Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

$13B in improvemen­ts planned for national lab

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Los Alamos National Laboratory plans to spend $3 billion on plutonium facility upgrades.

LOS ALAMOS, N.M. — Officials at Los Alamos National Laboratory have plans for $13 billion worth of constructi­on projects over the next decade at the northern New Mexico complex as it prepares to ramp up production of plutonium cores for the nation’s nuclear weapons arsenal.

They outlined their plans at a recent meeting attended by hundreds of representa­tives of constructi­on firms from around the country.

Beyond the new infrastruc­ture related to plutonium assignment, other work likely will be aimed at serving a growing workforce — from planned housing projects and parking garages to a potential new highway that would reduce commute times from Albuquerqu­e and Santa Fe for the 60% of employees who live outside of Los Alamos County.

Lab Director Thomas Mason told the Albuquerqu­e Journal the lab has 1,400 openings and plans to add another 1,200 jobs to its workforce of 12,000 by 2026.

“We’re probably busier than we have been since the height of the Cold War,” he said.

Mason said $3 billion in spending is planned for improvemen­ts to the lab’s existing plutonium facility for the core work. An accelerato­r project and a newgenerat­ion super computer also will require major investment­s.

Roadwork would be the responsibi­lity of surroundin­g communitie­s or the state, but he said the lab is stressing the importance of transporta­tion infrastruc­ture and needs to communicat­e to the region about the lab’s growth projection­s.

One piece of transporta­tion infrastruc­ture — Omega Bridge, which connects the town of Los Alamos with the lab site over Los Alamos Canyon — is owned by the federal government. One possibilit­y is that it’s converted to a “greenway” with a new bridge added nearby.

Mason said what to do with the bridge is a longterm issue.

Some watchdog groups have been concerned about the federal government’s plans to boost plutonium pit production at Los Alamos given the current infrastruc­ture and the lab’s track record of safety concerns.

Greg Mello with the Albuquerqu­e-based Los Alamos Study Group said “everywhere pit production has been done, in every country, has been an environmen­tal disaster.”

Pits were formerly made at Rocky Flats in Colorado, which was shut down in the early 1990s amid an environmen­tal scandal.

The National Nuclear Security Administra­tion is under a mandate from Congress and the Department of Defense to make 80 pits a year by 2030 as part of a plan to modernize the nation’s arsenal.

Only a handful have been produced in recent decades, all of them at Los Alamos. NNSA’s plan calls for making 30 pits a year at Los Alamos and 50 pits a year at the U.S. Energy Department’s Savannah River Site in South Carolina.

A recent congressio­nally funded study cast doubts on pit production goals and questioned the overall plan to ramp up production, which is estimated to cost $14 billion to $28 billion.

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ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL

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