The Department of Energy (DOE) has produced radioactive materials for nuclear bombs; designed, built, and tested nuclear weapons; and developed reactor and other technologies with little concern for the environmental harm those activities cause. The inevitable result is that all DOE sites are polluted. Nevertheless, DOE remains far more interested in protecting its pollution-causing activities than in correcting the harm they have already done.
DOE is not meeting its legal and ethical responsibility to clean up the legacy of more than 60 years of radioactive and toxic contamination. Instead, DOE is promoting nuclear activities that will create additional pollution and threaten the health of future generations. Currently, water near some DOE facilities, such as Paducah, KY, and Pantex, TX, remains unfit to drink. Some of the nation’s major water sources, including the Columbia River, Snake River Aquifer, and Ogallala Aquifer, are threatened.
After declaring the Yucca Mountain project dead, the Obama Administration called for a "Blue Ribbon Commission on America's Nuclear Future" to determine what should be done with US high level nuclear waste. The Blue Ribbon Commission has issued its draft report. A final report will be issued in January
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Public Comments
ANA's statement to the Blue Ribbon Commission at their Denver meeting in September 2011
ANA's comment on the April 2011 Department of Energy Greater than Class C Waste Draft Environmental Impact Statement.
FACT SHEETS
2011 ANA fact sheet on Nuclear reactors and Waste
Greater Than Class C Waste Fact Sheet from the Snake River Alliance
Department of EnergyEnvironmental Cleanup:�Underfunded and Inadequate 2007Yucca Mountain:Not the Solution to Nuclear Waste 2007
Spent Fuel Reprocessing and the Global Nuclear Energy PartnershipANA Water Report:
DANGER LURKS BELOW The Threat to Major Water Supplies from US Department of Energy Nuclear Weapons Plants