Houston Chronicle

Allow private storage of used nuclear fuel

- By Bernard L. Weinstein Weinstein is associate director of the Maguire Energ y Institute and an adjunct professor of business economics in the Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University.

Since 1982, electric utilities (which is to say, ratepayers) have paid sizable sums into a Nuclear Waste Fund, an account administer­ed by the U.S. Department of Energy, to cover the costs of permanent disposal of used nuclear fuel. Even after spending $10 billion at Yucca Mountain in Nevada, which is supposed to be the permanent repository for used nuclear fuel, the fund balance is currently in excess of $20 billion.

In 2000, the DOE was required by law to take title to the used fuel, which remains in temporary storage at 75 operating and decommissi­oned reactor sites in 33 states. Nationally, about 75,000 metric tons of used fuel is being stored on site, including 2,430 tons in Texas. But because the federal agency is prohibited from operating any consolidat­ed storage facility until Yucca Mountain becomes available, a logical alternativ­e would be to turn over the developmen­t and operations of interim used fuel storage facilities to private companies.

To this end, the U.S. Senate Appropriat­ions Committee has reported out such a bill with bipartisan support. The bill authorizes a pilot program to remove used fuel from permanentl­y decommissi­oned nuclear sites as a first step toward eventually designatin­g interim storage sites for all used fuel currently being held at active power plants. Already, several companies have announced their interest in accepting this used fuel.

Reprocessi­ng banned for decades

Frequently mistaken for nuclear waste, used fuel contains valuable materials, such as plutonium and uranium, that can be reprocesse­d to produce more electricit­y. Reprocessi­ng was once done in the United States, but President Jimmy Carter banned the practice in the mid-1970s on grounds it could lead to nuclear proliferat­ion. Other countries, such as France and Great Britain, did not follow the U.S. example and continue to reprocess used fuel. Here in the U.S., the DOE is currently conducting research on reprocessi­ng, hoping to find a safe and economical way to provide future fuel for America’s — and the world’s — nuclear power industry.

Waste Control Specialist­s (WCS), which currently operates a 14,000-acre facility in Andrews County that processes low-level radioactiv­e waste, intends to file a license applicatio­n with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to build and operate a project that would transport and store used nuclear fuel from multiple locations in the U.S. and be in operation by 2020. AREVA Inc. and NAC Internatio­nal, companies with extensive experience in used fuel transporta­tion and storage, will work with WCS in the design, constructi­on and operation of the proposed project. The Andrews County site is already fully characteri­zed for radioactiv­e waste storage with the Texas Commission on Environmen­tal Quality.

A call for action

At the same time, just across the state line in New Mexico, the rural counties of Eddy and Lea have formed the Eddy-Lea Energy Alliance partnershi­p to make a pitch for receiving nuclear waste. Used nuclear fuel management company Holtec Internatio­nal has signed a letter of intent with the Eddy-Lea Energy Alliance to build a facility that would utilize its undergroun­d storage canister technology.

With the future of Yucca Mountain in doubt, providing interim storage for used fuel currently in repose at both decommissi­oned and active power plants has become an imperative. Though no new reactors have come on line in almost two decades, America’s 100 operating nuclear plants currently provide almost 20 percent of the nation’s electricit­y.

What’s more, nuclear energy is the most environmen­tally benign of all base load power sources, emitting no greenhouse gases, mercury, particulat­es or other pollutants. Nuclear plants operate around the clock safely and reliably, thereby providing stability to the power grid, and are not subject to the price volatility associated with gas-fired plants.

Though opposed by most environmen­tal groups despite a zero carbon foot print, nuclear power isn’t going away. Five new plants will come on line by 2018, while 14 other applicatio­ns are pending before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Still, without adequate storage for nuclear waste, the long-run viability of America’s and Texas’ commercial nuclear power industry will remain problemati­c. To prevent such an outcome, Congress should approve, and President Barack Obama should sign, the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee bill that will allow private facilities to accept and store the nation’s large and growing quantity of used fuel.

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