038783,960507,254808,6601,010,6991,035,9551,035,5961,009,139936,630516,252990,61610,675,382
20101,018,294967,3761,083,3971,030,5691,051,048998,2131,040,8691,026,391799,817532,177807,035950,21511,305,401
20111,083,606970,186723,049509,797753,4231,018,8281,042,8211,042,7771,009,929787,503930,1891,035,50410,907,612
20121,077,256816,872532,927515,458514,979507,690513,086503,943577,674804,287633,161613,1437,610,476
2013596,329256,221298,366621,162782,2241,172,2661,211,5021,203,3781,163,6341,188,4981,187,2511,225,11310,905,944
20141,231,3051,092,018903,771619,7541,098,7611,060,7621,073,9231,017,330944,911714,6501,156,7711,136,74012,050,696
20151,227,3411,114,1801,168,1511,138,166999,5601,156,6501,194,9151,193,6461,171,287956,099599,0681,127,58913,046,652
20161,254,7631,176,4511,177,979601,4611,208,6041,181,4101,164,2171,181,4561,177,9641,160,4021,203,3171,245,43613,733,460
20171,253,2031,125,418974,846642,4371,228,2671,185,5001,214,9361,216,600971,665669,622983,0531,252,75212,718,299
20181,260,4471,126,9751,251,3701,199,3031,239,5811,178,6491,214,5701,191,9021,167,430616,4131,020,7141,282,41413,749,768
20191,276,9191,143,527829,018979,4191,222,1991,212,6711,249,8331,252,0191,202,3491,262,9841,232,9591,278,54114,142,438
20201,279,9031,191,3281,201,311685,0361,264,4611,213,943946,8101,096,4121,207,649669,685756,1851,106,25912,618,982
20211,287,0501,112,3211,171,0141,248,4151,283,5401,238,9441,270,4351,144,5051,229,922795,442819,2221,303,79413,904,604
20221,305,3121,178,579862,737990,4891,290,7361,242,7581,280,6671,279,3371,240,3961,295,3611,254,9471,257,22514,478,544
20231,298,1241,186,109
2024
Generation (MWh) of Turkey Point Nuclear Generation Station (Natural Gas Only)[14]
YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecAnnual (Total)
200126,11856,91873,146102,63897,483129,586117,59433,265147,473192,602125,118164,8661,266,807
2002136,002118,18123,95196,774110,521151,506171,531118,96373,306181,20096,47646,3051,324,716
200330,8059,78415,2897,85399,98889,52741,09174,370113,95882,13097,66227,395689,852
200422,90226,62847,44741,13560,4738,3713,11965,784118,806110,96540,77633,792580,198
200551,60714,68915,81731,77422,69967,48213,25744,65825,716161,499138,92511,376599,499
200665,35872,07488,833117,762131,770204,506154,69585,965254,666166,14763,77423,0431,428,593
200739,93712,31118,317279,640614,605647,376632,010646,381652,408646,121580,769623,0895,392,964
2008561,289624,752480,718676,456638,484662,602629,599683,347640,199260,969117,024541,4086,516,847
2009511,900484,854564,616648,279612,300629,077652,588654,454678,284641,024594,038464,6297,136,043
2010520,172478,803558,724377,453501,805498,917553,334612,923612,707559,796549,643350,1586,174,435
2011484,428388,725260,158708,907637,179570,788590,597617,766556,188415,815244,955505,0325,980,538
2012527,004503,630648,788687,775657,334605,580661,659705,176633,304605,326308,223455,5206,999,319
2013543,186585,555620,779640,122622,102528,546604,208564,951603,190599,230536,003486,7816,934,653
2014484,170320,979503,090585,411562,074526,199642,077679,599638,656642,121213,299489,7456,287,420
2015524,445468,566536,429575,763686,497664,558649,332659,663641,620678,051681,424499,1847,265,532
2016496,185457,439402,332600,409566,580596,609650,109656,336607,674603,407505,944498,5386,641,562
2017524,422507,375614,925590,021599,683567,989597,403581,642396,167148,5647,314162,8395,298,344
2018296,270307,867490,241493,592562,822563,251634,990669,099647,783605,717523,645253,8576,049,134
2019397,765388,185579,371533,839633,981639,676628,162605,435622,0660091,3095,119,789
2020310,802451,840556,513536,235487,004587,490592,280608,538582,836644,241606,160417,8816,381,820
2021248,371361,536212,147607,730150,712571,417647,779663,091625,985651,304379,333312,0505,431,455
2022370,289357,000676,376600,684591,532539,666633,857628,659585,435508,524343,314472,9026,308,238
2023374,999318,013
2024

Surrounding population edit

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission defines two emergency planning zones around nuclear power plants: a plume exposure pathway zone with a radius of 10 miles (16 km), concerned primarily with exposure to, and inhalation of, airborne radioactive contamination, and an ingestion pathway zone of about 50 miles (80 km), concerned primarily with ingestion of food and liquid contaminated by radioactivity.[15]

The 2010 U.S. population within 10 miles (16 km) of Turkey Point was 161,556, an increase of 62.8 percent in a decade, according to an analysis of U.S. Census data for msnbc.com. The 2010 U.S. population within 50 miles (80 km) was 3,476,981, an increase of 15.1 percent since 2000. Cities within 50 miles include Miami (25 miles to city center).[16]

Incident history edit

May 8, 1974 edit

A test was performed on all three of the Emergency Feedwater (EFW) pumps serving Unit 3 while the reactor was operating at power. Two of the pumps failed to start as a result of overtightened packing. The third pump failed to start because of a malfunction in the turbine regulating valve pneumatic controller. In an ongoing study of precursors that could lead to a nuclear accident if additional failures were to have occurred, the NRC concluded in October 2005 that this event at Turkey Point Unit 3 was the fifth-highest ranked occurrence.

August 24, 1992 edit

Turkey Point was directly hit by Hurricane Andrew on August 24, 1992, destroying two raw water tanks and portions of the fire protection systems, draining another raw water tank, partially disabling the fire protection systems, causing severe damage to various non-nuclear structures, and cracking the smokestack for fossil-fueled Unit 1. The smokestack later had to be demolished and rebuilt. It also suffered a total loss of offsite power, requiring the use of the onsite emergency diesel generators for several days. No significant damage was done to the plant's nuclear containment buildings.[17][18] The plant was built to withstand winds of up to 235 mph (380 km/h), greatly exceeding the maximum winds recorded by most category 5 hurricanes.

March 18, 2017 edit

On March 18, 2017, an electrical fault occurred in a Unit 3 switchgear room, resulting in the loss of a safety related electrical bus and a reactor trip. Other safety systems functioned as required, ensuring adequate reactor cooling. There was no threat to local residents or the environment, and the alert, the second-lowest Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) emergency declaration, was terminated later that same day.[19] The electrical fault caused an arc flash, resulting in a minor burn of a plant worker who was in the room and was treated at a local hospital.[20] On March 22, 2017, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced that it had initiated a special inspection into the failure of the electrical bus that resulted in the plant declaring an alert.[21]

2008 Florida electricity blackout edit

Turkey Point Generating Station from the Biscayne National Park visitor center

On February 26, 2008, both reactors were shut down due to the loss of off-site power during a widespread power outage in South Florida, affecting 700,000 customers.[22]

The fire occurred at 1:08 PM and caused an automatic shutdown of the power plant. This led to a domino effect that caused outages as far north as Daytona Beach and Tampa. Power was restored by 4:30 PM. The reason this malfunction caused such widespread outages was still under investigation a few days later.[23]Walt Disney World Resort, Orlando International Airport, and Miami International Airport were among the places affected by the outage.[24] At least 2.5 million people were without power.[23]

The blackout was initially caused by an overheated voltage switch that soon caught fire at in a power substation in Miami, 23 miles away from the plant.[23] Although the substation had protective relays to isolate the electrical fault from the broader transmission system, a local engineer was troubleshooting a failure within the substation at the time of the blackout, and had temporarily disabled the protection systems contrary to Florida Power & Light policy.[25][26] Additional layers of protection eventually removed the substation from service, but required 1.7 s to do so. The long fault duration caused substantial power swings, and many generators tripped off-line to protect themselves from damage; Turkey Point was one such.[26]

David Hoffman, a nuclear supervisor at Turkey Point, resigned over the incident and was subsequently sued by Florida Power and Light for return of a bonus. Hoffman countersued, claiming he was pressured to restart the reactors while they were in a condition which in his judgment made it unsafe to do so. Upper management wanted the reactors restarted during xenon dead time, which would have led to the operators at the controls having to continuously step control rods to safely manage reactor output.Florida Power and Light responded to the allegation, claiming Hoffman's suit was "self-motivated".[27][28]

Ecology edit

The site is home to a large wildlife preserve.

Turkey Point has been a contributing force to the reclassification of the American crocodile from endangered to the less serious category of vulnerable.[29]

Cooling canals edit

Instead of a cooling tower, the plant has a large five-by-two mile (10-square-mile (26 km2)) network of canals covering nearly 6,000 acres (2,400 ha).[30] Several problems have arisen from this, including pollution of nearby national parks or water supply, particularly the Biscayne Aquifer,[31] issues with overheating, and radioactive material.[32] Overheating in the canals twice caused the plant to shut down reactors in 2014.[31] In September 2016, a controversial cleanup process began that included injecting hypersaline water deep into the boulder zone beneath the aquifer and/or making some of the unlined canals more shallow. 600,000 pounds of salt gets into the canal system daily, and the saltwater contamination reaches 4 miles (6.4 km) west of the system as well as possibly into Biscayne Bay.[33]

Seismic risk edit

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's estimate of the risk each year of an earthquake intense enough to cause core damage to the reactor at Turkey Point was 1 in 100,000, according to an NRC study published in August 2010.[34][35] The plant is located in an area with the lowest earthquake hazard potential described by the USGS.[36]

Reactor data edit

The Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station consists of two operational reactors, and two additional units are planned.

Reactor unit[37]Reactor typeCapacity(MW)Construction startedElectricity grid connectionCommercial operationShutdown
NetGross
Turkey Point-3Westinghouse 3-loop69372927.04.196702.11.197214.12.1972
Turkey Point-421.06.197307.09.1973
Turkey Point-6 (planned)[38]AP10001117-Licensed[12]
Turkey Point-7 (planned)[38]

In 2019 the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) approved a second 20-year licence extension for units 3 and 4, the first time NRC had extended licences to an 80-year total lifetime.[39]

Name edit

Speculation about the name Turkey Point, first known written reference in 1865, suggests that it is because of the presence of the anhinga.[40]

See also edit

References edit

External links edit