Texarkana Gazette

Decades-old dispute over Yucca Mountain nuclear dump resumes under Trump plan

- By Ralph Vartabedia­n

An abandoned tunnel in the desolate Nevada desert, barricaded only by a chain-link fence, is all that remains of the nation’s tortured effort to create a permanent repository for nuclear waste 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas. After spending $11 billion, the Energy Department met with unrelentin­g opposition from Nevada and was forced to shut down the program at Yucca Mountain— the only remotely viable option for storing tons of deadly waste that currently has nowhere to go—in 2010.

But that was before Nevada’s powerful senior senator, former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, retired in January. It was before the election of President Donald Trump, who is looking for a way to keep nuclear power plants operationa­l. Oblivious to the storm of fury it would arouse in Nevada—which doesn’t have a single commercial nuclear reactor of its own—Trump has proposed spending $120 million to restart licensing Yucca Mountain to take on a massive storehouse of deadly radioactiv­e spent fuel.

The plan to ship waste from reactors all over the nation to Yucca Mountain and bury it deep in volcanic rock has dragged on for 30 years, ranking among the most intractabl­e political, legal and technical issues in modern U.S. history.

The prospects for Yucca Mountain have fluctuated so many times that its future is unpredicta­ble. But the Trump initiative could bring closure to dozens of communitie­s desperate to get rid of what they consider a frightenin­g safety threat.

At an estimated cost of $100 billion, the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump would rival the Internatio­nal Space Station in cost and complexity, requiring constructi­on of roughly 300 miles of new railroad tracks to transport the waste, developmen­t of advanced robots to work undergroun­d and fabricatio­n of special titanium shields to keep the waste intact for, it is hoped, hundreds of thousands of years.

The $120 million outlined by Trump last month in his budget blueprint would restart the ponderous licensing process that was abandoned by the Obama administra­tion and begin plans for a temporary storage facility at an undetermin­ed location.

With 99 operating reactors, supplying about 20 percent of the nation’s electricit­y, and four more under constructi­on, the nuclear industry considers a permanent storage facility such as Yucca Mountain to be a top priority. About two dozen more retired or demolished plants have stranded waste in need of a permanent home.

Proponents say the dump will provide safe disposal for waste parked at power plants from the shores of the Pacific in California to the banks of the James River in Virginia. The waste, which generates enormous heat from nuclear decay, would be placed in side rooms off the existing five-mile-long main tunnel.

The nation’s utilities have a total of 79,000 metric tons of spent fuel already in reserve, and are producing another 2,000 tons every year. Yucca Mountain’s legal limit is 70,000 tons, though the site has the physical capacity to handle all the existing waste and much more.

Nevada officials have put every ounce of their political muscle into stopping the dump, worried that a radioactiv­e spill or even the possibilit­y of one could destroy their tourist economy. There are also fears that, in the distant future, the dump might leak radioactiv­ity into groundwate­r supplies—that has happened at several Energy Department plants. The state is quickly gearing up for a new fight, readying new legal strategies and pushing a resolution through the state Legislatur­e.

“The Trump administra­tion’s attempt to revive Yucca Mountain is naive and a waste of taxpayer dollars,” said Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., who successful­ly fought off the Energy Department for years when she was the state’s attorney general. “It is a nonstarter.”

Cortez Masto said the state is united against the dump across party lines, including Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval, another former attorney general.

“Yucca Mountain is just a hole in the ground,” she said in an interview. “It is time for members of Congress to recognize that Yucca Mountain won’t work.”

Energy Secretary Rick Perry made a lowkey visit to Yucca Mountain March 27 and met with Sandoval afterward, saying it was “the first step in a process that will involve talking with many federal, state, local and commercial stakeholde­rs.”

Sandoval said he had “reaffirmed my unwavering opposition to any potential progress toward developing the site as a potential destinatio­n for high-level nuclear waste.”

Environmen­tal groups have opposed the dump as well, part of an effort to undermine any further reliance on nuclear power. “If you don’t solve the waste problem, it is very difficult to make the case for nuclear power,” said Judy Treichel, executive director of the Nevada Nuclear Waste Task Force.

But the Nuclear Energy Institute, a Washington trade group, sees political support growing for the dump. “There are signs that the new administra­tion wants to end the stalemate, but we need resolve from both branches of government,” said spokesman John Keeley.

Longtime nuclear waste watchers see a potential sea change. “As long as the Trump administra­tion is willing to spend political capital, we will move slowly forward to placement of spent fuel in Yucca Mountain,” said David Leroy, an Idaho attorney who was the federal government’s “nuclear waste negotiator” and led an effort in the 1990s to find a state willing to voluntaril­y take waste on an interim basis.

 ?? Los Angeles Times file photo via TNS ?? n Julie Taylor, left, and Jules Bitsilly take dust level readings at the Yucca Mountain Project in Nevada in September 2004.
Los Angeles Times file photo via TNS n Julie Taylor, left, and Jules Bitsilly take dust level readings at the Yucca Mountain Project in Nevada in September 2004.

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