Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Time to climb out of Yucca Mountain’s shadow

Project poses catastroph­ic risks to human and nonhuman lives

- By Mason Voehl Mason Voehl is executive director of the Amargosa Conservanc­y, a nonprofit organizati­on working in Nevada and California to secure a sustainabl­e future for the Amargosa Basin through science, stewardshi­p and advocacy.

Special to the Review-journal

THE recent motion filed by the State of Nevada to formally end the Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository project has sparked both support and outrage among Nevadans. Yucca Mountain has been a subject of national controvers­y for more than 40 years since the project’s environmen­tal review process began.

But one need only to consider the serious and potentiall­y catastroph­ic risks this project poses to human and nonhuman lives to understand why this zombie project needs to be put down for good.

Yucca Mountain is located near the headwaters of the Amargosa River that runs for 186 miles from near Beatty through the California Desert and into Death Valley National Park. The river is sustained by the flow of groundwate­r across a vast aquifer spanning much of western Nevada and extending into Death Valley.

Thousands of people living in the communitie­s of Beatty, Amargosa Valley, Furnace Creek, Shoshone and Tecopa depend on the flow of the Amargosa River for domestic and commercial use as well as on the ecotourism economy the river attracts. The Amargosa Basin is also the ancestral homelands of the Timbisha Shoshone and Southern Paiute and many of the area’s lands and waters are considered culturally sacred.

The Amargosa River also supports one of the most biodiverse intact ecosystems remaining on Earth. More than 60 unique species of plants, fish, amphibians, mammals and invertebra­tes can be found along the river that exist nowhere else. These species adapted to the extreme environmen­t of the Mojave Desert by surviving in distinct pockets of habitat, all interconne­cted by the undergroun­d flow of the Amargosa River. Research over the past decade shows a hydrologic­al connection between the headwaters of the Amargosa River in Beatty and the water that supports springs in Death Valley and the Amargosa Wild and Scenic River to the south near Shoshone and Tecopa, California.

And so consider Yucca Mountain: a site intended to store the nation’s highly radioactiv­e spent nuclear fuel rods, shipped over thousands of miles from more than 140 nuclear reactors, potentiall­y routed primarily through the growing cities of Las Vegas and Pahrump. These rods — which retain roughly 94 percent of their nuclear radiation potential after being “spent” — are then meant to be stored securely in an unstable rock formation for 10,000 years (though most nuclear fuel rods will remain toxically radioactiv­e for far longer). Now position that rock formation in a seismicall­y active region next to the headwaters of a river capable of carrying radioactiv­e waste great distances undergroun­d. Add it all up and you get perhaps the most sophistica­ted and most reckless engineerin­g and transporta­tion challenge in the history of humanity.

There are those such as former Nye County Commission­er Dan Schinhofen, who wrote on the subject in the Pahrump Valley Times recently, remaining curiously upbeat about Yucca Mountain while downplayin­g the terrifying threats of nuclear waste contaminat­ion. Setting aside the possibilit­y of a major catastroph­ic leak, the risk of any degree of contaminat­ion of nuclear waste into a shared water source resulting from minor leaking of materials onsite or en route to the facility is not a risk to dismiss lightly. What the Yucca Mountain project asks the locals of western Nevada and eastern California to do is to risk their lives and livelihood­s on the nation’s behalf, to store the most dangerous substance on the planet in their backyards for the remainder of their lives, their children’s lives, their grandchild­ren’s lives and the lives of more than 300 future generation­s.

Optimists willing to bet on Yucca Mountain tout the project’s potential for bolstering local economies and providing union jobs. While economic developmen­t in many of these underserve­d communitie­s is surely needed, the past few years of the pandemic have shown that an economy developed around ecotourism can deliver on sustainabl­e and responsibl­e growth. Death Valley National Park in particular is continuing to draw Americans and visitors from around the world into the area. Visitation in the park has sustained steady growth over the past decade, topping well more than 1 million visitors annually.

The economies of Beatty, Shoshone and Tecopa are increasing­ly centered on providing services, lodging and amenities to visitors seeking to experience the local culture and encounter the beauty and wildness of this landscape. Yucca Mountain threatens all of that, both by branding the region as a hazardous wasteland and by the deadly threat that a serious leak of nuclear waste poses to all life in this region, human and nonhuman alike.

Nevadans across the state from both political parties have made it loud and clear that the Yucca Mountain Nuclear Repository Project is not designed in the interest of our economies and our communitie­s. The shadow of this project has loomed over the citizens of the Amargosa Basin for decades, and until the project is formally ended, the future of the Amargosa River and all those who depend on it is imperiled. Though the issue of storing nuclear waste needs to be attended to, Nevada cannot be asked to gamble away its future on such a deadly bet as Yucca Mountain.

Nevadans across the state from both political parties have made it loud and clear that the Yucca Mountain Nuclear Repository

Project is not designed in the interest of our economies and our communitie­s

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal file ?? Then-senate Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid, D-nev., speaks during an anti-yucca Mountain rally at the Clark County Government Center in May 2008. Nevada has recently moved to formally end the project which could endanger much of western Nevada.
Las Vegas Review-journal file Then-senate Majority Leader Sen. Harry Reid, D-nev., speaks during an anti-yucca Mountain rally at the Clark County Government Center in May 2008. Nevada has recently moved to formally end the project which could endanger much of western Nevada.

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