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Centralized Storage

With the scientifically unsound proposed Yucca Mountain radioactive waste dump now canceled, the danger of "interim" storage threatens. This means that radioactive waste could be "temporarily" parked in open air lots, vulnerable to accident and attack, while a new repository site is sought.

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Entries by admin (702)

Thursday
Oct082020

Beyond Nuclear's 7th set of public comments, re: Docket ID NRC-2016-0231, and report number NUREG-2239, NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS -- re: simply assuming Yucca Mountain, Nevada on Western Shoshone land, will be the permanent repository, is false, indefensible, and a violation of treaty obligations (that is, illegal)

Submitted via: <WCS_CISF_EIS@nrc.gov>

 

Dear NRC Staff,

We submit these comments on behalf of our members and supporters, not only in New Mexico and Texas, near the targeted ISP/WCS CISF site, but across both of these states, and the rest of the country, along road, rail, and waterway routes that would be used for high risk, highly radioactive waste shipments to ISP/WCS's CISF, as well as to Yucca Mountain, Nevada, on Western Shoshone land -- wrongly and illegally assumed by ISP/WCS, as well as by NRC, to someday (or some decade, or some century) become a permanent disposal repository.

The following subject matter has gotten little to no attention in NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS, a far cry from NEPA's legally binding "hard look" requirement: simply assuming Yucca Mountain, Nevada on Western Shoshone land, will be the permanent repository, is false, indefensible, and a violation of treaty obligations (that is, illegal).

ISP/WCS, and NRC, assume that the Yucca Mountain dump in Nevada, targeting Western Shoshone Indian land, will open, allowing re-export of irradiated nuclear fuel from Andrews County, west Texas, to Nevada for permanent disposal. It's how ISP/WCS and NRC attempt to justify calling the CISF "interim" or temporary. But the Yucca dump should not, and will not, happen, for a long list of reasons. This includes the Yucca dump's illegality (it would violate the Treaty of Ruby Valley of 1863, signed by the U.S. government with the Western Shoshone Indians), as well as the environmental injustice of opening the national high-level radioactive waste dump in the same state that "hosted" (unwillingly) full-scale nuclear weapons testing for several decades on end (1951 to 1992), resulting in disastrous radioactive fallout and health damage downwind. But it also includes Yucca's flagrant scientific unsuitability, as well as the fact that more than a thousand environmental groups have been actively opposing the scheme for 33 years. (A partial listing of the large number of these groups are listed below.) And it also includes the fact that the State of Nevada, and the Western Shoshone, have expressed their non-consent to the Yucca Mountain dump for several long decades now. They have done so most actively, as in resisting the Yucca dump scheme at every turn.

ISP/WCS and NRC are entirely unjustified in assuming the Yucca dump will open someday, or year, or decade, or century. In fact, NRC's doing so reveals its bias in the Yucca Mountain licensing proceeding, in which it is supposed to be a neutral safety regulator, only sitting in judgment of the Yucca site's capability of meeting regulations, not advocating for its opening even in the face of its clear unsuitability. For this reason, there is a very high risk that the ISP/WCS CISF in Andrews County, west Texas -- just a few miles from Eunice, New Mexico -- will become de facto permanent surface storage, a parking lot dump, risking catastrophic releases of hazardous radioactivity directly into the environment when containers ultimately fail over a long enough period of time, due to loss of institutional control.

Please see a partial listing of (around 750, out of more than 1,000+, organizations opposed to the Yucca Mountain, NV dump proposal scheme:

 

Please address your woefully inadequate "hard look" under NEPA, re: this health-, safety-, and environmentally-significant, as well as legally-binding, subject matter above.

And please acknowledge your receipt of these comments, and confirm their inclusion as official public comments in the record of this docket.

Thank you.

Sincerely,

Kay Drey, President, Board of Directors, Beyond Nuclear

and

Kevin Kamps, Radioactive Waste Specialist, Beyond Nuclear

Thursday
Oct082020

COMMENT: NRC PUBLIC MEETINGS -- 2 MTGS. LEFT: Unjust TX nuke waste dump

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Draft Environmental Impact Statement public comment proceeding for Interim Storage Partners' Consolidated Interim Storage Facility at Waste Control Specialists in Texas has only two call-in sessions left, today and a week from today.

The meetings will be held Thursday, October 8, 6pm; and Thursday, October 15, 11am (all times Eastern). Here are the call-in numbers: (888) 989-9268; Pass Code 5300047. Press *1 [star-one] as soon as you get through, or at any point, to get in line to submit verbal comments for 3-5 minutes. See NRC's slideshow presentation here. See comprehensive action alert here. Help stop an environmentally unjust high-level nuke waste dump & thousands of Mobile Chernobyls nationwide!
Wednesday
Oct072020

Urgent EJ Action Alert: Thurs., Oct. 8th, 6pm Eastern; & Thurs., Oct. 15th, 11am Eastern -- Just 2 chances left, to Call in/Say NO! to High-Level Radioactive Waste Dump in TX and thousands of high-risk shipments

Dear Friends and Colleagues,
Thanks to all those who have submitted verbal comments during the Oct. 1 and Oct. 6 NRC call-in sessions thus far.
Please still take more action -- call in and submit verbal comments -- this Thursday/tomorrow (Oct. 8), and/or a week from Thursday/tomorrow (Oct. 15).
See below for the details. Note that the start times vary, 6pm Eastern tomorrow, and 11am Eastern a week from tomorrow.
Please spread the word. Thank you.
---Kevin Kamps, Beyond Nuclear & Don't Waste Michigan

 

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Diane D'Arrigo <dianed@nirs.org>
Date: Mon, Oct 5, 2020 at 11:59 AM
Subject: Oct 8,15th--2 chances to Call in/ Say NO to Hi Level Nuclear Waste Dump in TX and thousands of shipments
To: Diane D'Arrigo <dianed@nirs.org>, Karen Hadden <karendhadden@gmail.com>

 

 
CALL IN TO COMMENT ON THE Nuclear Regulatory Commission draft Environmental Impact Statement for 

Supposedly "Interim" Nuclear Waste Dump and Massive Transport Across the US for Decades

OCTOBER  8th, 15th

We have 2 chances left to let the Nuclear Regulatory Commission know we don't want nuclear waste moved across the country for 40 years (or centuries, or de facto permanently) to a supposedly temporary site! They refuse to wait until after COVID 19 crisis and hold in-person meetings in TX or along the routes to get the waste there.

Please call in on Oct. 8 and/or 15th. TEXANS are asking for AS MANY AS POSSIBLE TO CALL IN 

Please Call in to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's "Public Meeting" on the 
draft Environmental Impact Statement for the proposed HIGH LEVEL NUCLEAR WASTE SITE in Andrews TX 

Talking points below
Link to 10/8 meeting details/notice: https://www.nrc.gov/pmns/mtg?do=details&Code=20201100 
Link to 10/15 meeting details/notice: https://www.nrc.gov/pmns/mtg?do=details&Code=20201101
Link to Draft Environmental Impact Statement on which we are commenting https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML2012/ML20122A220.pdf
Link to the Power Point NRC will use in ENGLISH--https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML2027/ML20274A035.pdf
Lin to the Power Point en Espanol https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML2027/ML20274A036.pdf 
If you access the Power Point you will not need to connect by computer to the WEBEX webinar site, which can be confusing--it requires you to sign in twice and once you are in you can see the Power Point and follow along changing the slides yourself. So if you download the power point in advance and look at it during the oral presentation by NRC on the phone you don't have to connect via WEB EX or computer. 

CALL IN NUMBER  (888) 989-9268 Pass Code 5300047#   TO get in line to speak PRESS *1 [star-one] and give your name.

The first 30-40 minutes will be a power point presentation by NRC describing that all environmental impacts are small or moderate 
[even though it is from bringing in and storing the majority of the radioactivity in the nuclear power and weapons complex...they won't be mentioning that it's such an enormous part of the nuclear waste generated in the country since the dawn of the nuclear age but they will tell us it can't possibly have a Large Impact]
 
Then public comments are usually 3-4 minutes each, but can go up to 5 minutes or longer.

All previous NRC calls have had people who want to speak Push *1 [star-one] to get in the queue. You can do this at any time-the sooner you do it the sooner you get to speak, at least in theory.
The 2 meetings still remaining are:
THURS OCT 8 from 5-8pm Central Time/6-9pm Eastern Time
THURS OCT 15 from 10am-1pm Central Time/11am-2pm Eastern Time

(888) 989-9268 Pass Code 5300047#   TO get in line to speak PRESS *1 [star-one]

Details on each session including WEB EX connection info are at www.nonuclearwaste.org
[It is actually much easier to simply advance the slides of the slideshow oneself, while listening to the audio portion of slideshow presentation via telephone connection. Here are links to the slideshow presentation:

Regarding the presentation slides the NRC staff will use in this Thursday’s meeting, the slides are available in ADAMS and through the NRC’s public website for its review of the Interim Storage Partners license application.  You can find them using these links: in ADAMS and the NRC public website.]

TALKING POINTS

Waste Control Specialists/ Interim Storage Partners propose bring in 40,000 Metric Tonnes of irradiated ('spent") nuclear fuel- the hottest waste in the nuclear power and weapons fuel chain....this is the waste from the cores of nuclear power reactors which can give a lethal dose unshielded in minutes and which will stay dangerous for more than 1 million years. The Draft Environmental Impact State for this proposal is here

Illegal-- CIS or Consolidated "Interim" Storage Facilities are illegal under federal law. Under the law, no "interim" or "temporary" storage site is allowed unless there is a final repository is operating...because the site would become de-facto permanent although not designed or licensed for permanent isolation of the waste

EJ- Sending the most deadly waste in the country to communities of color clearly violates Environmental Justice Principles. This region is largely Hispanic. Public Citizen and Lone Star Legal Aid did analyses showing that the people in the region would be disproportionately impacted. 
Transport across the country is through poorer communities, often communities of color so the movement of the waste for decades puts them at greater risk--and all of us who travel on roads, rails and waterways and live and work near transport corridors are being put at risk with no input. Requests for public meetings along the routes have been rejected so the project can move quickly despite the COVID 19 crisis hitting the whole country and poorer and people of color more so.

Synergistic effects of other facilities and industries  The proposed site is next 2 other operating nuclear facilities--Waste Control Specialists is a burial ground for nuclear waste and LES Urenco enriches uranium using dangerous chemicals. It is also in the Permian Basin home to the largest deposits of oil and gas in North America thus home to oil and gas drilling, fracking and processing.
 
Effect on Water The TCEQ (TX Commission on Environmental Quality) technical team evaluating the neighboring waste site Waste Control Specialists Texas (WCS) unanimously recommended against the license and TO NOT TO PUT NUCLEAR WASTE THERE BECAUSE THE WATER RESOURCES WOULD NOT BE PROTECTED. The technical experts were ignored and the license granted for political reasons under Governor Bush. This is the SAME SITE targeted for HIGH LEVEL WASTE from nuclear power across the country.  The threat to the water cannot be "SMALL" or "MODERATE."
NO DTF Dry Transfer Facility- There is no shielded facility to repackage damaged fuel or containers-- without a fuel pool, the only other option is a Dry Transfer Facility. There is no plan to build a Dry Transfer Facility, or a fuel pool. How can NRC believe there will never be a need to recontainerize aging nuclear fuel that is in aging containers, especially when they are out in the open exposed to severe heat, cold, hail, flooding, tornados, earthquakes, possible wildfires and other extremes.


The ISP Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) is Misleading, Incomplete and Denies or Ignores Reality. It:

--Fails to assess the additional risk to the country that one or more CIS sites will cause. Not all waste will be moved from all nuclear power reactors sites to ISP/WCS (or to the Holtec site proposed nearby) thus the CIS sites are ADDITIONAL sites requiring massive transport risks, with no guarantee that the sites sending the waste will really be cleaned up.

--Incorrectly assumes only 40 years of storage even though the waste could be at the site far longer than that, potentially indefinitely. The DEIS incorrectly assumes there will be a permanent repository elsewhere, despite the only proposed permanent repository at Yucca Mountain having been rightly cancelled in 2010. The ISP/WCS application does not provide protections for long term or permanent isolation and the DEIS ignores this. The more-likely reality—i.e., that the waste will be at the site for much longer than the 40-year license period—is not addressed in the DEIS. This puts the air, water, soil and ecosystem at long term risk from radioactivity.

--Incorrectly assumes all waste and containers that arrive will be intact and waste will not need to be re-containerized for the decades it will remain at the WCS ISP site. The DEIS fails to address what happens when waste must be repackaged. The application and the DEIS should require a wet or dry transfer facility to shield the intensely radioactivity so it can be repaired or transferred to new containers. Workers, passers-by and the environs could receive massive, potentially lethal, gamma doses in that scenario--yet no assessment is provided in the DEIS.

--Fails to address the environmental impacts of returning damaged containers of high-level radioactive waste if they arrive in unacceptable condition. ISP’s plan is to "return to sender" with no analysis of the logically higher risk of transporting failed fuel and/or containers twice.

--Ignores potential higher risks from damaged fuel and high burnup fuel. 

--Fails to acknowledge or respect the institutional racism in selecting the ISP WCS site in West Texas. 

-- Fails to acknowledge impacts on all transport routes to the site. I call on NRC to hold in-person DEIS meetings all along the potential routes and to extend the comment period until six months after the COVID-19 crisis ends.

Talking Points / Risks / Key issues   from SEED COALITION
  • HALT LICENSING NOW! 
  • This deadly waste shouldn’t be shipped across the country to be dumped in the Southwest for decades... perhaps forever.
  • Fails to get the waste into a permanent repository
  • Could hamper efforts to develop less risky storage systems and permanent disposal 
  • This waste must be isolated from living things for a million years. Consolidated Interim Storage is a band-aid approach that makes matters worse, not better. 
  • It would be massive environmental injustice 
  • Health and safety risks from potential contamination 
  • Transportation risks - accidents, leaks, sabotage, and even routine transport emissions, which the NRC calls "less than a chest X-ray" 
  • Impacts to water, air, soil - WCS site is near the Ogallala Aquifer - the nation's largest aquifer 
  • Financial risks - could cost billions of dollars to remediate contamination 
  • Lack of a dry cask transfer facility - so there would be no way to repackage cracked or leaking canisters
  • The region has temperature extremes, wildfires, intense winds, flooding - not safe for radioactive waste.
  • Earthquakes and radioactive waste don't mix
  • Impacts to businesses - the Permian Basin region is the largest oil-producing region in the world. 
  • Heavy trains, train traffic, lack of safety training and equipment, Lack of full-time paid fire departments in many areas. 
  • Consolidated Interim Storage is ILLEGAL under the Nuclear Waste Policy Act.... NRC has no business processing this license application by Waste Control Specialists (WCS) / Interim Storage Partners (ISP) for Texas - or the Holtec application for nearby New Mexico. 
  • Resolutions opposing nuclear waste dumping and transport have been passed by Dallas, Bexar, Nueces, Midland and El Paso Counties, and the cities of San Antonio, Midland and Denton, plus the Midland Chamber of Commerce. This represents the voices of 5.4 million Texans. 
  • These inadequate webinars make a mockery of "public meetings". The NRC must schedule real, in-person public meetings after Covid risks are over - in Dallas/Ft. Worth, Houston, San Antonio, El Paso, Midland and Andrews in Texas and along transport routes across the country. The comment period should remain open until this is accomplished.   
More talking points can be found at 

THANKS-- any questions please contact
Diane D'Arrigo
NIRS
or 
Karen Hadden
SEED Coalition
or
Kevin Kamps
Beyond Nuclear 
Tuesday
Oct062020

Tues., Oct. 6th; Thurs., Oct. 8th; & Thurs., Oct. 15th--3 chances to Call in/Say NO! to High-Level Radioactive Waste Dump in TX and thousands of high-risk shipments

Please take action -- call in and submit verbal comments -- tomorrow, this Thursday, and/or a week from Thursday.
See below for the details. Note that times vary, per particular call-in public comment meeting.
Please spread the word. Thank you.
---Kevin Kamps, Beyond Nuclear & Don't Waste Michigan

 

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Diane D'Arrigo <dianed@nirs.org>
Date: Mon, Oct 5, 2020 at 11:59 AM
Subject: Oct 6,8,15th--3 chances to Call in/ Say NO to Hi Level Nuclear Waste Dump in TX and thousands of shipments
To: Diane D'Arrigo <dianed@nirs.org>, Karen Hadden <karendhadden@gmail.com>



 
CALL IN TO COMMENT ON THE Nuclear Regulatory Commission draft Environmental Impact Statement for 

Supposedly "Interim" Nuclear Waste Dump and Massive Transport Across the US for Decades

OCTOBER  6, 8, 15th

We have 3 Chances left to let the Nuclear Regulatory Commission know we don't want nuclear waste moved across the country for 40 years to a supposedly temporary site! They refuse to wait until after COVID 19 crisis and hold in-person meetings in TX or along the routes to get the waste there.

Please call in on Oct 1, 6, 8 and/or 15th. TEXANS are asking for AS MANY AS POSSIBLE TO CALL IN 

Please Call in to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's "Public Meeting" on the 
draft Environmental Impact Statement for the proposed HIGH LEVEL NUCLEAR WASTE SITE in Andrews TX 

Talking points below
Link to Draft Environmental Impact Statement on which we are commenting https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML2012/ML20122A220.pdf
Link to the Power Point NRC will use in ENGLISH--https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML2027/ML20274A035.pdf
Lin to the Power Point en Espanol https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML2027/ML20274A036.pdf 
If you access the Power Point you will not need to connect by computer to the WEBEX webinar site, which can be confusing--it requires you to sign in twice and once you are in you can see the Power Point and follow along changing the slides yourself. So if you download the power point in advance and look at it during the oral presentation by NRC on the phone you don't have to connect via WEB EX or computer. 
CALL IN NUMBER  (888) 989-9268 Pass Code 5300047#   TO get in line to speak PRESS *1 and give your name.

The first 30-40 minutes will be a power point presentation by NRC describing that all environmental impacts are small or moderate 
[even though it is from bringing in and storing the majority of the radioactivity in the nuclear power and weapons complex...
they won't be mentioning that it's such an enormous part of the nuclear waste generated in the country since the dawn of the nuclear age 
but they will tell us it can't possibly have a Large Impact]
[Here are links to the NRC slideshow presentation:

Regarding the presentation slides the NRC staff will use in this Thursday’s meeting, the slides are available in ADAMS and through the NRC’s public website for its review of the Interim Storage Partners license application.  You can find them using these links: in ADAMS and the NRC public website.]
 
Then public comments are usually 3-4 minutes each, but can go up to 5 minutes
All previous NRC calls have had people who want to speak Push *1 to get in the queue. You can do this at any time-the sooner you do it the sooner you get to speak at least in theory.
The 3 meetings are
THURS OCT 1 from 5-8 Central Time
TUES OCT 6 from 1-4pm Central Time/2-5pm Eastern Time
THURS OCT 8 from 5-8pm Central Time/6-9pm Eastern Time
THURS OCT 15 from 10am-1pm Central Time/11am-2pm Eastern Time

(888) 989-9268 Pass Code 5300047#   TO get in line to speak PRESS *1 [star-one]
Details on each session including WEB EX connection info are at www.nonuclearwaste.org
[It is actually much easier to simply advance the slides of the slideshow oneself, while listening to the audio portion of slideshow presentation via telephone connection. Here are links to the slideshow presentation:

Regarding the presentation slides the NRC staff will use in this Thursday’s meeting, the slides are available in ADAMS and through the NRC’s public website for its review of the Interim Storage Partners license application.  You can find them using these links: in ADAMS and the NRC public website.]

TALKING POINTS
Waste Control Specialists/ Interim Storage Partners propose bring in 40,000 Metric Tonnes of irradiated ('spent") nuclear fuel- the hottest waste in the nuclear power and weapons fuel chain....this is the waste from the cores of nuclear power reactors which can give a lethal dose unshielded in minutes and which will stay dangerous for more than 1 million years. The Draft Environmental Impact State for this proposal is here

Illegal-- CIS or Consolidated "Interim" Storage Facilities are illegal under federal law. Under the law, no "interim" or "temporary" storage site is allowed unless there is a final repository is operating...because the site would become de-facto permanent although not designed or licensed for permanent isolation of the waste

EJ- Sending the most deadly waste in the country to communities of color clearly violates Environmental Justice Principles. This region is largely Hispanic. Public Citizen and Lone Star Legal Aid did analyses showing that the people in the region would be disproportionately impacted. 
Transport across the country is through poorer communities, often communities of color so the movement of the waste for decades puts them at greater risk--and all of us who travel on roads, rails and waterways and live and work near transport corridors are being put at risk with no input. Requests for public meetings along the routes have been rejected so the project can move quickly despite the COVID 19 crisis hitting the whole country and poorer and people of color more so.

Synergistic effects of other facilities and industries  The proposed site is next 2 other operating nuclear facilities--Waste Control Specialists is a burial ground for nuclear waste and LES Urenco enriches uranium using dangerous chemicals. It is also in the Permian Basin home to the largest deposits of oil and gas in North America thus home to oil and gas drilling, fracking and processing. 
Effect on Water The TCEQ (TX Commission on Environmental Quality) technical team evaluating the neighboring waste site Waste Control Specialists Texas (WCS) unanimously recommended against the license and TO NOT TO PUT NUCLEAR WASTE THERE BECAUSE THE WATER RESOURCES WOULD NOT BE PROTECTED. The technical experts were ignored and the license granted for political reasons under Governor Bush. This is the SAME SITE targeted for HIGH LEVEL WASTE from nuclear power across the country.  The threat to the water cannot be "SMALL" or "MODERATE."
NO DTF Dry Transfer Facility- There is no shielded facility to repackage damaged fuel or containers-- without a fuel pool, the only other option is a Dry Transfer Facility. There is no plan to build a Dry Transfer Facility, or a fuel pool. How can NRC believe there will never be a need to recontainerize aging nuclear fuel that is in aging containers, especially when they are out in the open exposed to severe heat, cold, hail, flooding, tornados, earthquakes, possible wildfires and other extremes.


The ISP Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) is Misleading, Incomplete and Denies or Ignores Reality. It:

--Fails to assess the additional risk to the country that one or more CIS sites will cause. Not all waste will be moved from all nuclear power reactors sites to ISP/WCS (or to the Holtec site proposed nearby) thus the CIS sites are ADDITIONAL sites requiring massive transport risks, with no guarantee that the sites sending the waste will really be cleaned up.

--Incorrectly assumes only 40 years of storage even though the waste could be at the site far longer than that, potentially indefinitely. The DEIS incorrectly assumes there will be a permanent repository elsewhere, despite the only proposed permanent repository at Yucca Mountain having been rightly cancelled in 2010. The ISP/WCS application does not provide protections for long term or permanent isolation and the DEIS ignores this. The more-likely reality—i.e., that the waste will be at the site for much longer than the 40-year license period—is not addressed in the DEIS. This puts the air, water, soil and ecosystem at long term risk from radioactivity.

--Incorrectly assumes all waste and containers that arrive will be intact and waste will not need to be re-containerized for the decades it will remain at the WCS ISP site. The DEIS fails to address what happens when waste must be repackaged. The application and the DEIS should require a wet or dry transfer facility to shield the intensely radioactivity so it can be repaired or transferred to new containers. Workers, passers-by and the environs could receive massive, potentially lethal, gamma doses in that scenario--yet no assessment is provided in the DEIS.

--Fails to address the environmental impacts of returning damaged containers of high-level radioactive waste if they arrive in unacceptable condition. ISP’s plan is to "return to sender" with no analysis of the logically higher risk of transporting failed fuel and/or containers twice.

--Ignores potential higher risks from damaged fuel and high burnup fuel. 

--Fails to acknowledge or respect the institutional racism in selecting the ISP WCS site in West Texas. 

-- Fails to acknowledge impacts on all transport routes to the site. I call on NRC to hold in-person DEIS meetings all along the potential routes and to extend the comment period until six months after the COVID-19 crisis ends.

Talking Points / Risks / Key issues   from SEED COALITION
  • HALT LICENSING NOW! 
  • This deadly waste shouldn’t be shipped across the country to be dumped in the Southwest for decades... perhaps forever.
  • Fails to get the waste into a permanent repository
  • Could hamper efforts to develop less risky storage systems and permanent disposal 
  • This waste must be isolated from living things for a million years. Consolidated Interim Storage is a band-aid approach that makes matters worse, not better. 
  • It would be massive environmental injustice 
  • Health and safety risks from potential contamination 
  • Transportation risks - accidents, leaks, sabotage, and even routine transport emissions, which the NRC calls "less than a chest X-ray" 
  • Impacts to water, air, soil - WCS site is near the Ogallala Aquifer - the nation's largest aquifer 
  • Financial risks - could cost billions of dollars to remediate contamination 
  • Lack of a dry cask transfer facility - so there would be no way to repackage cracked or leaking canisters
  • The region has temperature extremes, wildfires, intense winds, flooding - not safe for radioactive waste.
  • Earthquakes and radioactive waste don't mix
  • Impacts to businesses - the Permian Basin region is the largest oil-producing region in the world. 
  • Heavy trains, train traffic, lack of safety training and equipment, Lack of full-time paid fire departments in many areas. 
  • Consolidated Interim Storage is ILLEGAL under the Nuclear Waste Policy Act.... NRC has no business processing this license application by Waste Control Specialists (WCS) / Interim Storage Partners (ISP) for Texas - or the Holtec application for nearby New Mexico. 
  • Resolutions opposing nuclear waste dumping and transport have been passed by Dallas, Bexar, Nueces, Midland and El Paso Counties, and the cities of San Antonio, Midland and Denton, plus the Midland Chamber of Commerce. This represents the voices of 5.4 million Texans. 
  • These inadequate webinars make a mockery of "public meetings". The NRC must schedule real, in-person public meetings after Covid risks are over - in Dallas/Ft. Worth, Houston, San Antonio, El Paso, Midland and Andrews in Texas and along transport routes across the country. The comment period should remain open until this is accomplished.   
More talking points can be found at 
THANKS-- any questions please contact
Diane D'Arrigo
NIRS
or 
Karen Hadden
SEED Coalition
or Kevin Kamps
Beyond Nuclear 
Tuesday
Oct062020

Beyond Nuclear's 6th set of public comments, on NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS, re: Docket ID NRC-2016-0231, and report number NUREG-2239 -- re: NRC Staff's internal contradictions

Submitted via: <WCS_CISF_EIS@nrc.gov>

Dear NRC Staff,

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

The following subject matter has gotten little to no attention in NRC's ISP/WCS CISF DEIS, a far cry from NEPA's legally binding "hard look" requirement: NRC Staff's internal contradictions.

As we have commented previously in this public comment proceeding, there is tremendous overlap between the Holtec/ELEA CISF, NM and the ISP/WCS CISF, TX schemes. This set of comments has to do with just such a similarity, touching on NRC's violation of federal laws (such as the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as Amended, as well as the Administrative Procedure Act) in both proceedings, Holtec/ELEA's CISF in NM, as well as ISP/WCS's CISF in TX.

The following paragraph appears on Page 5-5 of NRC's ISP/WCS DEIS (line number markers, #25 to 44, included):

In January 2015, TCEQ sent a letter to the NRC with questions concerning the State’s authority 25 to license a disposal cell for GTCC, GTCC-like, and transuranic waste. The Commission began 26 considering the issue and undertook actions such as development of a regulatory basis, 27 evaluation of technical issues, and conducting stakeholder engagement activities. In 28 February 2016, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) issued a final EIS titled, “Final 29 Environmental Impact Statement for the Disposal of Greater-Than-Class C (GTCC) Low-Level 30 Radioactive Waste and GTCC-Like Waste.” The document evaluated disposition paths for 31 GTCC, and the Final EIS identified the preferred alternative as the WIPP geological repository 32 and/or land disposal at generic commercial facilities. In October 2018, DOE issued an 33 environmental assessment (EA) that provides a site-specific analysis of the potential 34 environmental impacts of disposing the entire inventory – 12,000 m3 [423,776 ft3] – of GTCC 35 LLRW and GTCC-like waste at WCS (DOE, 2018a). However, DOE’s publication of these 36 documents is not a decision on GTCC LLRW disposal. Under the Energy Policy Act of 2005,37 both DOE and Congress would require additional actions. The NRC’s actions regarding review 38 of the TCEQ request and determinations regarding GTCC are ongoing. The NRC reviewed the 39 DOE’s Final EIS and EA and developed a draft regulatory basis for GTCC and transuranic 40 waste disposal (NRC, 2019c). Thus, because disposal of GTCC at WCS would require 41 completion of the regulatory basis for GTCC and transuranic waste and actions by DOE and 42 Congress, a detailed evaluation of this reasonably foreseeable future action is not feasible at 43 this time but is included here for completeness. 44 [emphasis added]

As clearly spelled out in comments we previously submitted in the Holtec/ELEA CISF DEIS public comment proceeding (included below), this paragraph above exposes a stark, glaring internal contradiction at NRC.

As stated below in our Holtec/ELEA CISF DEIS public comments, but equally applicable here as ISP/WCS CISF public comments:

The NRC Staff has a glaring internal contradiction: it is willing to overlook this proposed Holtec/ELEA CISF's violation of the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as Amended (which prohibits the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) from taking ownership of commercial irradiated nuclear fuel at an interim site in the absence of an open permanent repository), while citing in the DEIS that the lack of a legally-binding decision by DOE and Congress re: highly radioactive Greater-Than-Class-C "low-level" radioactive waste, means NRC will choose to refrain from reviewing that aspect of the proposal any further at this time. NRC is talking out both sides of its mouth, to the benefit of license applicant Holtec, and to the disadvantage of the public interest! And the double standard re: rule of law is also outrageous NRC behavior. NRC must obey, and not violate, all federal laws, including the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as Amended. To violate that law is itself a violation of the Administrative Procedure Act.

Mindy Goldstein and Diane Curran, Beyond Nuclear's legal counsel in its opposition to the Holtec International consolidated interim storage facility for highly radioactive irradiated nuclear fuel targeted at southeastern New Mexico, have submitted a letter to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commissioners regarding this matter. It addresses NRC Staff internal contradictions, as revealed in the NRC's March 2020 Draft Environmental Impact Statement, as compared to NRC Staff's assertions during the licensing proceeding, upon which the NRC Atomic Safety and Licensing Board relied when it ruled against Beyond Nuclear's intervention on May 7, 2019.

 

Again, as stated above, NRC's glaring internal contradiction has now also been revealed in its ISP/WCS CISF DEIS -- as documented at Page 5-5, above.

Although the italicized Beyond Nuclear comments, immediately above, were submitted as part of the Holtec/ELEA CISF DEIS proceeding, they are equally relevant here and now, in the ISP/WCS CISF DEIS public comment proceeding.

Beyond Nuclear is similarly opposed to the ISP/WCS CISF in TX, just as it is opposed to the Holtec/ELEA CISF in NM.

Mindy Goldstein and Diane Curran also serve as Beyond Nuclear's legal counsel in the ISP/WCS CISF case, just as they do in the Holtec/ELEA CISF case.

Beyond Nuclear's comments, in the Holtec/ELEA CISF DEIS public comment period, copied below, and Beyond Nuclear's communications to the NRC Commission, copied and linked below, equally apply to this ISP/WCS CISF DEIS public comment period proceeding and license application case.

NRC's glaring internal contradiction is as relevant in the ISP/WCS CISF, TX proceeding and case, as it is in the Holtec/ELEA CISF, NM proceeding and case.

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

And please acknowledge your receipt of these comments, and confirm their inclusion as official public comments in the record of this docket.

Thank you.

Sincerely,

Kay Drey, President, Board of Directors, Beyond Nuclear

and

Kevin Kamps, Radioactive Waste Specialist, Beyond Nuclear

 

Beyond Nuclear public comment #4, re: NRC's Holtec/ELEA CISF DEIS, Docket ID NRC-2018-0052 -- re: NRC Staff's internal contradictions

Submitted June 27, 2020, via: <Holtec-CISFEIS@nrc.gov>
Dear NRC Staff,

The NRC Staff has a glaring internal contradiction: it is willing to overlook this proposed Holtec/ELEA CISF's violation of the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as Amended (which prohibits the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) from taking ownership of commercial irradiated nuclear fuel at an interim site in the absence of an open permanent repository), while citing in the DEIS that the lack of a legally-binding decision by DOE and Congress re: highly radioactive Greater-Than-Class-C "low-level" radioactive waste, means NRC will choose to refrain from reviewing that aspect of the proposal any further at this time. NRC is talking out both sides of its mouth, to the benefit of license applicant Holtec, and to the disadvantage of the public interest! And the double standard re: rule of law is also outrageous NRC behavior. NRC must obey, and not violate, all federal laws, including the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as Amended. To violate that law is itself a violation of the Administrative Procedure Act.

Mindy Goldstein and Diane Curran, Beyond Nuclear's legal counsel in its opposition to the Holtec International consolidated interim storage facility for highly radioactive irradiated nuclear fuel targeted at southeastern New Mexico, have submitted a letter to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commissioners regarding this matter. It addresses NRC Staff internal contradictions, as revealed in the NRC's March 2020 Draft Environmental Impact Statement, as compared to NRC Staff's assertions during the licensing proceeding, upon which the NRC Atomic Safety and Licensing Board relied when it ruled against Beyond Nuclear's intervention on May 7, 2019.

Diane Curran is a Partner at Harmon, Curran, Spielberg + Eisenberg, LLP in Washington, D.C.

Mindy Goldstein Director of the Turner Environmental Law Clinic at Emory University School of Law in Atlanta, Georgia.

The letter, dated April 7, 2020, entitled "Re: Holtec International (HI-STORE Consolidated Interim Storage Facility), Docket No. 72-1051," was sent to all four then serving NRC Commissioners: Commissioner Kristine Svinicki, Chair; Commissioner Jeff Baran; Commissioner Annie Caputo; and Commissioner David A. Wright.

The text of the letter, as contained with brackets below, states:

[On behalf of Beyond Nuclear, Inc., we write to alert you of a recent statement by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (“NRC”) Staff in the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Holtec International’s License Application for a Consolidated Interim Storage Facility for Spent Nuclear Fuel and High Level Waste (NUREG-2237, March 2020) (“DEIS”), which bears on the legal issues now before you in this proceeding on appeal of LBP-19-04, 89 NRC __ (May 7, 2019).

In LBP-19-04, the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board (“ASLB”) stated:

             If Congress decides to amend the [Nuclear Waste Policy Act] to allow [the Department of Energy] to take title to spent nuclear fuel before a national nuclear waste
             repository becomes operational, the only difference would be that DOE could then lawfully contract with Holtec to store the same spent fuel that presently belongs to the
             nuclear power plant owners. The NRC Staff assures us that it is reviewing Holtec’s application in light of both possibilities: ‘[T]he Staff bases its safety and environmental
             reviews on the application as presented, which seeks a license on the basis that either DOE or private entities may hold title to the waste.

Id., slip op. at 34 (emphasis added) (cited in Beyond Nuclear’s Brief on Appeal of LBP-19-04 at 6 (June 3, 2019)). In the DEIS, however, the NRC Staff refuses to provide “a detailed evaluation” of the environmental impacts of an action related to the storage of spent fuel at the proposed Holtec facility, i.e., disposal of Greater-Than-Class-C (“GTCC”) waste at the Waste Control Specialist (“WCS”) Low Level Radioactive Waste disposal facility in Andrews, Texas, on the ground that it is not “feasible” until Congress passes legislation:

           [B]ecause disposal of GTCC at WCS would require completion of [an NRC rulemaking] and actions by DOE and Congress, a detailed evaluation of this reasonably
           foreseeable future action is not feasible at this time but is included here for completeness.

Id. at 5-5 (emphasis added). This statementin the DEIS runs counter to the NRC Staff’s assurances, relied upon by the ASLB in LBP-19-04, that the NRC Staff can ably assess the environmental and safety impacts of DOE ownership of spent nuclear fuel at the proposed Holtec facility, when such ownership would also require actions by both DOE and Congress (i.e.amending the Nuclear Waste Policy Act).]

The following press release, contained within brackets below, published by Beyond Nuclear on April 27, 2020, contains additional information about the NRC's violation of the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as Amended, as well as the Administrative Procedure Act, vis-a-vis the Holtec/ELEA CISF:

[U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission announces it will proceed with licensing of proposed high-level radioactive waste dump in New Mexico despite illegal license term

In violation of Nuclear Waste Policy Act, license applicant Holtec International contemplates federal ownership of 173,000 metric tons of highly radioactive spent reactor fuel to be stored at New Mexico site

Beyond Nuclear vows to challenge NRC and Holtec in federal court

WASHINGTON, D.C. and SOUTHEASTERN NM -- In an astounding ruling on April 23, 2020, the four-member U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) acknowledged that an application by Holtec International/Eddy-Lea [Counties] Energy Alliance to store a massive quantity of highly radioactive irradiated nuclear fuel in southeastern New Mexico violates federal law – and yet ruled that the unlawful provisions of the license application could be ignored and would not bar approval.

Beyond Nuclear has challenged the NRC’s authority to approve Holtec's license application because it contemplates that the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) may become the owner of the irradiated reactor fuel. The federal Nuclear Waste Policy Act (NWPA) prohibits federal ownership of spent fuel, however, unless and until a federal repository for permanent disposal is operating.

The NRC Commissioners acknowledged that Federal law prohibits federally-sponsored storage of irradiated reactor fuel unless and until a repository for permanent disposal is in operation. Nevertheless the NRC threw out Beyond Nuclear’s legal challenge to the project on the ground that Holtec could be depended on not to implement the unlawful provision if the license were granted.

The Commissioners’ decision affirms an earlier ruling by the NRC's Atomic Safety and Licensing Board that the storage facility may be licensed despite the illegal license terms contemplating federal ownership of the irradiated fuel. The Licensing Board accepted arguments by Holtec and the NRC’s technical staff that the license containing illegal provisions could be approved as long as it also contained a provision that would allow private ownership of the spent fuel.   

Mindy Goldstein, a lawyer for Beyond Nuclear, stated, “the NRC’s decision flagrantly violates the federal Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which prohibits an agency from acting contrary to the law as issued by Congress and signed by the President.” Goldstein also stated that “the Commission lacks a legal or logical basis for its rationale that the illegal provisions could be ignored in favor of other provisions that are legal, or that an illegal license could be issued in ‘hopes’ that the law might change in the future. The APA gives the NRC no excuse to ignore the mandates of federal law.”   

Diane Curran, also a lawyer for Beyond Nuclear, said the group will pursue a federal court appeal of the NRC decision. “Our claim is simple,” she declared. “The NRC is not above the law.”

Kevin Kamps, radioactive waste specialist for Beyond Nuclear, called the federal Nuclear Waste Policy Act “the public’s best protection against an interim storage facility becoming a de facto permanent, national radioactive waste dump at the surface of the Earth.” According to Kamps, “Congress knew, in passing the NWPA, that the only safe long-term strategy for care of irradiated reactor fuel is to place it in a permanent repository for deep geologic isolation.

Congress acted wisely in refusing to allow nuclear reactor licensees to transfer ownership of their irradiated reactor fuel to the DOE until a repository was up and running.  The carefully crafted Nuclear Waste Policy Act thus protects a state like New Mexico from being railroaded by the powerful nuclear industry, its friends in the federal government, and other states looking to off-load their mountain of forever deadly high-level radioactive waste."

Kamps added: "A deep geologic repository for permanent disposal should meet a long list of stringent criteria. These include legality, environmental justice, consent-based siting, scientific suitability, mitigation of transport risks, regional equity, intergenerational equity, and non-proliferation, including a ban on reprocessing. This is why a coalition of more than a thousand environmental, environmental justice, and public interest organizations, representing all 50 states, have opposed the Yucca Mountain dump targeted at Western Shoshone Indian land in Nevada for 33 years."

“On behalf of our members and supporters in New Mexico, and across the country along the road, rail, and waterway routes in most states, that would be used to haul the high risk, high-level radioactive waste out West, we will appeal the NRC Commissioners' bad ruling to the federal court,” Kamps added.]

And this press release, contained in brackets below, published on June 4, 2020, by Beyond Nuclear, sheds more light on NRC's violation of the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as Amended, and the Administrative Procedure Act:

[BEYOND NUCLEAR FILES FEDERAL LAWSUIT CHALLENGING HIGH-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE DUMP FOR ENTIRE INVENTORY OF U.S. “SPENT” REACTOR FUEL   

Petitioner charges the Nuclear Regulatory Commission knowingly violated U.S. Nuclear Waste Policy Act and up-ended settled law prohibiting transfer of ownership of spent fuel to the federal government until a permanent underground repository is ready to receive it

[WASHINGTON, DC – June 4, 2020] -- Today the non-profit organization Beyond Nuclear filed an appeal with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit requesting review of an  April 23, 2020 order and an October 29, 2018 order by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), rejecting challenges to Holtec International/Eddy-Lea Energy Alliance’s application to build a massive “consolidated interim storage facility” (CISF) for nuclear waste in southeastern New Mexico. Holtec proposes to store as much as 173,000 metric tons of highly radioactive irradiated or “spent” nuclear fuel – more than twice the amount of spent fuel currently stored at U.S. nuclear power reactors – in shallowly buried containers on the site.   

But according to Beyond Nuclear’s petition, the NRC’s orders “violated the Nuclear Waste Policy Act and the Administrative Procedure Act by refusing to dismiss an administrative proceeding that contemplated issuance of a license permitting federal ownership of used reactor fuel at a commercial fuel storage facility.”

Since it contemplates that the federal government would become the owner of the spent fuel during transportation to and storage at its CISF, Holtec’s license application should have been dismissed at the outset, Beyond Nuclear’s appeal argues. Holtec has made no secret of the fact that it expects the federal government will take title to the waste, which would clear the way for it to be stored at its CISF, and this is indeed the point of building the facility. But that would directly violate the 1982 Nuclear Waste Policy Act (NWPA), which prohibits federal government ownership of spent fuel unless and until a permanent underground repository is up and running.  No such repository has been licensed in the U.S. The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) most recent estimate for the opening of a geologic repository is the year 2048 at the earliest.

In its April 23 decision, in which the NRC rejected challenges to the license application, the four NRC Commissioners admitted that the NWPA would indeed be violated if title to spent fuel were transferred to the federal government so it could be stored at the Holtec facility.  But they refused to remove the license provision in the application which contemplates federal ownership of the spent fuel. Instead, they ruled that approving Holtec’s application in itself would not involve NRC in a violation of federal law, and that therefore they could go forward with approving the application, despite its illegal provision. According to the NRC’s decision, “the license itself would not violate the NWPA by transferring the title to the fuel, nor would it authorize Holtec or [the U.S. Department of Energy] to enter into storage contracts.” (page 7). The NRC Commissioners also noted with approval that “Holtec hopes that Congress will amend the law in the future.” (page 7).

“This NRC decision flagrantly violates the federal Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which prohibits an agency from acting contrary to the law as issued by Congress and signed by the President,” said Mindy Goldstein, an attorney for Beyond Nuclear. “The Commission lacks a legal or logical basis for its rationale that it may issue a license with an illegal provision, in the hopes that Holtec or the Department of Energy won’t complete the illegal activity it authorized. The buck must stop with the NRC.”   

“Our claim is simple,” said attorney Diane Curran, another member of Beyond Nuclear’s legal team. “The NRC is not above the law, nor does it stand apart from it.”

According to a 1996 D.C. Circuit Court ruling, the NWPA is Congress’ “comprehensive scheme for the interim storage and permanent disposal of high-level radioactive waste generated by civilian nuclear power plants” [Ind. Mich. Power Co. v. DOE, 88 F.3d 1272, 1273 (D.C. Cir. 1996)]. The law establishes distinct roles for the federal government vs. the owners of facilities that generate spent fuel with respect to the storage and disposal of spent fuel. The “Federal Government has the responsibility to provide for the permanent disposal of … spent nuclear fuel” but “the generators and owners of … spent nuclear fuel have the primary responsibility to provide for, and the responsibility to pay the costs of, the interim storage of … spent fuel until such … spent fuel is accepted by the Secretary of Energy” [42 U.S.C. § 10131]. Section 111 of the NWPA specifically provides that the federal government will not take title to spent fuel until it has opened a repository [42 U.S.C. § 10131(a)(5)].  

“When Congress passed the Nuclear Waste Policy Act and refused to allow nuclear reactor licensees to transfer ownership of their irradiated reactor fuel to the DOE until a permanent repository was up and running, it acted wisely,” said Kevin Kamps, radioactive waste specialist for Beyond Nuclear. “It understood that spent fuel remains hazardous for millions of years, and that the only safe long-term strategy for safeguarding irradiated reactor fuel is to place it in a permanent repository for deep geologic isolation from the living environment. Today, the NWPA remains the public’s best protection against a so-called ‘interim’ storage facility becoming a de facto permanent, national, surface dump for radioactive waste. But if we ignore it or jettison the law, communities like southeastern New Mexico can be railroaded by the nuclear industry and its friends in government, and forced to accept mountains of forever deadly high-level radioactive waste other states are eager to offload.”

In addition to impacting New Mexico, shipping the waste to the CISF site would also endanger 43 other states plus the District of Columbia, because it would entail hauling 10,000 high risk, high-level radioactive waste shipments on their roads, rails, and waterways, posing risks of radioactive release all along the way.

Besides threatening public health and safety, evading federal law to license CISF facilities would also impact the public financially. Transferring  title and liability for spent fuel from the nuclear utilities that generated it to DOE would mean that federal taxpayers would have to pay for its so-called "interim" storage, to the tune of many billions of dollars.  That’s on top of the many billions ratepayers and taxpayers have already paid to fund a permanent geologic repository that hasn’t yet materialized. 

But that’s not to say that Yucca Mountain would be an acceptable alternative to CISF. “A deep geologic repository for permanent disposal should meet a long list of stringent criteria: legality, environmental justice, consent-based siting, scientific suitability, mitigation of transport risks, regional equity, intergenerational equity, and safeguards against nuclear weapons proliferation, including a ban on spent fuel reprocessing,” Kamps said. “But the Yucca Mountain dump, which is targeted at land owned by the  Western Shoshone in Nevada, fails to meet any of those standards.  That’s why a coalition of more than a thousand environmental, environmental justice, and public interest organizations, representing all 50 states, has opposed it for 33 years."

Kamps noted that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has upheld the NWPA before, including in the matter of inadequate standards for Yucca Mountain.  In its landmark 2004 decision in Nuclear Energy Institute v. Environmental Protection Agency, it wrote, “Having the capacity to outlast human civilization as we know it and the potential to devastate public health and the environment, nuclear waste has vexed scientists, Congress, and regulatory agencies for the last half-century."  The Court found the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s insufficient 10,000-year standard for Yucca Mountain violated the NWPA’s requirement that the National Academy of Sciences' recommendations must be followed, and ordered the EPA back to the drawing board. In 2008, the EPA issued a revised standard, acknowledging a million-year hazard associated with irradiated nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste. Even that standard falls short, Kamps said, because certain radioactive isotopes in spent fuel remain dangerous for much longer than that.  Iodine-129, for example, is hazardous for 157 million years.] 


These internal contradictions by NRC Staff, described above, must be corrected in the DEIS. The correction must follow, and be faithful and obedient to, federal law, as described above.

I submit these comments on behalf of our members and supporters in New Mexico, and in all states along the impacted transport routes.

Please acknowledge receipt of these comments. Thank you.