Los Angeles Times

Nuclear waste: Unsafe for eons

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Re “Where to put San Onofre’s nuclear waste,” editorial, Sept. 11

After promises that nuclear waste could be stored safely, we learn that there is no place to safely store tens of thousands of tons of uranium and plutonium for hundreds of thousands of years.

The current industry “solution” is to store it unsafely where it was generated (near major metropolit­an areas like Los Angeles and San Diego) or to get political revenge and force it on Nevada (a state that produces no nuclear waste and continues to suffer from 928 atom bomb tests).

Did anyone notice that two of Florida’s nuclear power plants quickly shut down before the hurricane? Or that South Carolina has abandoned constructi­on of two new plants after wasting $8 billion on them? How about the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station being closed following a generator failure and radiation accident?

The public is finally realizing that nuclear energy is environmen­tally unfriendly, very expensive, completely unreliable and very dangerous. Add to that the current dilemma: There still is nowhere to store the toxic waste [the plants] generate. Roger Johnson

San Clemente

For 15 years, hundreds of environmen­tal groups have advocated for hardened on-site storage of irradiated nuclear fuel, as close and safely as possible, to the point of generation as a necessary interim measure.

Why ship highly radioactiv­e waste a thousand miles to the east when it could be moved just a few miles? San Onofre’s wastes can be transferre­d out of the tsunami zone, away from the earthquake faults, across the 5 Freeway, further inland and to higher ground. By moving the dangerous nuclear fuel rods into the heart of Camp Pendleton, there would be the added bonus of many thousands of U.S. Marines to help guard it.

The push to turn the New Mexico-Texas borderland­s into a nuclear wasteland is an environmen­tal injustice. The large Hispanic population already suffers significan­t pollution from oil drilling, natural gas fracking, uranium enrichment and “low-level” radioactiv­e waste disposal. Kevin Kamps

Takoma Park, Md. The writer monitors radioactiv­e waste for the group Beyond Nuclear.

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