Bird Poop Likely Caused N.Y. Nuclear Reactor Outage

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Bird droppings were the likely cause of a December shutdown at a nuclear power plant outside New York City, according to the operator.
Image: A security boat sits in front of Indian
Indian Point Nuclear Power Plant on the Hudson Rivern on March 22, 2011 in Buchanan, NY. DON EMMERT / AFP - Getty Images File

ALBANY, New York — Bird droppings were the likely cause of a December shutdown at a nuclear power plant outside New York City, according to the operator.

An Indian Point reactor safely shut down for three days starting Dec. 14 following an electrical disturbance on outdoor high voltage transmission lines, Entergy Corp. said. An outside expert is analyzing whether what's technically called bird "streaming" was the culprit.

In a report to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission last month, the New Orleans-based company said the automatic reactor shutdown was apparently from bird feces that caused an electric arc between wires on a feeder line at a transmission tower.

Image: The nuclear power plant at Indian Point is seen in Buchanan, N.Y.
The nuclear power plant at Indian Point is seen in Buchanan, N.Y., on May 10, 2011.Seth Wenig / AP, file

"If it has nowhere to send its electricity, the generator senses that and automatically shuts down," Entergy spokesman Jerry Nappi said.

Plant managers told the NRC they were revising preventive maintenance for additional inspection and cleaning and installing bird guards on transmission towers.

Nappi said he couldn't recall a similar incident in the past several years from birds at Indian Point, which is located along the Hudson River north of New York City. He didn't immediately know whether a carcass was found nearby or what type of bird was suspected.

Nuclear Regulatory Commission spokesman Eliot Brenner said it's not uncommon for wildlife to trigger electrical outages on transmission lines regardless of the generation source of the electricity. "Squirrels are the biggest offenders," he said.

He didn't know if the NRC was specifically tracking animal-related reactor outages. "They're kind of few and far between, but they're not uncommon," he said.

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