Search
JOIN OUR NETWORK

     

     

 

 

ARTICLE ARCHIVE

Radioactive Waste

No safe, permanent solution has yet been found anywhere in the world - and may never be found - for the nuclear waste problem. In the U.S., the only identified and flawed high-level radioactive waste deep repository site at Yucca Mountain, Nevada has been canceled. Beyond Nuclear advocates for an end to the production of nuclear waste and for securing the existing reactor waste in hardened on-site storage.

.................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Entries by admin (643)

Thursday
Sep262013

Momentum building of international opposition against OPG DUD

The Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump petition now has nearly 35,000 signatures! If you haven't already signed it yourself, please do. And please continue to circulate it to everyone you know! Beverly Fernandez, spokesperson for Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump, gave powerful testimony last Saturday in opposition to the proposal to "bury poison next to the well" of 40 million people, the Great Lakes, drinking water supply for 8 U.S. states, 2 Canadian provinces, and a large number of Native American/First Nations.

On September 23rd, Beyond Nuclear's Radioactive Waste Watchdog, Kevin Kamps, also testified against Ontario Power Generation's (OPG) proposal to bury all of Ontario's so-called "low" and "intermediate" level radioactive wastes (L&ILRWs), from 20 atomic reactors across the province, within a half-mile of the Lake Huron shoreline (see image, left).

OPG refers to its proposal as the DGR, for Deep Geologic Repository. But critics use DUD, for Deep Underground Dump, an apt appellation coined by Dave Martin of Greenpeace Canada.

Dave, along with Irene Koch of Nuclear Awareness Project, published a map of Nuclear Hotspots on the Great Lakes in 1990. It gave an overview of the vast number of uranium fuel chain activities taking place in the bio-region, including scores of atomic reactors on the shorelines. Anna Tilman of International Institute of Concern for Public Health recently updated the map, to include the proposed DUDs. Both maps helped frame Kevin's testimony to the JRP regarding the DUDs.

Kevin's testimony focused on the woeful inadequacy of OPG's environmental assessment of cumulative impacts, as well as synergistic effects, of radiological and toxic chemical hazards in the Great Lakes bio-region caused by nuclear power facilities, as well as other dirty, dangerous and expensive energy industries, such as fossil fuel burning power plants.

The Canadian federal Joint Review Panel, comprised of a majority of two members from the CNSC (Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission), and one member from the CEAA (Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency), have posted the transcript of Kevin's testimony (beginning at Page 112, or 116 of 350 on the PDF counter). The JRP has also posted the video recording of Kevin's testimony (beginning at time code 2:26, for two hours 26 minutes into the segment). Kevin's Power Point presentation was based on his previously filed written submission.

CNSC is as infamous, if not more so, as the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, in terms of rubber-stamping nuclear industry proposals.

Altogether, dozens of concerned local residents and environmental group represenatives have testified thus far against the DUD, with many more to come. During Kevin's short two days in Kincardine, Ontario, alone, (the "company town" where the Bruce Nuclear Generating Station and its Western Waste Management Facility are located), he was joined by the likes of Don Hancock of Southwest Research and Information Center (SRIC) in New Mexico, Brennain Lloyd of Northwatch, Angela Bischoff of Ontario Clean Air Alliance, John LaForge of Nukewatch in Wisconsin, Theresa McClenaghan of Canadian Environmental Law Association, Janet McNeill of Durham Nuclear Awareness, and many others

In addition to his formal JRP testimony, Kevin joined with Brennain of Northwatch and Don of SRIC as featured speakers at community forums regarding yet another proposed dump in the vicinity of Bruce Nuclear, "DUD#2," for all of Canada's high-level radioactive wastes (HLRW). The two events were held in Ripley, Ontario, just a few kilometers, as well as Goderich, Ontario, just 50 kilometers, from Kincardine. Those two municipalities, and four more in the area, have "volunteered" to "host" HLRW from 22 atomic reactors in Ontario, Quebec, and New Brunswick. Both events drew good turnouts of deeply concerned local residents.

The international opposition against both DUDs is growing, despite the perception of intimidation and harassment by the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) which has garnered multiple articles in the Toronto Star about OPP's interactions with local Canadian residents, as well as American interveners (including Beyond Nuclear). CNSC has disavowed having put the OPP up to the now controversial knocks on Canadian doors and phone calls to the U.S., even though an OPG spokesperson has said they did.

Yesterday, the neighboring Saugeen Ojibwe Nations gave powerful testimony.

On Monday, Michigan State Senator Hopgood and State Representative Roberts will testify against the DUD. Hopgood introduced a resolution critical of the DUD which garnered unanimous passage in the Michigan State Senate. Roberts is working on a companion resolution in the Michigan State House of Represenatives.

Thursday
Sep192013

The fate of the Great Lakes is at stake, as OPG DUD hearings begin

The Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Waste Dump petition now has nearly 33,000 signatures! If you haven't already signed it, please do! And please spread the word about the petition to everyone you know!

As reported in the Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Waste Dump's press release section, Canada's most famous environmentalist, David Suzuki, as well as North American physicians organizations, have joined the effort to block the dump!

On August 19th, Beyond Nuclear's Kevin Kamps had to honor of sharing the stage with Stop the Great Lakes Nuclear Dump's Beverly Fernandez, as well as Sierra Club South East Michigan Group's Ed McArdle, Michigan State Senator Hoon-Yung Hopgood, and Michigan State Representative Sarah Roberts, at a town hall meeting at Wayne State University's law school in downtown Detroit, held to organize resistance to this nuke waste dump.

As documented in Tom Lawson's recently published, inspiring book Crazy Caverns: How one small community challenged a technocrat juggernaut...and won!, Suzuki played an important role in the successful grassroots campaign in the mid-1990s that stopped the burial of radioactive wastes on the Lake Ontario shore at Port Hope, Ontario.

As reported last week, Beyond Nuclear's Radioactive Waste Watchdog, Kevin Kamps, will testify on Sept. 23rd alongside a large number of environmental allies from both the U.S. and Canada at a hearing that could determine the fate of the Great Lakes, the drinking water supply for 40 million people in 8 U.S. states, 2 Canadian provinces, and a large number of Native American First Nations.

Kevin has already submitted written testimony and prepared a power point presentation.

The pre-mature Joint Review Panel environmental assessment hearings for Ontario Power Generation's (OPG) proposed Deep Geologic Repository (DGR) for all of Ontario's so-called "low" (LLRW) and "intermediate" level radioactive wastes (ILRW) began last week.

LLRWs and ILRWs from a dozen additional atomic reactors, at the Pickering and Darlington nuclear power plants just east of Toronto, have been imported, over the past 40 years, into the Bruce Nuclear Generating Station, itself one of the world's single largest nuclear power plants with 9 reactors (one a permanently shutdown prototype, Douglas Point, but 8 still-operable). Bruce is on the Lake Huron shoreline, less than 100 miles from Michigan (see map, above left).

Months ago, Beyond Nuclear joined with a coalition of environmental groups from both sides of the border, to protest the commencement of the hearings, as the environmental assessment is woefully incomplete. As Kevin will testify on Monday, OPG has barely even considered the cumulative impacts of dozens of atomic reactors, as well as a large number of fossil fuel burning power plants, discharging radioactivity and toxic chemicals into the Great Lakes watershed, combined with the risks of future leaks or accidents at the proposed DGR. The JRP is composed of two members from the Canadian Nuclear Safety (sic) Commission (CNSC), as well as one member from the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA).

Once at Bruce, the LLRWs have been incinerated. Atmospheric radioactive emissions from this large-scale incineration of radioactive wastes are very likely greater than zero, to put it mildly! The resulting LLRW ashes, as well as the ILRWs, have since been stored at Bruce's Western Waste Management Facility (WWMF), alongside a growing stockpile of high-level radioactive wastes (HLRW) in dry cask storage. It is immediately adjacent to the WWMF that OPG wants to dig the entrance tunnel to its DGR, or as Dave Martin of Greenpeace Canada dubbed it, the DUD (for Deep Underground Dump). This proposed entrance tunnel is a mere half-mile from the waters of Lake Huron.

But this LLRW and ILRW DGR is but DUD#1. It could easily pave the way for DUD#2--a national HLRW dump for irradiated nuclear fuel from 22 Canadian reactors in three provinces (20 in Ontario, plus Gentilly-2 in Quebec and Point Lepreau in New Brunswick). A half-dozen Bruce area municipalities have "volunteered" to be considered by Canada's Nuclear Waste Management Organization (NWMO) for the national HLRW dump. Never mind that these municipalities are mostly populated by Bruce Nuclear workers, and are also blinded by dollar signs.

Beyond Nuclear has joined with Canadian environmental allies like Northwatch to demand answers about a DUD#3, that could double the capacity of DUD#1 from 200,000 to 400,000 cubic meters of radioactive waste. While DUD#1 is supposedly to be limited to operational and refurbishment LLRWs and ILRWs, DUD#3 is for decommissioning LLRWs and ILRWs.

Media coverage of the hearings began on day one, and has continued steadly, including this hard-hitting column in the Toronto Star.

The Star also reported on the environmental coalition's challenge to DUD#3, as mentioned above.

Thursday
Sep192013

Sample comments you can use to write your own for NRC's "Nuke Waste Con Game" draft GEIS public comment period (Sept. 13 to Nov. 27)

Following are a number of basic, sample comments you can use to prepare your own written comments, and/or oral testimony for the upcoming public meeting nearest you. There is no limit to the number of times you can submit comments between now and the end of the 75-day public comment period. As Beyond Nuclear, as well as other organizations, further digest the 600-page GEIS, additional ideas for public comments will be shared widely. Please comment "early and often"! Public participation in this proceeding is vital, to show decision makers that people across the country care deeply about high-level radioactive waste risks.
For more information, contact Beyond Nuclear's Radioactive Waste Watchdog, Kevin Kamps, at kevin@beyondnuclear.org or (301) 270-2209 ext. 1.
SAMPLE PUBLIC COMMENTS:
1. Stop making it. The only solution to the high-level radioactive waste (HLRW) problem is to not generate irradiated nuclear fuel in the first place. Our society's "preferred alternative" to nuclear power and the forever deadly radioactive waste it inevitably generates is efficiency and renewables, such as wind and solar power. As Dr. Arjun Makhijani, President of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research, showed in his 2007 book Carbon-Free, Nuclear-Free: A Roadmap to U.S. Energy Policy, both fossil fuels and nuclear power can be completely phased out of the U.S. economy by 2040, and replaced by efficiency and renewables, without any further technological breakthroughs required, and for the same percentage of our Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as we currently spend on dirty, dangerous, and expensive fossil fuels and nuclear power.
2. For the HLRWs that already exist, require Hardened On-Site Storage (HOSS). Hundreds of environmental and public interest groups, representing all 50 states, have endorsed the Statement of Principles for Safeguarding Nuclear Waste at Reactors, which describes HOSS. Where possible, densely-packed, vulnerable HLRW storage pools, at risk of catastrophic fires and radioactivity releases, should be emptied into on-site dry cask storage that is "hardened": designed and built well, safeguarded against accidents, fortified against attacks, and protected against leakage into the environment. This should be expedicted as a national security top priority. Locations where HOSS is not safe (places vulnerable to flooding, for example), hardened dry cask storage should be done as close to the wastes' point of generation as possible, as safely as possible. HOSS must be monitored and retrievable, and is but an interim measure. HOSS cannot be a permanent measure on the sea coasts and fresh water sources (rivers, lakes, reservoirs) of our country, due to rising sea levels and risk of leakage into our vital drinking water supplies.
3. NRC's assumption that "indefinite storage" at reactor sites can go on literally forever, without a loss of institutional control, is absurd. As the environmental coalition's expert witness, Dr. Makhijani of IEER, has pointed out, one of the oldest continuous human institutions in the world, the Catholic Church, is only 2,000 years old. Plutonium-239, for one, will remain hazardous for at least 240,000 years.
4. Under its "indefinite storage" scenario, NRC has assumed that dry cask storage -- cask pads, inner canisters, and the dry casks themselves -- will be replaced once every 100 years, forevermore into the future. NRC assumes that Dry Transfer Systems will be built (and also replaced every 100 years), since pools will have been dismantled during decommissioning, by at most 60 years after permanent reactor shutdown. But NRC has not dealt with the very real risk that the irradiated nuclear fuel will so degrade with age that such transfer operations cannot be carried out safely or smoothly. This is especially a risk with "high burn-up fuel," that has spent more time in an operating reactor core, and is thus significantly more radioactive and thermally hot. NRC has also not provided the price tag for such future transfer and replacement operations.
5. It is inappropriate for NRC, in this GEIS, to use the Private Fuel Storage (PFS), LLC "centralized interim storage" proposal, targeted at the Skull Valley Goshutes Band of Indians in Utah, as a model for away-from-reactor storage. Although licensed by NRC for construction and operation, PFS was canceled in December 2012. NRC claims in its GEIS to observe Environmental Justice (EJ) principles, and yet PFS was a blatant violation of EJ. Nearly 500 organizations across the U.S. joined with Skull Valley Goshute traditionals urging NRC to disapprove PFS's license, due to its inherent violation of EJ.
6. NRC downplays the risks of pool fires by assuming that surrounding populations will be successfully evacuated. But nuclear utilities are allowed to store HLRW in pools for many decades after reactors permanently shutdown, in order to defer the costs of dry cask storage as far off into the future as possible, despite the inherent risks. At the same time, NRC allows utilities, via exemptions from regulations, to do away with 10-mile radius emergency planning zones (EPZs) within as soon as 12 to 18 months post-reactor shutdown. This, despite the lingering risk of storing HLRW in pools at such shutdown reactor sites. How can populations be evacuated, if EPZs have been dismantled?!
7. NRC also downplays the risks of pool fires by assuming that a pool drain down accident (or attack) involves the complete drain down of the pool. However, as environmental coalition expert witness Dr. Gordon Thompson of the Institute for Resource and Security Studies (IRSS) has pointed out, any technically competent person paying attention to the issue should have known since 1979 that a partial drain down of the pool is actually a worse-case scenario, for the leftover water in the bottom of the pool would block convection current air flow which would help cool the irradiated nuclear fuel, leading to faster heat up to the ignition point.
8. You can also comment to NRC about specific risks with HLRW storage pools or dry casks at the nuclear power plant near you. As a Generic EIS, NRC's current draft largely ignores site-specific risks.

Click on this link to see HOW you can submit public comments to NRC on its "Nuke Waste Con Game" draft GEIS, including by email, webform, fax, snail mail, hand-delivery, and orally at a dozen public comment meetings across the country (including NRC HQ public comment meetings on Oct. 1 and Nov. 14, which can be called into from anywhere, as well as attended by webcast, thus allowing remote oral comments to be submitted).

Thursday
Sep192013

How to submit public comments to NRC re: its "Nuke Waste Con Game" draft GEIS

Public comments will be accepted by NRC through various means.

Comments can be submitted online at www.regulations.gov, using Docket ID No. NRC-2012-0246.

Comments can be submitted via e-mail to Rulemaking.Comments@nrc.gov, citing Docket ID No. NRC-2012-0246.

Comments can be snail-mailed to: Secretary; U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission; Washington, D.C. 20555-0001; ATTN: Rulemakings and Adjudications Staff (cite Docket ID No. NRC-2012-0246 at the top of your comments).

Comments can be faxed to the Secretary, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, at (301) 415-1101, citing Docket ID No. NRC-2012-0246.

Comments can also be hand-delivered to 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852, between 7:30 AM and 4:15 PM Eastern Time on Federal workdays; telephone (301) 415-1677.

Comments can also be made by way of oral testimony presented at a dozen public comment meetings to be held around the country from October 1st to mid-November. We need to pack these meetings, so please spread the word!

The first and last public comment meetings, on October 1st and November 14th, will be held at NRC HQ in Rockville, MD. At these two public comment meetings only, members of the public can take part remotely, online via webcast and/or by telephone conference, and provide oral comments that way. (All other public comment meetings around the country must be attended in person only, in order to submit public comments.)

NRC has requested that participants in the public comment meetings register ahead of time. You can pre-register by phone at (301) 287-9392, or by filling out the webform at:

http://www.nrc.gov/waste/spent-fuel-storage/wcd/wcd-public-mtg-reg.html

If there is a large number of persons at a meeting seeking to make public comments, NRC will limit each speaker to 3 minutes. Although one can register on the day of, at the event, those who have pre-registered will be given priority at the microphone.

NRC has provided the following point of contact for any questions about the material in the GEIS:

Sarah Lopas; Mail Stop: 3WFN; 14C64; U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission; Washington, D.C. 20555-0001; Phone: (301) 287-0675; E-mail: sarah.lopas@nrc.gov.

Click on this link to see Beyond Nuclear sample comments, which you can use to write your own.

Thursday
Sep192013

Environmental groups challenge NRC's false confidence on radioactive waste, organize for nationwide public comment meetings

The desperate attempts to drop water by helicopter into the Fukushima Daiichi HLRW storage pools during the first days of the catastrophe -- when it was feared they had drained dry -- clearly show that the catastrophic risk of HLRW pool fires is all too real.On September 18th, a coalition of environmental and public interest groups challenged the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's (NRC) "Draft Consequence Study" on the risk of fires in high-level radioactive waste (HLRW) storage pools.

At a hard-won public meeting held at NRC's HQ in Rockville, Maryland, attorney Diane Curran, and expert witness Dr. Gordon Thompson, President of the Institute for Resource and Security Studies, speaking on behalf of an environmental coalition of 26 groups, including Beyond Nuclear, repeated their strong criticisms of the "Draft Consequence Study," calling for its withdrawal due to its misleading and incomplete nature, and its lack of scientific integrity.

They were joined in the room by Robert Alvarez, senior scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies, who prepared written remarks. Also tesitfying in person were representatives from Beyond Nuclear, Nuclear Information and Resource Service, Natural Resources Defense Council, and the Union of Concerned Scientists. A representative of the State of New York Office of Attorney General also testified.

Joining by phone were representatives of the State of Vermont's Attorney General's office, Pilgrim Watch, Sierra Club Nuclear-Free Campaign, Vista 360, Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League, Georgia Women's Action for New Directions, Nuclear Energy Information Service, Alliance for Nuclear Responsibility, San Luis Obispo Mother's for Peace, concerned local residents near HLRW storage sites, as well as longtime watchdogs on the permanently shutdown San Onofre nuclear power plant, and the still operating Diablo Canyon atomic reactors.

U.S. Senator Ed Markey (D-MA), a longtime congressional watchdog on the nuclear industry, also wrote NRC's Chairwoman, Allison Macfarlane, pointing out the irony of NRC's "Draft Consequence Study," given her own co-authorship of a 2003 study that strongly warned of the needless risks of fire in densely-packed HLRW storage pools. In fact, a number of her co-authors on that study were among those at yesterday's meeting strongly criticizing NRC's "Draft Consequence Study," including Alvarez and Thompson mentioned above, as well as Dr. Ed Lyman, now at Union of Concerned Scientists.

NRC staff plan to use the "Draft Consequence Study," done as part of the agency's "Fukushima Lessons Learned" review, as the basis for leaving HLRW storage pools packed to capacity not only during 40 or even 60 years of reactor operations, but even for an additional 60 years post reactor shutdown, during nuclear power plant decommissioning. The environmental coalition is challenging this conclusion as absurd. Hundreds of groups have long called for the emptying of the vulnerable, densely-packed storage pools into "Hardenend On-Site Storage" (HOSS) as an interim measure, and top priority for national security, public health, safety, and environmental protection. However, for well over a decade, calls for NRC to require HOSS have fallen on deaf ears.

September 18th's showdown over NRC's "Draft Consequence Study" comes just 5 days after the agency published its court-ordered Nuclear Waste Confidence draft Generic Environmental Impact Statement (GEIS) in the Federal Register, officially commencing a short 75-day public comment period. NRC has announced a dozen public comment meetings around the country between October 1st and November 14th. Please find the public comment meeting nearest you, make plans to attend, and bring as many folks as you can with you! Organize a carpool or even a van-load! Organizing has begun nationwide to pack these meetings! Groups in some regions are even considering chartering buses!

If you cannot physically attend an NRC "Nuke Waste Con Game" public comment meeting, then call-in to, or take part in the webcast of, the very first and very last of the public comment meetings, both to be held at NRC's HQ in Rockville, on October 1st and November 14th, respectively. You will be able to submit oral comments remotely to those two meetings only.

NRC has requested that meeting participants who wish to submit oral comments pre-register, by phoning (301) 287-9392, or by filling out the webform at: http://www.nrc.gov/waste/spent-fuel-storage/wcd/wcd-public-mtg-reg.html.

The public comment period ends on November 27th, a couple weeks after the last public comment meeting. NRC is accepting public comments via email, webform, snail mail, fax, and hand-delivery, in addition to orally at the public comment meetings described above. Please see Beyond Nuclear's sample comments, which you can use to write your own. Submit public comments "early and often" to NRC -- there is no limit to the number of times you can submit public comments between now and November 27th!