Las Vegas Review-Journal

Plutonium transfer ban sought

Nevada officials say other eligible sites were ignored

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Nevada has filed a federal lawsuit seeking a halt a court-ordered shipment of military-grade plutonium from South Carolina to a temporary storage facility near Las Vegas.

The state cited health, environmen­tal and transporta­tion in its filing with the federal district court in Nevada.

“I don’t want Interstate 11 to become the plutonium expressway,” Robert Halstead, executive director for the Nevada governor’s Agency for Nuclear Projects and Nuclear Waste Project Office, said Tuesday, referring to the planned north-south freeway that would bisect the state.

The state’s motion, filed Friday, seeks to prevent the Trump administra­tion from shipping a metric ton of weapons-grade plutonium from the Department of Energy’s Savannah River site in South Carolina to the Nevada National Security Site, about 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas.

The Energy Department is under federal court order in South Carolina to move the plutonium from the site to comply with environmen­tal laws.

Nevada claims the Trump administra­tion violated the National Environmen­tal Policy Act of 1969 by failing to conduct an environmen­tal impact study to determine risks for shipping the high-grade material in 35-gallon drums through states to Nevada.

In addition, the state claims that DOE failed to look at five alternativ­e sites in New Mexico, Texas and Tennessee before selecting Nevada to store the material.

The lawsuit was filed by state Attorney General Adam Laxalt at the direction of Gov. Brian Sandoval, who is leaving office because of term limits.

The state argues that once the material is moved, “Nevada will forever lose the ability to formally comment upon safety and environmen­tal concerns related to the shipments.”

The Nevada National Security Administra­tion issued a statement saying that it has “conducted the required National Environmen­tal Policy Act analysis for these shipments, and all movements of this material will be carried out in a manner that complies with strict safety, security and environmen­tal requiremen­ts.”

It also said that the nuclear material would be temporaril­y stored at the Doe-operated security site until it can be moved to Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico or another site.

Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States