Yuma Sun

N.M. regulators worry about US plans to ship radioactiv­e waste back from Texas

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. – Federal officials gathered Tuesday in southern New Mexico to mark the 25th anniversar­y of the nation’s only undergroun­d repository for radioactiv­e waste resulting from decades of nuclear research and bomb making.

Carved out of an ancient salt formation about half a mile (800 meters) deep, the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant outside Carlsbad has taken in around 13,850 shipments from more than a dozen national laboratori­es and other sites since 1999.

The anniversar­y comes as New Mexico raises concerns about the federal government’s plans for repackagin­g and shipping to WIPP a collection of drums filled with the same kind of materials that prompted a radiation release at the repository in 2014.

That mishap contaminat­ed parts of the undergroun­d facility and forced an expensive, nearly three-year closure. It also delayed the federal government’s multibilli­on-dollar cleanup program and prompted policy changes at labs and other sites across the U.S.

Meanwhile, dozens of boxes containing drums of nuclear waste that were packed at the Los Alamos National Laboratory to be stored at WIPP were rerouted to Texas, where they’ve remained ever since at an above-ground holding site.

After years of pressure from Texas environmen­tal regulators, the U.S. Department of Energy announced last year that it would begin looking at ways to treat the waste so it could be safely transporte­d and disposed of at WIPP.

But the New Mexico Environmen­t Department is demanding more safety informatio­n, raising numerous concerns in letters to federal officials and the contractor that operates the New Mexico repository.

“Parking it in the desert of West Texas for 10 years and shipping it back does not constitute treatment,” New Mexico Environmen­t Secretary James Kenney told The Associated Press in an interview. “So that’s my most substantiv­e issue – that time does not treat hazardous waste. Treatment treats hazardous waste.”

The 2014 radiation release was caused by improper packaging of waste at Los Alamos. Investigat­ors determined that a runaway chemical reaction inside one drum resulted from the mixing of nitrate salts with organic kitty litter that was meant to keep the interior of the drum dry.

Kenney said there was an understand­ing following the breach that drums containing the same materials had the potential to react. He questioned how that risk could have changed since the character and compositio­n of the waste remains the same.

Scientists at Sandia National Laboratori­es in Albuquerqu­e were contracted by the DOE to study the issue. They published a report in November stating that the federal government’s plan to repackage the waste with an insulating layer of air-filled glass micro-bubbles would offer “additional thermal protection.”

The study also noted that ongoing monitoring suggests that the temperatur­e of the drums is decreasing, indicating that the waste is becoming more stable.

 ?? SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN VIA AP ?? A SIGN marks the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant on March 6, 2014, near Carlsbad, N.M.
SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN VIA AP A SIGN marks the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant on March 6, 2014, near Carlsbad, N.M.

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