Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ex-official to Congress: Move forward on Yucca

Panel urged to OK nuclear waste plan

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — A former Department of Energy official who retired after working on the Yucca Mountain project told a House hearing Thursday that Congress should move forward to open the site, despite overwhelmi­ng and bipartisan opposition from the state of Nevada.

Lake Barrett, former acting director of the Office of Civilian Radioactiv­e Management, acknowledg­ed Nevada’s concerns but told lawmakers it was time to move forward with nuclear Congress owes it to these communitie­s to ensure science, not political whims, determines the fate of the Yucca Mountain repository, the nation’s only authorized disposal option. waste disposal after 30 years of delays.

“The federal government has to acknowledg­e the

strengths of Nevada, engage with them and try to work out the issues,” Barrett said.

He said an integrated proposal that includes permanent and temporary repositori­es would be a step forward in the negotiatio­ns.

His testimony was echoed by Nuclear Energy Institute President Maria Korsnick, who argued that spent nuclear waste is stockpilin­g and needs to be moved from 121 sites in 39 states.

“Congress owes it to these communitie­s to ensure science, not political whims, determines the fate of the Yucca Mountain repository, the nation’s only authorized disposal option,” said Korsnick, whose group represents the nuclear technologi­es industry.

DOE officials MIA

Notably, no current official from the Department of Energy appeared before the panel, even though the Trump administra­tion has proposed $116 million to revive the licensing process for Yucca Mountain.

Rep. Paul Tonko, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce subcommitt­ee on energy and climate change, his legal aides and an aide to Rep. John Shimkus, R-ill., the ranking Republican on the panel, offered no explanatio­n why no one from the department testified.

But witnesses and Democratic lawmakers who oppose the licensing of Yucca Mountain saw the absence as a signal that legislatio­n being considered by the subcommitt­ee is unlikely to move forward.

Gov. Steve Sisolak, in a letter to the panel, was firm about Nevada’s opposition.

“Not one ounce of nuclear waste will reach Yucca Mountain while I’m governor,” Sisolak said in the letter.

“I fully intend to keep my promise to the people of Nevada and fight any attempts to restart the failed Yucca Mountain program,” he said.

‘Long-term fight’

The state’s nuclear projects expert, Bob Halstead, told the subcommitt­ee the Energy Department “bungled” all aspects of nuclear waste storage in past years.

And he warned the panel that Nevada was financiall­y prepared to fight Yucca Mountain proposals in Congress, before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and in federal courts.

“Nevada has never been more opposed to Yucca Mountain. Our opposition has never been more bipartisan and has never been stronger,” Halstead told reporters afterward. “That’s a lot of cohesion going into a long-term fight.”

Even if the federal government receives a license, “the earliest realistic date that the proposed Yucca Mountain repository could receive spent fuel from decommissi­oned and decommissi­oning reactors would be 20-25 years from now, if ever,” Halstead said. Geoffrey Fettus, senior attorney with the National Resources Defense Council, said the licensing process would cost $330 million, take several years and “waylay the process of developing (an alternativ­e) repository for a significan­t period of time.”

Funding to continue the licensing process for Yucca Mountain was stripped this year from a House spending bill for the Energy Department for fiscal 2020, which will begin Oct. 1.

The House Energy and Commerce subcommitt­ee on environmen­t and climate change is weighing three bills that would authorize spending on nuclear waste storage.

One of the bills, filed by Shimkus and Rep. Jerry Mcnerney, D-calif., focuses mostly on moving forward on Yucca Mountain as a permanent repository. It is similar to a measure filed in the Senate by Sen. John Barrasso, R-wyo., chairman of the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee.

Another House bill would authorize temporary storage sites, and a third would prioritize moving radioactiv­e waste from decommissi­oned plants in seismic areas, like coastal California and Maine, to a temporary or permanent site.

Nevada focuses on one bill

Nevada opponents of Yucca Mountain focused on the Mcnerney-shimkus bill.

Rep. Steven Horsford, D-nev., whose congressio­nal district includes the proposed repository site, said the bill would increase the cap on storage “from 70,000 metric tons to 110,000 metric tons, paving the way to force all of the nation’s nuclear waste on Yucca Mountain.”

Rep. Dina Titus, D-nev., called the Mcnerney-shimkus bill irresponsi­ble and said Yucca Mountain opponents have already scored a victory by keeping funds out of the House spending bill for the Department of Energy.

“We have already beaten back stronger threats, and I’m confident that this reckless legislatio­n will not see the light of day,” Titus said.

Officials in Nye County, where Yucca Mountain is located, as well as eight other rural Nevada counties support restarting the licensing process to determine if the site is safe for waste storage. They see economic benefits to developing a repository.

Building Yucca Mountain would create 2,000 constructi­on jobs for 10 years, Austin Keyser, director of the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers, told the panel.

Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

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