Feds Leave Radioactive Waste Stranded In Wildfire Danger Zone
by aletho
DOE
announces it will not meet deadline for removal of radioactive
containers held above-ground at northern New Mexico nuclear weapons lab
By Sarah Lazare | Common Dreams | May 31, 2014
At
least 3,706 cubic meters of radioactive waste are being stored at the
Los Alamos National Laboratory complex after the Waste Isolation Pilot
Plant, an underground nuclear waste dump in southeastern New Mexico, was
shut down indefinitely in February due to an airborne radiation leak.
Officials in New Mexico have warned that the waste at Los Alamos could be within the reach of wildfires and must be transferred elsewhere by the end of June. According to the Associated Press, "The agreement for removal of the waste by June 30
was reached after a massive wildfire lapped at the edge of lab property
three years ago, raising concerns about the thousands of barrels of
waste that were being stored outside."
"The waste at Los Alamos is trapped with no place to go," Arnie Gundersen, chief engineer and nuclear safety advocate at Fairewinds Associates, told Common Dreams.
The
stranded waste is "transuranic" described by the DOE as "clothing,
tools, rags, debris, soil and other items contaminated with radioactive
material generated during decades of nuclear research and weapons
development."
Concerns have been raised about the safety of these barrels after it was discovered
that changes in methods of packaging at Los Alamos, using organic cat
litter to absorb moisture, may have been responsible for chemical
reactions that set off the "heat event" behind the WIPP leak. According
to New Mexico state regulators, more than 500 nuclear waste containers
originating from Los Alamos were packed with this cat litter.
The
DOE had been sending some Los Alamos radioactive waste to a Texas
facility for temporary storage until WIPP is functional. Upon
discovering that Los Alamos shipments may be dangerous, the DOE halted
all shipments, citing public safety.
But
Gundersen warns that these barrels of waste now pose a threat in Texas
and Los Alamos, where they are being stored above-ground. "It is worse
in the summer, because it is hotter in the summer, and the reactions
become less stable," he said.
In a statement (pdf) released Friday,
the New Mexico Environment Department said it is "disappointed, but not
surprised" that the DOE will not meet its deadline to remove the waste.
Meanwhile, it is still not clear when WIPP will reopen. The facility, which was never supposed to leak,
is the bedrock of the U.S. government's current approach to dispose of
military-generated plutonium-contaminated transuranic waste from decades
of nuclear bomb production and testing.
Critics have warned that WIPP's failure raises serious questions about the overall federal strategy for disposing of nuclear waste.
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