Albuquerque Journal

Defense funding bill protects Los Alamos

Senators from NM add amendment to preserve lab’s role making nuclear triggers

- BY MARK OSWALD JOURNAL NORTH

SANTA FE — New Mexico’s two U.S. senators have successful­ly added an amendment to a major defense funding bill to help protect Los Alamos National Laboratory’s role as the nation’s producer of plutonium pits, the triggers for nuclear weapons.

The possibilit­y of moving pitmaking to another weapons complex site was first raised at a meeting of a nuclear safety board in June in Santa Fe.

As the Journal reported then, an official with the Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security

Administra­tion said a study was underway to determine if meeting pit-production goals for a huge weapons modernizat­ion plan could be best met at Los Alamos or by adding “capabiliti­es” elsewhere. Loss of the pit-making job — none have been made since 2011, but LANL is ordered to make up to 80 per year by 2030 — would cost Los Alamos millions, and possibly billions, of dollars worth of work.

No findings from the study have been released, and no one has proposed moving pit production. But Sens. Tom Udall and Martin Heinrich, New Mexico Democrats, made a pre-emptive strike with an amendment to the defense authorizat­ion bill passed by the Senate on Thursday and which now awaits the president’s signature.

It requires the Trump administra­tion to meet certain requiremen­ts to justify moving pit manufactur­ing from Los Alamos, including certificat­ion by the Secretary of Defense and review by the Nuclear Weapons Council. If no decision is made within 150 days of Trump signing the defense funding bill, the pit work stays in Los Alamos using planned, new undergroun­d “modules.”

The two senators didn’t address their amendment in comments released about the defense bill. Heinrich said he will continue to ensure “our installati­ons in New Mexico have strong, sustainabl­e national security missions for years to come.”

Critics maintain there’s no need for new pits with thousands currently in storage. Greg Mello of the Albuquerqu­e-based Los Alamos Study Group said the senators “see only dollar signs involved.”

“Rebuilding even a small version of the Rocky Flats Plant (which formerly made pits in Colorado) near Santa Fe will have very serious consequenc­es for the region and the country as a whole,” he said.

LANL has been under attack for safety lapses. In 2016, it was the only one of the DOE’s nuclear facilities to receive a failing safety rating in the area of “criticalit­y,” or prevention of uncontroll­ed nuclear chain reactions, although no such accidents have taken place.

In all, the defense bill includes more than $14 billion for the National Nuclear Security Agency, an increase of nearly $1 billion over the last fiscal year. The funds support weapons work and environmen­tal cleanup at LANL, Sandia National Laboratori­es and the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in southern New Mexico.

Another Udall-Heinrich amendment supports the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, an independen­t panel that oversees the labs. The measure requires board members to report to Congress each year about whether the White House’s budget request for the board is enough to fund reviews deemed necessary to ensure safe operations at DOE sites. Supporters say the board’s role is critical given safety issues at LANL and the planned uptick in nuclear weapons work.

The bill also authorizes spending for projects at New Mexico bases, including $50 million at Cannon Air Force Base, $4.2 million for Holloman and more than $9 million for Kirtland Air Force Base.

 ??  ?? Sen. Martin Heinrich
Sen. Martin Heinrich
 ??  ?? Sen. Tom Udall
Sen. Tom Udall

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