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Trojan Park HistoryHighlights
Native Americans
European Settlers
Trojan Plant
Native Americans
• Chinook Nation (~12300BC-1850)– Local Tribe: CATHLAMET
• Largest original settlement was in Cathlamet, WA (34 miles north) with 500-1000 inhabitants
• Range: Mouth of the Columbia River in Oregon and Washington, to the present location.
Native Americans• Chinook Village
Native Americans• Plank house
Ridgefield Wildlife Refuge, Ridgefield, WA
Native Americans• Chinook Canoes
Shovelnose
Nootka
Native Americans• Tools and Clothing
Fishing with a seine
Native Americans• Customs: Head Flattening
Clark Journal Diagram Chinook Woman
Native Americans• Language: Chinook Jargon -“Chinuk Wawa”
– Chinook WaWa explained
• Some words…– A a a h! Exclamation confirming a statement.– A a a a e! Wonder, sympathy, etc.– Ats Sister.– Boston White man.– Bebe Baby.– Canim Boat.– Chuck Water.– Halo No. – House House. – Mama Mother – Wawa Talk
European Settlers• Early Chinook-European Interaction (1792)
• Chinook People in decline (1770-1850)
You are here
European Settlers• Lewis and Clarke: "Corps of Discovery Expedition“
(1804-1806)
European Settlers
• City of Rainer, OR
Electrical Power
• What is electricity used for?– Industrial manufacturing– Household uses
Electrical Power
• How is our electrical power generated? – Portland General Electric power comes from:
Thermal1.Natural Gas 28%2.Coal 25%
3.Hydro22%
4.Wind 11%
5.Purchases 9%
Electrical Power• What about nuclear power generation?
– In the 1960’s, it was said that that nuclear generated electricity would be “too cheap to meter!”
So Portland General Electric built the
Trojan Nuclear Power Plant
Material Energy Type Energy (KJ)/Kilo
Uses
Anti-Matter Matter/Antimatter 180 Billion Theoretical
Uranium-235 Nuclear 80 Million Electrical power plants
Hydrogen Chemical 123 Experimental
Gasoline Chemical 47 Auto engines
Coal Chemical 24 Electrical power plants
Carbs/Sugar Chemical 17 Human nutrition
Gunpowder Chemical 3 Explosives
Nuclear Power Generation
• How is nuclear power generated?– Radioactive Uranium 235 atoms, closely packed, generates heat
– Reactor controls the temperature of the radioactive core
– Heats water under pressure (pressurized water reactor)
– Transfers heat to a steam generator; steam spins the turbine-generator
– Water is cooled to reuse in the steam generator
– No fire = no air pollution!
Nuclear Power Generation
• Pressurized Water Nuclear Reactor
Trojan Power Plant• PGE built the Trojan Nuclear Power Plant
– Largest ever “Pressurized Water Reactor“ – Cost $430 million to build– Licensed to operate for 35 years, to 2011– Only operated from1976 until 1992, just 16 years.
Trojan Power Plant• Trojan produced 1,130 Megawatts of power
– That is a LOT of power!– Three (3) times as much as the Boardman Oregon coal plant– Without any air pollution!
Boardman coal power plant produces ⅔ of the SOx emissions & ⅓ of the NOx emissions in the state [from stationary sources]
Trojan Power Plant• Trojan produced 1,130 Megawatts of power
– That is a LOT of power!– Almost as much as the Bonneville Dam [1189 Megawatts]
• But we can’t locate more dams on the Columbia River• And dams are not good for the fish stocks
Trojan Power Plant• Trojan produced 1,130 Megawatts of power
– That is a LOT of power!– This is as much as the largest wind farm in the United States– 342 Wind Turbines producing 1020 Megawatts in California
Trojan Power Plant
Trojan suffered three problems that lead to its early shutdown, demolition, and removal
1. Premature failure of the steam generator tubes Supposed to last the life of the plant; began cracking after
only 4 years.
2. Design and construction flaws Would it withstand an earthquake?
3. Political opposition People repeatedly brought “Close Trojan” ballot measures to
vote; They were defeated but PGE spent heavily to advertise their side of the issue
Trojan Closure• Trojan became too costly to maintain, repair, and defend to the
public so it was closed in 1992. – In 2001, the massive reactor was encased in concrete, wrapped in
plastic, & barged upriver to Hanford, a nuclear storage facility
– Largest reactor to be moved in one piece.
– It was buried in a 45 foot deep hole, buried under 6” of gravel.
The spent fuel is stored here in 34 dry steel casks. They were supposed to be shipped to Yucca Mtn. Nevada until the plans for nuclear waste storage there were cancelled. Dry casks are built as “temporary storage” so we have a problem than needs solving!
Trojan Closure• The iconic 499 foot tall cooling tower was demolished via dynamite implosion at 7:00am on May 21, 2006
– This implosion marked another first for Trojan; the first cooling tower implosion at a nuclear power site
– Closing the site cost $230 million!
Trojan Closure• The iconic 499 foot tall cooling tower was demolished via
dynamite implosion at 7:00am on May 21, 2006– This implosion marked another first for Trojan; the first cooling tower implosion at a
nuclear power site
Trojan Plant De-commissioning
The Final Day
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