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Xcel Energy Monticello Power Plant Tritium Leak

Information about the leak

Xcel has reported a recurring issue of water containing tritium leaking from its Monticello facility. While there is no indication the water has moved away from the immediate site of the plant, the leak prompted the company to power down the plant to address the issue, and the company is monitoring the groundwater plume through two dozen wells. See: Xcel Energy to take Monticello nuclear plant offline to fix tritium leak.

The facility is regulated by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), and Minnesota state agencies will continue to review the company’s response and oversee the recovery, storage and disposal of impacted groundwater.

Based on the available information, there is no evidence at this point to indicate a current or imminent risk to the public. For more information, see the March 23 joint statement from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and the Minnesota Department of Health.

  • Statement on Xcel Energy shutdown of Monticello nuclear plant

About Tritium

Tritium is a naturally occurring radioactive form of hydrogen (low-energy beta particle) that is produced in the atmosphere. It is also a byproduct of producing electricity from nuclear power plants. Beta particles do not travel far in air and are too weak to penetrate the skin. Therefore, it is not an external radiation dose concern, but breathing in tritium or swallowing contaminated water are possible ways to be exposed.

The EPA Safe Drinking Water Act limit for tritium in drinking water is 4 millirems per year which equates to a concentration of 20,000 picocuries per liter. This provides minimal risk of health impacts for people from drinking water. Picocuries are often the units used to describe environmental levels of radioactivity.

More information can be found at:

  • Health Physics Society: Tritium (PDF)
  • Backgrounder On Tritium, Radiation Protection Limits, And Drinking Water Standards | NRC.gov
  • Radionuclide Basics: Tritium | US EPA. and Fact Sheet - EPA Facts about Tritium (PDF)
No health risks from the leak for people

Currently, there is no health risk due to this situation. Monitoring wells are being sampled frequently to track the migration of the plume while the plant works to recover the tritiated water. Should the monitoring well results indicate protective action is necessary, it will be taken at that time.

The potential health risk from this event is the possibility of extremely small amounts of radiation exposure to the public. A conservative assumption in radiation protection is that any radiation exposure could result in an increase in cancer occurrences in the population, with the risk increasing as exposure increases. Tritium has not been detected, so there is no increase in cancer risk to the public. 

No evidence of public drinking water impacts from the leak

We have no evidence that there currently are impacts to public drinking water serving the plant or serving public water supplies in the vicinity of the plant.

  • The closest public water supply well to the plume is more than a mile away in the opposite direction of groundwater flow. At this time, the plume has not migrated off the site. It would take years for the contamination to reach the closest wells. We do expect the mitigation activities to contain the plume. We will continue to monitor and assess the situation.
  • We will work with Xcel on an appropriate plan to test drinking water at the plant to protect Xcel workers.

The leak that resulted in a plume has not reached the river. Minneapolis and St. Paul are many miles downstream from the plant and use water from the river as a drinking water source. If the contamination would reach the river, we do not expect to find harmful amounts of tritium from the groundwater plume in downstream samples due to the volume of water moving through the river.

No evidence of private well water impacts from the leak

We have no evidence at this time that there are impacts or risk to private wells in the vicinity of the plant. The plume has not migrated off the site.

The closest private well to the plant is 0.6 miles away in the opposite direction of groundwater flow. There are no private wells located in the direction of groundwater flow between the plume and the Mississippi River.

We will continue to monitor water sources and evaluate the situation. MDH does not have plans to test private wells at this time. Testing your private well for tritium is not recommended at this time.

  • Private Well Distances (PDF)

To look up information on your well, see: Minnesota Well Index. The Minnesota Well Index may not have information your well, especially if it was constructed prior to 1975. You can contact MDH at MNGP2023@state.mn.us if you are unable to find your well information.

Testing your private well water

As a private well owner, you are responsible for regularly testing the water you use for cooking and drinking to make sure it is safe. Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) recommends that you test your well water for several contaminants. Information can be found here - Well Testing, Results, and Options - MN Dept. of Health (state.mn.us).

No evidence of impacts to animals and plants (including crops)

Tritium does not bio-accumulate in people, animals or wildlife, crops or build-up in the environment. Tritium in the groundwater at the plant site will behave like water. It will not accumulate in food crops.

  • Wildlife would not be affected.
  • There is no risk to farmers who grow crops near the plant.

At this time, there is no indication that tritium has migrated off the plant property or come near private wells or irrigation wells.

More information will be added to this webpage as it is available.

Contact with Questions

For questions about drinking water, private wells and about Tritium, contact MDH by sending inquiries to MNGP2023@state.mn.us. We will respond to your questions as soon as we are able.

For questions about site cleanup and permitting, contact MPCA.
Minnesota state agencies monitoring cleanup of tritium leak at Xcel Energy Monticello Plant | Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.

 

Tags
  • environment
Last Updated: 03/27/2023

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