Beyond Nuclear's 19th set of public comments, re: Docket ID NRC-2018-0052, NRC's Holtec/ELEA CISF DEIS -- Risks of “Routine” or “Incident-Free” Shipments Nonetheless Being Like “Mobile X-ray Machines That Can’t Be Turned Off,” and Risks of Externally Contaminated Shipments
September 3, 2020
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Dear NRC Staff,

This is my 19th set of public comments in this proceeding.

I submit these comments on behalf of our members and supporters, not only in New Mexico, near the targeted Holtec/ELEA Laguna Gatuna site, but across New Mexico, and the rest of the country, along road, rail, and waterway routes that would be used for high risk, highly radioactive waste shipments to Holtec's CISF, as well as to Yucca Mountain, Nevada, on Western Shoshone land -- bogusly assumed by Holtec, as well as NRC, to someday become a permanent disposal repository.

The following subject matter has gotten little to no attention in NRC's Holtec CISF DEIS, a far cry from NEPA's legally binding "hard look" requiremet.

 

Risks of  “Routine” or “Incident-Free” Shipments Nonetheless Being Like “Mobile X-ray Machines That Can’t Be Turned Off,” and Risks of Externally Contaminated Shipments

Even “routine” or “incident-free” shipments of irradiated nuclear fuel carry health risks to workers and innocent passers by. This is because it would take so much radiation shielding to completely hold in the gamma and neutron radiation, being emitted by the highly radioactive waste, that the shipments would be too heavy to move economically. So NRC has compromised, and “allows” for or “permits” a certain amount of hazardous gamma and neutron radiation to stream out of the shipping container.

NRC’s regulations allow for up to 10 millirem per hour (mR/hr) of gamma and/or neutron radiation to be emitted, about six feet (two meters, 6.6 feet) away from a shipping cask’s exterior surface. That’s about one to two chest X-rays worth of gamma and neutron radiation, per hour of exposure.

Since the radiation dissipates with the square root of the distance, this means that NRC’s regulations “allow” for up to 200 mR/hr, at the surface of the cask’s exterior. That’s 20 to 40 chest X-rays worth of gamma and neutron radiation, per hour, which NRC “allows” to stream out, right at the cask’s surface.

NRC has done a cost-benefit analysis – the cost, to human health; the benefit, to the nuclear power industry’s bottom line – and deemed these exposure levels “acceptable” or “permissible.” (“Permissible” or “acceptable” should never be confused with “safe” or “harmless” – exposures to 200 mR/hr, or even 10 mR/hr, still carry health risks. After all, any level of exposure to hazardous ionizing radiation, no matter how small the dose, has long been confirmed to cause cancer, and other maladies. For more information, see: <https://web.archive.org/web/20160325141005/http://www.nirs.org/press/06-30-2005/1>)

The humans actually harmed by these exposures to hazardous radioactivity – related to the industry’s NRC-approved, unnecessary shipments, for example – might beg to differ! But of course, any negative health impacts associated with irradiated nuclear fuel shipments will not be closely tracked (or tracked at all) by NRC, or any other government agency for that matter. NRC and industry almost always downplay the health risks, and would almost certainly deny any connection between such exposures and negative health outcomes.

Six feet away could affect a person standing beside a train track, as the train goes by. Some real world examples of this situation include the Takoma Metro Station near Takoma Park, Maryland – the Red Line Metro Station platform is right beside the CSX railway, which is targeted for trains to haul irradiated nuclear fuel from the Calvert Cliffs, MD and North Anna, VA nuclear power plants, such as bound for Holtec's proposed CISF in NM.

Although further than six feet away, residences located immediately adjacent to these same CSX rail lines in Tacoma, D.C. mean that those living there could well be exposed to gamma and neutron radiation, although at a lower dose rate (again, the dose rate decreases inversely with the square root of the distance). However, residents can be expected to be present in their homes a lot more often than commuters standing on a Metro platform – including during sleep hours, when trains carrying irradiated nuclear fuel could still go by. And of course, residents along these tracks, would also be commuters standing on the platform, leading to multiple exposures in their daily (and nightly) lives, for years or even decades on end, during a Holtec CISF shipping campaign.

Trains pausing next to commuter platforms or residences will prolong and exacerbate these hazardous and potentially injurious exposures. Paused trains – even ones carrying hazardous cargoes like highly radioactive waste – are commonplace in the U.S. Pauses can sometimes last a long time. Lead automobiles (the ones nearest the tracks) stuck by paused trains at railroad crossings could mean the occupants of those vehicles are exposed to prolonged dose of intense gamma and neutron radiation at such a close range distance. Even a rolling train car would emit a certain dose as it passed by, to lead car occupants stopped nearest the tracks.

Similar situations will arise across the U.S. Innocent passers by, whose daily lives bring them in close proximity to railways, waterways (barges), or roadways (heavy-haul trucks) that would be used to ship irradiated nuclear fuel, mean that ordinary people would be exposed to hazardous gamma and neutron radiation in some amount greater than zero – perhaps repeatedly, over the course of years, or even decades, during a Holtec CISF shipping campaign.

The 200 mR/hr “acceptable” dose rate at the surface of shipping casks would most likely impact workers – locomotive engineers, railway workers, inspectors, security guards, police, firefighters, emergency responders, etc.

However, when, in 2003, the Big Rock Point reactor pressure vessel (albeit so-called “low” level radioactive waste, it still serves as a cautionary tale) was shipped by heavy-haul truck into Gaylord, Michigan to be loaded onto a train, for its shipment by rail to Barnwell, South Carolina, to be buried in a leaking ditch, neither the nuclear utility, Consumers Power, nor the NRC (nor any other federal or state agency), nor local law enforcement, created a security or safety or health perimeter around the shipping container. As if it were a parade, onlookers were allowed to simply approach the shipping container, walk right up to it, and even touch it. In fact, a parade would probably have had better health, safety, and security precautions in place! (See 2003 written entries, as well as a photo, about this and other incidents that occurred during this single shipment, posted online at: <https://web.archive.org/web/20151211005008/http://www.nirs.org/radwaste/hlwtransport/mobilechernobyl.htm>). Holtec's CISF would involve up to 10,000 in-bound irradiated nuclear fuel shipments into the NM de facto permanent, surface storage, parking lot dump; and at least an equal number out, if the waste ever were to leave. (Holtec and NRC both erroneously simply assume Yucca Mountain, Nevada -- Western Shoshone land, by treaty right -- will be the permanent burial site.)

However, as expert witness Bob Alvarez has testified on behalf of CISF opponents in the NRC ASLB's Holtec proceeding, the 10,000 storage canisters could be subdivided into as many as 80,000 smaller diameter TADs (Transport, Aging, and Disposal canisters), for the out-bound shipment from the Holtec CISF in NM, to the falsely assumed dump-site at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. This would mean 80,000 canister shipments, each one "allowed" or "permitted" to emit 10mR/hr at a distance of 6.6 feet away, or up to 200 mR/hr at the canister overpack's surface.

Likewise, Bob Halstead, several years ago, was able to guide a camera crew deep into the heart of a rail yard, just off downtown Chicago, that would be used to temporarily store (albeit, “temporarily” could last for days) train cars holding irradiated nuclear fuel. Security was nowhere to be seen. (Halstead, then long serving as transport consultant to the State of Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects, later long served as the agency’s director, the position from which he recently retired.)

Similarly, Rick Hind of Greenpeace U.S.A. guided a Wall Street Journal reporter deep into the heart of underground train tunnels under Washington, D.C. The graffiti and art on the walls showed clearly that the tunnels are frequented by human beings. (Hind was showing the reporter how insecure such tunnels, even in the nation’s capital, are to potential security risks, even as hazardous train cargoes – including chlorine shipments, and perhaps someday soon, irradiated nuclear fuel – pass by.)

In these ways, that 200 mR/hr “permissible” dose rate could impact not only workers, but even members of the public -- such as graffiti artists in Washington, D.C.'s train tunnels!

In this sense, even “routine” or “incident-free” shipments of irradiated nuclear fuel can be considered as similar to mobile X-ray machines that can’t be turned off, a phrase describing the concept first expressed by Lauren Olson, a supporter of NIRS (Nuclear Information and Resource Service).

To make matters worse, there have been large numbers of shipments, externally contaminated with radioactivity, making their actual dose rates much higher – and thus more hazardous – in serious violation of the already compromised “permissible” or “acceptable” levels.

Areva – now renamed Orano, and a key partner in the ISP CISF proposal targeted at WCS, TX, just 40 miles or so from Holtec's CISF – at its home base in France, experienced just such a plague or epidemic of externally contaminated shipments. A full 25% to 33% of Areva’s irradiated nuclear fuel shipments, into its La Hague reprocessing facility, were externally contaminated, for years on end, above “permissible” levels. This amounted to many hundreds of individual shipments, contaminated above “permissible” levels, over the course of several years. On average, the shipments were giving off radiation dose rates 500 times the “permissible” level; in one instance, a shipment was emitting radiation 3,300 times the “acceptable” level.

Environmental watchdogs and journalists revealed this contaminated shipment scandal. See the WISE-Paris write up, Transport Special - Plutonium Investigation n°6/7, posted at http://www.wise-paris.org/ under Bulletins.

But such externally contaminated shipments have happened in the U.S., as well. Halstead documented this in a report prepared for the Nevada State Agency for Nuclear Projects in 1996. It is entitled “Reported Incidents Involving Spent Nuclear Fuel Shipments, 1949 to Present.” 49 “surface contamination” incidents are documented. This report is posted online at: http://www.state.nv.us/nucwaste/trans/nucinc01.htm. Please see the full text of that report at the hyperlink provided.

Please address your woefully inadequate "hard look" under NEPA, re: this health- and environmentally-significant subject matter above. Thank you.

Article originally appeared on Beyond Nuclear (https://archive.beyondnuclear.org/).
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