Publications Details
Nuclear power plants: A unique challenge to fire safety
Nuclear power plants present the fire protection community with unique challenges. In addition to the traditional concerns of life safety and property loss prevention, nuclear safety analysts must also be concerned with the impact of fires on the safe operability of the nuclear reactor. Safe shutdown equipment must be protected from fire damage. When nuclear power plants were first designed and built, fire safety considerations were based primarily on the same criteria applied to general industrial facilities, primarily those concerning life safety and property loss prevention. This practice continued until 1975 when the Brown's Ferry nuclear reactor site experienced a severe cable tray fire. The fire burned for over seven hours, due in part to the reluctance of on-site personnel to use water on the fire for fear of shorting out critical electrical circuits. 4 figs.