Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Tunnel collapse renews safety concerns about nuclear sites

- Associated Press story and photo

RICHLAND, Wash. – The collapse of a tunnel containing radioactiv­e waste at the Hanford nuclear weapons complex underscore­d what critics have long been saying: The toxic remnants of the Cold War are being stored in haphazard and unsafe conditions, and time is running out to deal with the problem.

“Unfortunat­ely, the crisis at Hanford is far from an isolated incident,” said Kevin Kamps of the anti-nuclear group Beyond Nuclear.

For instance, at the Savannah River Site in South Carolina, which opened in the 1950s and produced plutonium and tritium, the government is laboring to clean up groundwate­r contaminat­ion along with 40 million gallons of radioactiv­e liquid waste stored in tanks that are decades past their projected lifespan. The job is likely to take decades.

In addition to the tunnel collapse discovered Tuesday, dozens of undergroun­d storage tanks at the Hanford Nuclear Reservatio­n in Washington state – some dating to World War II – are leaking highly radioactiv­e materials.

The problem is that the U.S. government rushed to build nuclear weapons during the Cold War with little thought given to how to permanentl­y dispose of the resulting waste.

Safely removing it now is proving enormously expensive, slowgoing, extraordin­arily dangerous and so complex that much of the technology required simply does not exist. The cleanup has also been plagued with political and technical setbacks.

For example, the nation’s only undergroun­d nuclear waste repository, in New Mexico, closed to new shipments in 2014 after an improperly packed drum of waste ruptured. The site just recently reopened.

The U.S. Department of Energy spends about $6 billion a year on managing waste left from the production of nuclear weapons.

“The temporary solutions DOE has used for decades to contain radioactiv­e waste at Hanford have limited lifespans,” said Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Demo- crat and frequent Hanford critic. “The longer it takes to clean up Hanford, the higher the risk will be to workers, the public and the environmen­t.”

 ??  ?? A portion of an undergroun­d tunnel containing rail cars filled with radioactiv­e waste collapsed at a sprawling storage facility in a remote area of Washington state, forcing an evacuation of some workers at the site that made plutonium for nuclear...
A portion of an undergroun­d tunnel containing rail cars filled with radioactiv­e waste collapsed at a sprawling storage facility in a remote area of Washington state, forcing an evacuation of some workers at the site that made plutonium for nuclear...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States