Albuquerque Journal

Panel flags safety concern at LANL nuclear waste storage facility

LANL managers say changes have made safety at plant adequate

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

A federal nuclear review panel still has some safety concerns about Los Alamos National Laboratory’s new multimilli­on-dollar storage facility for radioactiv­e waste.

The Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board said in a recent report that more reviews will be needed, but that limits placed on the amount of material and types of containers allowed at the facility will provide adequate protection, at least for the near term.

The board noted in the report made public last week that eliminatin­g or downgradin­g safety protocols at the lab’s Transurani­c Waste Facility “could result in a potential exposure” to the public or workers.

The buildings that make up the $97.5 million facility were completed in early 2017. Officials said the project came in under budget and they consider the report positive.

The facility was designed to store and prepare for shipping newly generated waste from nuclear weapons research as a means of meeting state-mandated cleanup requiremen­ts. The waste includes tools, clothing, gloves and other items that have come in contact with radioactiv­e elements.

The northern New Mexico lab was the birthplace of the atomic bomb and is still one of the nation’s premier research facilities.

It has made headlines recently because of a string of safety lapses that include the mistaken shipping of radioactiv­e material aboard a commercial cargo plane and the storage of too much plutonium in one location.

The latest instances follow one of the more costly mishaps for the nation’s nuclear complex: A 2014 radiation release caused by inappropri­ate packing of waste at Los Alamos that forced a nearly three-year closure of the federal government’s only undergroun­d nuclear waste repository.

The Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board also has uncovered other problems at the lab, but Los Alamos managers said they have been making changes to address the systemic issues and believe the safety plans for the new waste facility are adequate.

The multibilli­on-dollar contract with Los Alamos National Security LLC to manage the lab expires in 2018. Federal officials announced in late 2015 that it would not be renewed because of missed performanc­e goals.

The company’s partners include the University of California and Bechtel National Inc. Both have expressed interest in bidding for the new contract, along with dozens of others.

The safety board looked at various scenarios in determinin­g the adequacy of the waste facility’s safety protocols. They included an accidental puncturing of a waste drum and whether workers could evacuate in time, the possible effects of strong winds on the storage buildings and fires inside the structures.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The new multimilli­on-dollar storage facility at the Los Alamos National Laboratory is still the subject of some safety concerns, according to a Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board review.
ASSOCIATED PRESS The new multimilli­on-dollar storage facility at the Los Alamos National Laboratory is still the subject of some safety concerns, according to a Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board review.

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