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Past and Present

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


WIPP Is Window on Budget Debate
published Wednesday, November 09, 2011  907 Views :: 0 Comments

This article, which exposes the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant's inability to meet it's performance milestones - and new strategy of simply doing away with performance metrics - features quotes and research from ANA's member group the Southwest Research and Information Center.

Oct 11, 2011

By John Fleck
From the Albuquerque Journal

Cutting the federal budget seems all the rage in political circles these days.

The problem, as is becoming increasingly obvious, is that all that money is currently going to someone. Those people very much seem to want to continue to receive it or, if possible, get more.

As an example, consider the tug of war over money the Department of Energy is spending in southeastern New Mexico to dispose of its backlog of radioactive waste at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant outside Carlsbad.

Congressional budget cutters have proposed modest spending reductions. The project’s defenders have gone into hyperdrive.

Lost in the discussion seems to be the question of how well the government’s money – upwards of $200 million per year – is being spent.

The Department of Energy’s own “performance measures” give reason for pause. In the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, the final amount of waste tucked safely underground was less than half the target set by the Department of Energy when it asked Congress for the latest $200 million.

In operation since 1999, WIPP has long benefited from a helpful political dynamic – supported by those trying to clean up nuclear sites around the country (who need a place to send their waste) in a happy alliance with the community of Carlsbad (which likes the jobs).

When those jobs are under threat, the region’s political leadership can be counted on to step up.

“Given WIPP’s success, we must act now to protect the jobs at WIPP, which also support other jobs in the local community,” Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M., normally a fiscal hawk, said in a June announcement pledging legislation intended to keep the money flowing to WIPP.

Support for the money from the state’s congressional delegation is bipartisan. Democratic Sens. Tom Udall and Jeff Bingaman last month sent a letter to their appropriations committee colleagues arguing against cutting WIPP’s budget.

“As a mayor, I agree that waste of money in government is unacceptable, whether it is local, state or federal government,” Carlsbad Mayor Dale Janway wrote in an op-ed published last month in the Carlsbad Current-Argus. “We cannot confuse a critical, incredibly successful federal program like WIPP that has a 12-year track record of successfully and safely solving our nation’s nuclear waste problems with other federal programs that lack the critical importance and ongoing success of WIPP.”

But “success” here is in the eye of the beholder. And the debate over the definition highlights the inevitable tension between carrying out legitimate federal functions and providing jobs for the folks tasked with doing the work. That tension is likely to be on display in every single budget cut discussion to come.

There is no question that by some measures, WIPP has been a spectacular success. Through Oct. 1, according to federal records, it had received 10,026 shipments of waste contaminated with plutonium and other dangerously radioactive materials, safely stowing them in a salt mine 2,150 feet beneath the desert of southeast New Mexico with no spills, leaks or other serious problems. By those measures, Janway’s description of the project as “incredibly successful” applies.

But by the Department of Energy’s own “performance measures,” the project’s record is less rosy, in a way that leaves it vulnerable when congressional appropriators begin hunting for fat to trim.

Each year, the Department of Energy approaches Congress in February with a proposed spending plan for the following year, outlining how much money it says it needs for WIPP and how much waste it expects to put in the ground in return.

In February 2010, the plan set a target of 15,019 cubic meters of waste disposed of in WIPP during the 2011 fiscal year. The actual performance at year’s end was 7,314 cubic meters – less than half the target.

WIPP’s chief scientist, Roger Nelson, said the “performance measures” set out in the annual budget request to Congress should be viewed more as “ambitious goals” rather than firm performance commitments against which WIPP’s success should be judged. The DOE’s budget request is not so squishy. The purpose of the performance measures is, in the bureaucratic language of the budget request to Congress, to establish “expectations and accountability for those expectations within a given funding level.”

This year’s performance shortfalls at WIPP drew unusual public attention last summer because part of the 2011 money came from the Obama administration’s 2009 stimulus program. A July report from the Department of Energy’s Office of Inspector General complained that the agency spent the money without meeting waste disposal targets.

That was red meat for stimulus program critics. But it was nothing new. In seven of the last nine years, according to an analysis by watchdog Don Hancock, WIPP has fallen short of the performance measures set in DOE’s annual budget request.

Most years, no one other than Hancock and the occasional newspaper reporter pays any attention to WIPP’s failure to hit its targets. Certainly the politicians eager to keep the money flowing don’t seem to mind.

This year, the Department of Energy seems to have discovered a novel solution to the problem of its repeated failures to meet WIPP disposal goals. Nelson acknowledged in an interview last week that none have been set for the 2011-12 fiscal year, which began Oct. 1.

UpFront is a daily front-page opinion column. Comment directly to John Fleck at 823-3916 or jfleck@abqjournal.com.

— This article appeared on page A1 of the Albuquerque Journal


Resources

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 Energy
Environmental Cleanup:�
Underfunded and Inadequate  2007


Yucca Mountain:
Not the Solution to Nuclear Waste
  2007


Spent Fuel Reprocessing and the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership


ANA Water Report: 


DANGER LURKS BELOW
The Threat to Major Water Supplies from US Department of Energy Nuclear Weapons Plants


GTCC Resources
The Department of Energy is seeking comments to determine the scope of the planned Environmental Impact Statement dealing with the "Disposal of Greater-Than-Class-C (GTCC) Low-Level Radioactive Waste." 

Watch this space and this page for resources helpful in composing your own comments.




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