Stop the Calvert Cliffs Nuclear Power Plant Expansion

Constellation Energy has proposed expanding the Calvert Cliffs nuclear power plant in Maryland. Building a third reactor at Calvert Cliffs would be expensive, threaten public health, and damage the environment.

A third reactor at the Calvert Cliffs nuclear power plant increases the risk of an accident or terrorist attack. An accident or attack at the plant could harm over a million residents in Washington DC, Maryland and Virginia.

  • The new reactor at Calvert Cliffs could generate an estimated 1,250 metric tons of radioactive waste during its 40 years of operation. Much of this waste will be stored, at least temporarily, at the site of the reactor, where it would pose an attractive target for a potential terrorist attack.
  • The two existing reactors at Calvert Cliffs have been fined for safety lapses. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) fined the plant $50,000 in 1996 for problems with emergency equipment that had been identified in 1992 but still had not been repaired four years later.
  • If the federal nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain is opened, waste from Calvert Cliffs will be transported by rail or truck to Nevada, passing within five miles of 3.1 million people in Maryland.
  • Radioactive Waste Management Associates, a consulting firm working for the state of Nevada, has estimated that 100 to 450 accidents will occur as nuclear waste is transported via train and truck to Yucca Mountain. A single serious accident could cause thousands of cancers and cost billions of dollars.
  • Nationally, 107,500 metric tons of spent nuclear fuel and 22,280 canisters of high-level radioactive waste will be moved to Yucca Mountain over the course of 38 years. The waste would be shipped in casks that would each contain as much as 240 times the amount of radioactive material released by the Hiroshima bomb.

No long-term solution exists to store the highly toxic radioactive waste that the plant generates.

  • The Unites Sates has never had a plan for safe disposal of spent fuel.
  • Radioactive waste generated at nuclear power plants must be guarded and kept from the environment for tens of thousands of years; what amounts to financial eternity. Already, the federal government has spent $58 billion trying to devise a storage solution for nuclear waste from across the country.
  • The Yucca Mountain site is too small and will run out of room before it can take the spent fuel from the power plants already operating around the country. Adding a third unit at Calvert Cliffs means that more waste will be stored, temporarily or permanently, here in Maryland.

Taxpayer subsidies should not support dangerous forms of energy like nuclear power.

  • Calvert County has already granted $300 million in tax breaks to Constellation Energy. This is equal to $4,500 per taxpayer in Calvert County. The new plant will add 450 full-time jobs in the county, but at a cost to taxpayers of approximately $750,000 per job.
  • Constellation may seek additional financing from the state.
  • Constellation also potentially could seek to have some of the cost of the new plant paid for by electricity ratepayers, by adding the cost of the plant to the rate base that consumers pay.

Despite the claims of the nuclear industry, nuclear power is not an environmentally benign source of electricity.

  • Mining and processing uranium destroys land and creates toxic and radioactive waste.
  • While electricity generated from nuclear power does not directly emit global warming pollution, the nuclear fuel cycle does. As the world demand for nuclear energy and uranium rises, the quality of uranium that will be available will decline, and require more energy intensive (and more costly) processing. Eventually, global warming pollution from nuclear energy may be higher than that from fracked gas plants.
  • Producing more life-threatening waste in exchange for lower warming emissions is a poor trade-off. Fortunately, it is one we do not have to make.
  • Energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies, such as wind, solar, and ocean power, can compete economically with nuclear power without the negative impacts on the environment and public health and safety.

References:
 Calvert Cliffs 3 Nuclear Power Plant.docx

 Calvert3_062008.pdf

 

How You Can Help

Writing letters to the editor (LTEs) to your local newspaper is a great way to help inform your neighbors and let your elected officials know what their constituents think.

Click here to view an example LTE regarding Constellation Energy's proposal to expand nuclear power in Calvert County.

If we are to survive spiritually, culturally, and economically, we need to take action now by protecting the animals and natural communities that represent the diversity of life.

What are the biggest threats to biodiversity? Just remember "HIPPO":

  • Habitat loss
  • Introduced species (exotic and invasive)
  • Pollution
  • Population growth
  • Over consumption

Let's use HIPPO as a tool on all five fronts: Tackling the 'HIPPO' Threat to Biodiversity

The Southern Maryland  Sierra Club has decided to focus on all of these threats to biodiversity. Based on the premise that even relatively small actions can make a lot of difference in saving habitats, we are planning several actions that will raise awareness of the issue of threats to biodiversity, protect and restore natural communities, and remove invasive non-native species that choke out wildlife habitats and damage us economically.


Field Trip Coordinator

Increase public awareness by arranging adult trips and trip leaders with our partners to National Wildlife Federation wildlife gardens, butterfly gardens, tree plantings, rain gardens, and restored habitats and wetlands. Use this script to help you lead an informative hike in the Calvert Cliffs State Park. The script follows along a 5-mile trail where you will talk about the history of the Calvert Cliffs, the Cove Point Natural Gas Facility, and how people can get involved in stopping Dominion from becoming a LNG export facility.  CalvertCliffsHikeScript.pdf

 
Don't get lost! Use this map as you lead a hike through the Calvert Cliffs State Park. Check out the script as well to help you be prepared to lead a fun and informative trip.

Contact Marc Imlay, Habitat Stewardship Chair, Sierra Club MD

301-283-0808 marc.imlay [@]Maryland.Sierraclub.org


  • E-mail Governor O’Malley (governor@gov.state.md.us) and ask him to oppose state subsidies to Constellation and its partners to help fund the new nuclear reactor.
  • To join the campaign or for more information, contact:
  • ...Maryland PIRG (Public Interest Research Group) at 410-467-9389 or Johanna@ marylandpirg.org.
  • ...Sierra Club's Southern Maryland Group; Frank Fox at 301 884-8027 or ff725@yahoo.com.