Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nuke waste project nears end

DOE’S cleanup at unlined pits in Idaho landfill started in ’05

- By Keith Ridler

BOISE, Idaho — A project to dig up and remove radioactiv­e and hazardous waste buried for decades in unlined pits at a nuclear facility that sits atop an aquifer in eastern Idaho is nearly finished, U.S. officials said.

The U.S. Department of Energy said last week that it removed the final amount of specifical­ly-targeted buried waste from a 97-acre landfill at its 890-square-mile site that includes the Idaho National Laboratory.

The targeted radioactiv­e waste included plutonium-contaminat­ed filters, graphite molds, sludges containing solvents and oxidized uranium generated during nuclear weapons production work at the Rocky Flats Plant in Colorado. Some radioactiv­e and hazardous waste remains in the Idaho landfill, which will get an earthen cover.

The waste from Rocky Flats was packaged in storage drums and boxes before being sent from 1954 to 1970 to the high-desert, sagebrush steppe of eastern Idaho where it was buried in unlined pits and trenches. The area lies about 50 miles west of Idaho Falls.

The cleanup project, started in 2005, is named the Accelerate­d Retrieval Project and is one of about a dozen cleanup efforts of nuclear waste finished or ongoing at the Energy Department site.

The project involving the landfill is part of a 2008 agreement between the Energy Department and state officials that required the department to dig up and remove specific types and amounts of radioactiv­e and hazardous material.

The agency said it removed about 13,500 cubic yards of material — which is the equivalent of nearly 50,000 storage drums each containing 55 gallons.

Most of the waste is being sent to the U.S. government’s Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in New Mexico for permanent disposal. Some waste will be sent to other off-site repositori­es that could be commercial or Energy Department sites.

The Energy Department said it is 18 months ahead of schedule in its cleanup of the landfill.

“The buried waste was the primary concern of our stakeholde­rs since the beginning of the cleanup program,” Connie Flohr, manager of the Idaho Cleanup Project for the Energy Department’s Office of Environmen­tal Management, said in a statement. “Completing exhumation early will allow us to get an earlier start on constructi­on of the final cover.”

The nuclear site started operating in the late 1940s under the Atomic Energy Commission, a forerunner to the Energy Department.

In 1989, the area became a Superfund site when it was was added to the National Priorities List for Uncontroll­ed Hazardous Waste Sites.

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