Braidwood Generating Station is located in Will County in northeastern Illinois, U.S. The nuclear power plant serves Chicago and northern Illinois with electricity. The plant was originally built by Commonwealth Edison company, and subsequently transferred to Com Ed's parent company, Exelon Corporation. Following Exelon's spin-off of their Generation company, the station was transferred to Constellation Energy.
This station has two Westinghousepressurized water reactors. Unit #1 came online in July 1987. Unit #2 came online in May 1988. The units were licensed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to operate until 2026 and 2027,[5] then granted extended licenses until 2046 and 2047.[6] Each unit has received two power uprates during their lifetime, the first in May 2001 for 175.6 MWt and the second in February 2014 for 58.4 MWt.[7]
The power uprates at Braidwood granted in 2001 make it the largest nuclear plant in the state, generating a net total of 2,386 megawatts.[8] However the three largest Illinois nuclear power plants are nearly equal in generating capability as LaSalle County Nuclear Generating Station is only 2 MW less in capacity than Braidwood and Byron Nuclear Generating Station is only 4 MW less than LaSalle.[3]
Electricity Production
Generation (MWh) of Braidwood Generating Station[9]
Year
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Annual (Total)
2001
1,727,831
1,552,470
1,728,556
1,656,495
1,639,129
1,692,442
1,695,033
1,694,293
1,365,275
1,791,768
1,403,693
1,778,667
19,725,652
2002
1,776,635
1,606,213
1,780,427
1,398,545
1,401,854
1,709,365
1,757,864
1,681,552
1,720,900
1,805,512
1,736,584
1,686,273
20,061,724
2003
1,816,256
1,640,320
1,802,294
1,238,127
1,751,854
1,734,721
1,781,398
1,776,654
1,735,685
1,795,175
1,251,200
1,703,248
20,026,932
2004
1,738,564
1,656,538
1,774,983
1,700,986
1,752,537
1,681,449
1,731,556
1,740,868
1,682,239
1,120,860
1,707,647
1,719,785
20,008,012
2005
1,766,686
1,600,815
1,671,600
1,271,881
1,611,456
1,678,960
1,719,344
1,722,304
1,497,776
1,766,153
1,714,922
1,774,486
19,796,383
2006
1,771,808
1,601,657
1,774,500
1,285,822
1,635,891
1,684,512
1,728,207
1,728,027
1,694,748
1,283,966
1,609,250
1,772,146
19,570,534
2007
1,776,321
1,603,492
1,766,825
1,714,126
1,748,069
1,613,663
1,731,300
1,639,632
1,669,428
960,189
1,662,661
1,772,143
19,657,849
2008
1,731,291
1,614,049
1,772,366
1,406,539
1,253,148
1,684,865
1,731,457
1,730,016
1,684,800
1,762,567
1,716,205
1,698,853
19,786,156
2009
1,773,707
1,601,852
1,703,629
1,066,241
1,752,417
1,681,940
1,708,525
1,604,232
1,684,125
1,191,320
1,685,359
1,774,630
19,227,977
2010
1,775,666
1,603,074
1,771,800
1,706,628
1,751,580
1,676,774
1,718,858
1,337,482
1,613,317
941,921
1,531,083
1,771,752
19,199,935
2011
1,773,967
1,602,025
1,769,725
1,335,527
1,337,621
1,670,148
1,681,029
1,708,345
1,677,370
1,752,582
1,707,585
1,761,103
19,777,027
2012
1,763,387
1,650,893
1,755,352
1,257,537
1,138,637
1,667,525
1,701,080
1,714,248
1,677,589
1,269,307
1,450,645
1,760,134
18,806,334
2013
1,758,895
1,591,601
1,757,169
1,701,870
1,736,436
1,584,370
1,577,738
1,714,573
1,037,402
1,734,598
1,705,258
1,762,065
19,661,975
2014
1,762,037
1,604,657
1,787,766
1,727,061
1,157,984
1,704,049
1,758,188
1,752,907
1,700,921
1,783,708
1,733,837
1,790,550
20,263,665
2015
1,790,116
1,616,252
1,708,243
1,190,005
1,775,399
1,706,635
1,745,967
1,756,624
1,694,698
1,208,233
1,731,106
1,786,733
19,710,011
2016
1,789,077
1,674,933
1,786,565
1,726,257
1,775,552
1,580,024
1,725,072
1,743,664
1,519,219
1,010,762
1,729,216
1,788,928
19,849,269
2017
1,788,994
1,615,460
1,785,899
1,458,880
1,186,574
1,687,165
1,744,669
1,752,523
1,625,618
1,773,757
1,734,093
1,789,922
19,943,554
2018
1,790,375
1,617,645
1,783,945
1,060,125
1,738,028
1,652,448
1,744,664
1,748,081
1,684,169
1,058,731
1,676,171
1,789,077
19,343,459
2019
1,788,805
1,616,748
1,786,313
1,725,411
1,775,688
1,705,590
1,713,430
1,735,984
1,610,607
1,271,291
1,732,484
1,788,789
20,251,140
2020
1,788,805
1,673,358
1,786,237
1,368,679
1,584,026
1,697,373
1,733,347
1,742,565
1,701,985
1,780,056
1,730,552
1,784,693
20,371,676
2021
1,786,312
1,613,598
1,759,852
1,105,601
1,761,009
1,647,573
1,740,232
1,736,255
1,688,411
1,284,508
1,564,316
1,786,680
19,474,347
2022
1,778,624
1,614,176
1,783,478
1,724,063
1,767,739
1,691,225
1,738,769
1,740,020
1,630,078
1,170,952
1,728,711
1,787,795
20,155,630
2023
1,786,471
1,613,815
1,782,559
1,429,487
1,372,505
1,689,637
1,728,909
1,733,311
1,693,358
1,769,820
1,727,770
1,785,954
20,113,596
2024
1,782,260
1,670,399
1,733,840
1,155,868
1,559,472
1,692,984
1,736,210
1,737,397
1,687,288
--
Surrounding population
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.[10]
The 2010 U.S. population within 10 miles (16 km) of Braidwood was 33,910, an increase of 6.5 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 4,976,020, an increase of 5.3 percent since 2000. Cities within 50 miles include Joliet (20 miles to city center), as well as parts of both Aurora and Naperville (42 miles to city center).[11]
Tritium leaks
Exelon was sued by residents of Will County and by the state's attorney in 2006.[12] The lawsuit alleges that the Braidwood plant released radioactive tritium into local water in violation of its permit.[13] However, the US NRC has said the response is based on "emotion, not risk", and gone on record to state the tritium releases did not jeopardize human health or safety in any manner.[14] The Illinois EPA also reported that all tests have confirmed releases are below the action levels of 20,000 picoCuries per liter, currently set by the EPA. However, Exelon agreed to provide bottled water to residents of Godley and to residents within 1500 feet of the blowdown line to the Kankakee River.[15]
Seismic risk
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's estimate of the risk each year of an earthquake intense enough to cause core damage to the reactor at Braidwood was 1 in 136,986, according to an NRC study published in August 2010.[16]
^Braidwood Lake is an artificial lake whose levels are maintained by periodically pumping water from the nearby Kankakee River[4]
References
^Cohen, Bernard (1990-01-01). THE NUCLEAR ENERGY OPTION. p. Chapter 9. But its LaSalle nuclear plants completed in 1982-84 cost $1,160/kW, and its Byron and Braidwood plants completed in 1985-87 cost $1880/kW