Albuquerque Journal

Nuclear injustice in NM must end

- BY DENNIS MCQUILLAN Geologist Dennis McQuillan lives in Santa Fe.

New Mexico residents have long endured disproport­ionately high health and environmen­tal risks from nuclear energy and weapons programs. It is time for the federal government to protect citizens of the state with the greatest possible level of safeguards.

Instead of performing critical sitesuitab­ility analyses for the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) and for two proposed spent nuclear fuel (SNF) “storage” sites near WIPP, federal agencies attempted to validate their predetermi­ned conclusion­s that these sites were safe. The agencies either disregarde­d or rewrote siting criteria to accommodat­e their decisions to approve these sites.

WIPP is intended to provide deep geologic isolation of nuclear waste from the biosphere and, indeed, waste is buried 2,150 feet undergroun­d in 250-million-year-old salt beds. The following WIPP safety deficienci­es, however, need resolution:

The half-life of plutonium-239 is 24,100 years, but the WIPP safety assessment period is limited to 10,000 years.

For years, the federal government asserted that petroleum resources were minimal to nonexisten­t below WIPP. But, today, WIPP is surrounded by oil and gas operations in the most prolific oil patch in the United States. The risk that oil drilling may penetrate the repository, or that liquids injected during fracking, advanced recovery and produced water disposal may migrate into WIPP salt beds, must be reevaluate­d.

Risks from an artesian brine aquifer, deep-seated salt dissolutio­n and from highly pressurize­d brine pockets that underlie the WIPP salt beds are not fully assessed.

The geochemica­l mobility of plutonium and uranium, and possible interactio­ns with carbon dioxide generated by waste decomposit­ion and with geologic brine, needs further analysis.

Additional prevention is needed for such human errors as the 2014 accident where plutonium contaminat­ed nitrate salt packed with organic kitty litter generated heat, burst a waste drum, contaminat­ed 21 workers, and released americium and plutonium into the atmosphere.

WIPP is certified to accept only national defense waste. The federal government, after spending decades and millions of dollars, failed to establish a permanent disposal site for spent nuclear fuel from commercial reactors. SNF is highly radioactiv­e and toxic due to fission byproducts created during power generation.

The federal government now proposes to license two commercial facilities near WIPP, one in New Mexico and one in Texas, for the “storage” of SNF for up to 120 years. Unlike the deep geologic isolation at WIPP, the proposed SNF storage facilities are less than 100 feet deep, in young alluvium, and in a region with shallow groundwate­r, as well as concerns about ground subsidence and sinkholes. These two sites are geological­ly unsuitable even for SNF “storage” and it is possible that decades of “storage” could morph into permanent disposal. Excavating SNF that has deteriorat­ed undergroun­d for 120 years is a lurid scenario. Or will future engineers build a Chernobyls­tyle sarcophagu­s with the hope that it isolates the waste for 24,000 years?

The proposed “storage” sites for SNF could create dangers far greater than those posed by WIPP. Agricultur­al and petroleum industry organizati­ons expressed concerns that the SNF facilities could damage their livelihood­s. Attorney General Balderas sued the federal government to stop these ill-conceived and dangerous proposals to store SNF.

The legacy of nuclear injustice in New Mexico must end. The federal government must:

Resolve WIPP safety deficienci­es Disallow the reckless “storage” of spent nuclear fuel

Establish one or more permanent repositori­es for SNF that provide geologic isolation

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