Chattanooga Times Free Press

Uranium processing facility gets green light

Y-12 NATIONAL SECURITY COMPLEX

- BY BRITTANY CROCKER USA TODAY NETWORK-TENNESSEE

The Department of Energy has officially given the go-ahead to construct the last three buildings that will make up Y-12 National Security Complex’s long-awaited Uranium Processing Facility.

The $6.5 billion project will be the largest constructi­on project the state has ever seen and the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion expects the project to create more than 2,000 jobs during peak constructi­on.

Deputy energy secretary and project management executive Dan Brouillett­e approved the cost and baseline for the work Friday.

“This milestone is another important step toward delivering [the Uranium Processing Facility] and strengthen­ing our nation’s nuclear security,” said Lisa E. Gordon-Hagerty, Department of Energy undersecre­tary for nuclear security and administra­tor of the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion. “I’m proud of the [facility] team for keeping an acquisitio­n project of this size and scope on budget and on schedule.”

The project is being built through a series of seven sub-projects. Two have already been completed under budget and two are currently under constructi­on.

The salvage and accountabi­lity building, a process

support facility and the processing facility’s 240,000-square-foot main process building were the last of seven sub-projects to receive Department of Energy approval.

The main process building will house the facility’s primary stockpile maintenanc­e function: recycling uranium from old nuclear warheads to maintain the current arsenal.

Only certain isotopes can undergo fission, which releases excess neutrons that trigger a chain reaction when nearby atoms absorb them.

Modern weapons use both fission and fusion — which releases energy when nuclei bond together — to release explosive energy.

Uranium forms the core in many nuclear weapons, triggering the explosion when compressed or fired into another uranium mass. But uranium decays as it ages and may not be able to detonate when fired if it isn’t maintained.

The National Nuclear Security Administra­tion said the Uranium Processing Facility will use a “safer, cleaner and more efficient” process to modernize uranium warheads.

The facility is a big chunk of a trillion dollar, Obama-era plan to modernize the nation’s nuclear stockpile, and President Donald Trump is poised to carry it forward.

Trump signed a $1.3 trillion government spending bill Friday that allocated $663 million for the facility’s constructi­on. The spending bill also includes record levels for the nuclear security administra­tion’s weapons programs.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., said the $663 million allocated this year will help keep the constructi­on on schedule for 2025 completion and under its $6.5 billion budget cap.

The National Nuclear Security Administra­tion said it will use a “build to budget” approach to

ensure the project stays on track.

But nuclear watchdog groups are less confident. Ralph Hutchison of the Oak Ridge Environmen­tal Peace Alliance said his group and Nuclear Watch New Mexico have filed Freedom of Informatio­n Act requests asking the nuclear security administra­tion to provide the “definitive scope, schedule and cost baselines” for the facility.

“This project is already a classic boondoggle, and they are just getting started,” Hutchison said, referring to the plant’s rocky course so far.

Originally proposed in 2006 at a cost of $650 million, the project’s budget spun quickly out of control as more equipment and safety features were added on design plans than could actually fit in the facility.

After a 2014 red team review, Congress capped the facility’s budget at $6.5 billion and mandated that site designs reach 90 percent completion before constructi­on begins.

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