Home and Business Owners Alert: Property is not insured against radiological accidents at San Onofre
Many residents of Orange and San Diego counties were relieved when the nuclear power plant at San Onofre was permanently shut down in 2013. That the plant posed risks to people and property only while the reactors were operational was challenged in the Register’s March 31 Concerns about San Onofre are real, but experts debate the level of risk by lead reporter Terri Sforza, in which two nuclear experts weighed in on the dangers of storing 3.6 million pounds of nuclear waste onsite at San Onofre.
The false hope in 2013 ignored the hazards of dry storage of spent nuclear fuel (SNF), which contains some of the most dangerous materials on earth. Used nuclear fuel is termed “spent” only because it can no longer sustain fission in a nuclear reactor. The decay products of nuclear fission, which must be stored safely once a plant is shuttered, are millions of times more deadly than the original uranium fuel.
Due to the federal government’s failure to construct a geologic repository as mandated by the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, San Onofre will remain a nuclear waste dump site for the foreseeable future. This highly radioactive waste requires remote handling and isolation for up to a million years, which is a cause for concern for all southern Californians.
Add to that the worrisome facts of how and where the waste is stored: adjacent to the shoreline, with sea level rise inevitable; in an earthquake/flood/tsunami zone; in temporary thin-walled canisters susceptible to cracking; and in plain view, therefore vulnerable to terrorist attack.
Given that, like most states, California insurance policies for homes and commercial properties do not usually cover nuclear accidents of any type, home and business owners in southern California should invest in ensuring that San Onofre’s SNF is being secured as safely as humanly possible.
Like most homeowners, I failed to notice the Nuclear Hazards Clause in the exclusions section of my homeowner’s policy. In mine, the exclusion applies to “any nuclear reaction, radiation, or radioactive contamination, all whether controlled or uncontrolled or however caused or any consequences of any of these.”
This means zero insurance coverage for any radiologic-caused damage or contamination to anything within the property’s perimeter, including building structures, soil, and water. Nor are relocation costs covered if the property becomes uninhabitable.
This exclusion protects insurers from the obligation to honor impossibly huge payouts when large numbers of properties are impacted.
Nuclear power plant operators are also shielded from liability and compensation to the public in the event of a radioactive release through the 1957 Price-Anderson Act. This law limits the liability of individual commercial reactor owners to a defined amount ($500 million per site). It also explicitly caps at $16.1 billion, the total compensation available to the public for any radiological incident exceeding $500 million. That cap includes an industry-wide self-insurance program in which other commercial nuclear power sites chip in.
Any additional possible compensation to the public for an incident at San Onofre or elsewhere would require an act of Congress.
Contrast that $16.1 billion cap to a 2019 white paper on the economic impact of a radiological release impacting a 50-mile radius around San Onofre, which concluded: “. . . about $13.4 trillion in gross regional product could be at risk over a 50-year time horizon.”
Sforza’s article addressed the particular risks of San Onofre’s dry waste storage system. Two engineers with lifelong careers in the nuclear industry expressed differing views on the most imminent threats. Paul Blanch, a nuclear industry consultant and safety advocate, prioritizes flooding risks from sea level rise, storm surges, earthquakes, and tsunamis. Per Sforza, “He’d feel a lot better if the dry storage system were hoisted another 20 feet in the air.”
Regarding David Lochbaum’s views, a nuclear engineer and safety advocate turned watchdog, Sforza wrote: “Lochbaum’s concerns center on the dry storage systems themselves…. Lochbaum would feel a lot better if more regular and rigorous inspections of dry storage systems and canisters were required.”
Though these experts might disagree on the most imminent risks, there is apparent agreement that the current system for SNF storage at San Onofre is faulty, that radiological accidents are possible, and that both people and property are at risk. Many local nuclear safety advocates also want the thin-wall canisters replaced with more robust and fully inspectable thick-wall casks, as used throughout much of the rest of the world.
Despite controversy over the best solution(s), there is widespread agreement that Southern California Edison, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and possibly the State of California need to take quick and decisive action to protect people and property better.
A similar war clause is also contained in the exclusions section of home and commercial property insurance policies. This suggests that a radiological accident at San Onofre caused by an act of terrorism could leave homes and businesses doubly out of luck.
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