Thu
Jun 25 2009
11:00 am

UPDATE: Residents denied entry to press conference, media and invited guests only.

ORIGINAL REPORT:

The Root Cause Failure Analysis was presented by Bill Walton, Sr. AECOM engineer, who said it is "voluminous and complex" and comprises ten binders.

The failure initiated in NW corner of cell 2, spread rapidly, mobilized wet ash behind, stacked up on dike c, which breached. The ash flow crested 47 feet above the Watts Bar reservoir pool elevation.

Possible causes eliminated: earthquake. karstic or bedrock instability, artesian impacts (i.e. groundwater), surface seepage or piping (only minor erosion observed). Rainfall was a minor contributing factor. A rapid Watts Bar drawdown was a minor contributing factor.

The failure was "technically unusual," and there were four contributing factors:

1. Increased filling rates into dredge cells

2. Hydraulically placed loose wet ash

3. Fill geometry and setbacks

4. Unusually weak slimes foundation

Rapid loading rates did not allow time for water to drain making the ash more unstable. "Slimes" (high water content, high liquidity, low permeability, low strength ash) destabilized the bottom of the cells. Basically, the older (lower elevation) dikes on which the new ones were built "slid off" the "slime" (if I understand it correctly).

The increased filling rates exceeded design estimates, mainly due to different coal sources that produced more ash.

UPDATE: The full TVA failure analysis report. Summary:

The north end of Dredge Cell 2 was on the verge of failure due to the high stresses and creep in the loose wet layer of weak slimes. The deformation of the slimes in turn caused the overlying collapsible wet ash to liquefy. Failure of the Kingston dredge cells was sudden and complex in nature due its geographic setting and being built within the Watts Bar Reservoir after the lake was formed. It took a forensic type study to determine the propensity of the ash to liquefy at low strain levels when the material cannot drain and thus becomes undrained, and to locate the slide plane in the unusual, creep susceptible, low undrained shear strength slime layer that underlies Cell 2. In AECOM’s opinion, subsurface conditions at the dredge cells were unusual and rarely found. The consequence of failure in the slimes led to the collapse of the dredge cell and loss of the saturated contents of the ash landfill due to the breach of perimeter Dike C.

rikki's picture

Oh good grief, it's not that

Oh good grief, it's not that big of a mystery. The hard freeze that night was the primary cause. TVA was warned about the risk of a freeze rupture the prior year and had reduced moisture levels during winter to prevent it. They then shuffled personnel around, and the new guy at Kingston didn't know about the need to dry out the pile during winter.

rikki's picture

The TVA inspector general

The TVA inspector general has announced that his office will release a report on this report in "early July." Hopefully they will address why AECOM was so dismissive of weather as a cause of the failure. I've read the executive summary and the peer letter so far, and both consider several potential causes for the liquefaction, including a seismic event or a train passing by, but they don't mention the freezing weather at all.

We've all seen how a hard freeze fluffs and ruptures mud, often forming beautiful ribbons of ice to grow from the surface. That's just the kind of trigger these engineers are scrounging for, yet they don't even discuss that night's low temperatures.

WhitesCreek's picture

I don't buy weather, cold or

I don't buy weather, cold or rain, as the root cause, Rikki. We've had lots more rain and lots colder weather. The engineering base for this thing just wasn't sufficient for the load. the test holes were insufficient to show the defficiencies. It doesn't really matter though. All of the causes fall back on TVA as an organization as having been insufficient to the task of engineering, constructing, and maintaining a safe facility.

And they get to run nukes?

rikki's picture

I think the root cause is

I think the root cause is they piled up way too much ash for way too long. The proximal cause, the reason this disaster happened at 1am on Dec 22, 2008, was a too wet pile freezing and cracking open. In other words, it was both long-term and short-term management failure.

Gregg Lonas's picture

Art from the Ashes

This is to remind everyone about the art show and silent auction that benefits the survivors.

Sunday June 28th 3:00 PM
Knoxville Museum of Art

smalc's picture

There will be plenty of

There will be plenty of rebuttals coming out in the near future that will opine that the "slime theory" is a joke.

rikki's picture

The slime theory is not a

The slime theory is not a joke. The slime was a remnant layer from the early years when ash was discharged directly into the river. It helps explain the extent of the collapse, but not its cause. It also underscores how irresponsible it was to continue piling ash higher and higher, year after year, into a containment area never designed for long-term storage.

smalc's picture

Maybe joke was not the

Maybe joke was not the correct word for the presence of slime, but this comment from Walton:
"If you don't have the slime layer, you don't have the failure at this time," he said
is a joke.
Like you said, it was not a trigger. I suspect the cause is much less exotic, pore water pressure.

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