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Experts to study Yucca alternative

Chu will name members of panel today, sources say

WASHINGTON -- Energy Secretary Steven Chu is poised to announce today the long-awaited expert panel to recommend alternatives to storing nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain, congressional sources said.

The announcement is seen as another step in the process to end the government's decades-long bid to build an underground repository in Nevada for 77,000 tons of spent nuclear fuel.


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  • The Obama administration has cut the program's budget deeply.

    The president's new budget plan scheduled to be released Monday is expected to contain only token funding, with a charge for the panel to begin its work on a new path.

    Aides to Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., confirmed that an announcement will take place today.

    How many people would serve on the commission or how long it would have to develop its study was unknown.

    "We have already succeeded in cutting nearly all funding for this $100 billion hole in the Nevada desert, and the creation of this blue ribbon commission will begin the task of finding alternatives to burying nuclear waste 90 minutes outside Las Vegas," Berkley said in a statement Thursday night.

    Other sources said Chu would appoint veteran international policy experts Brent Scowcroft and Lee Hamilton to co-lead the study panel.

    Scowcroft is president of the Scowcroft Group, an international advisory service. He has led a number of high-level government councils and served presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and George W. Bush.

    Hamilton, a former member of the House of Representatives, is best known for his service on the 9/11 Commission and the Iraq Study Group, which dissected U.S. involvement in the Iraq war.

    Hamilton is president and director of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, a foreign affairs think tank.

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    Report abuse

    Green Dragon Regular wrote on January 31, 2010 08:47 AM: @ColinFromLasVegas-

    If those "people" go broke and become homeless, it will mean the United States became insolvent and went the way of the Soviet Union.


    Report abuse

    ColinFromLasVegas wrote on January 30, 2010 03:23 PM: Points noted. I still oppose.

    And I do really hope that people who want this to happen continue to spend a lot of manhours on it, waste tons of money and expend a lot of supplies. Hopefully, they will go broke and end up homeless before they realize they are getting nowhere.

    The fight continues. WE, the citizens of Nevada, have the upper hand right now. And we're not letting go of it til everyone that wants this to happen exhausts themselves and realize their money has went down a bottomless hole with no chance of even the slightest success.


    Report abuse

    Green Dragon Regular wrote on January 30, 2010 12:35 PM: @ColinFromLasVegas-

    If it weren't for science, sir, we'd STILL be living in caves.

    Funny, above- and underground nuclear testing had, by all appearances zero impact on tourism, yet the otherwise quiet activity of storing nuclear material in the safest possible way until technology exists to safely extract it's useful energy will have a negative impact? Strange logic unto itself.

    You are wildly naive if you think this is finished. The money spent and the power of the other 49 states far outweighs the dubious legal arguments and highly estimable influence of Nevada's "leaders".

    As in any enterprise, this comes down to risk versus reward. Provable rewards in this endeavor far outweigh hypothetical risks once you shift from a mentality rooted in fear and look at it objectively and logically.

    In the meant time, the consequences of Luddism are easily illustrated by historical (versus hysterical) examples.


    Report abuse

    ColinFromLasVegas wrote on January 30, 2010 11:29 AM: No explanation needed because it's a dead issue. Funding cut off and no means no means no.

    But for the sake or argument, you pursue logic in your line of reasoning radiation was here from testing before, so THEREFORE we should go ahead and continue by making a national nuclear waste port-o-let 90 miles from a city that contains 2 million people who are trying to live and survive.

    And that city of Las Vegas is basically a "one horse town," in that it thrives off of tourism and gambling. So, putting a nuclear waste dump closeby is magically going to diversify us and going to assist in the endeavor of attracting tourists here for generations to come?!?!! Yeah. Right.

    The last thing I checked with Yucca Mountain was a bunch of scientists were trying to figure out how to mark it so people wouldn't dig there 10,000 years from now. Like putting up stupid signs you can see from space or some dumb stuff like that. Which tells me they are worried about cosmic dumb crap rather than who lives here now.

    I am glad the faucet is turned off and locked on this issue.

    You put scientists in charge of this earth, we'll end up living in caves in about two years.....


    Report abuse

    Green Dragon Regular wrote on January 30, 2010 08:52 AM: @ColinFromLasVegas-

    Please explain to me how decades of nuclear testing 90 minutes from Las Vegas were just fine for four decades, but the storage of nuclear material in bullet-proof, waterproof, leak-proof, nasty-look-proof containers deep, deep underground in tunnels hardened beyond the specs of Cheyenne Mountain in the middle of the desert is somehow bad for the future of the same metropolitan area.

    I eagerly await your enlightenment...


    Report abuse

    ColinFromLasVegas wrote on January 29, 2010 08:22 PM: I am pleased to see the money being shut off on Yucca Mountain and the scientists howling in frustration. That does mean it's a dead issue. And if they still don't get it, keep fighting and make them waste money left and right until they get slapped by someone or they end up figuring it out by themselves that it ain't gonna happen.

    Although I agree jobs are important, THIS Yucca Mountain crap is not the way to diversify the jobs in Nevada. Diversity needs to be sought elsewhere other than the United States' nuclear dump site. Health is far more important than money.

    I'm pleased to see President Obama carried through with his campaign initiative on this. That's why I voted for him.


    Report abuse

    Frank M. Pelteson wrote on January 29, 2010 03:28 PM: Please note that mentioned Brent Scowcroft and Lee Hamilton are both members of the Council on Foreign Relations, the "Hidden Government" behind and above that of the United States. Scowcroft was also one of the founders of the Washington-based Brookings Institution, an elitist think tank devoted to altering the US Constitution. Brian Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun is a Member of the Board of Trustees of Brookings. He helped found the UNLV branch of Brookings, called "Brookings West."

    Note also that Gerald Ford and George H. W. Bush mentioned herein were members of the CFR.

    You can see how the conspiratorial Insider involvement here intends to ruthlessly inhibit the development of Nuclear Energy in order to lower the standard of living and Freedom of the American people through an energy famine, in preparation for The New World Order.


    Report abuse

    Craig wrote on January 29, 2010 12:54 PM: This is great news. Further proof that Yucca Mountain is dead. Thanks Senator Reid!


    Report abuse

    Pete wrote on January 29, 2010 12:16 PM: The Commission will produce an interim report within 18 months and a final report within 24 months.

    The members of the Blue Ribbon Commission are:

    Lee Hamilton, Co-Chair
    Brent Scowcroft, Co-Chair
    Mark Ayers, President, Building and Construction Trades Department, AFL-CIO
    Vicky Bailey, Former Commissioner, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission; Former IN PUC Commissioner; Former Department of Energy Assistant Secretary for Policy and International Affairs
    Albert Carnesale, Chancellor Emeritus and Professor, UCLA
    Pete V. Domenici, Senior Fellow, Bipartisan Policy Center; former U.S. Senator (R-NM)
    Susan Eisenhower, President, Eisenhower Group
    Chuck Hagel, Former U.S. Senator (R-NE)
    Jonathan Lash, President, World Resources Institute
    Allison Macfarlane, Associate Professor of Environmental Science and Policy, George Mason University
    Dick Meserve, Former Chairman, Nuclear Regulatory Commission
    Ernie Moniz, Professor of Physics and Cecil & Ida Green Distinguished Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Per Peterson, Professor and Chair, Department of Nuclear Engineering, University of California – Berkeley
    John Rowe, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Exelon Corporation
    Phil Sharp, President, Resources for the Future


    Report abuse

    Alvinjh wrote on January 29, 2010 10:27 AM: This is a waste of time and a sham. It is political cover. If they spent 30 years studying the Yucca Mountain site, use a portion of the funds collected from Nuclear Energy uses to do it, and still managed to violate a law written to ensure that congress would not do exactly what it ended up doing (play politics with this issue) what in the hell is a "commission" going to accomplish. Nothing. It is political cover for Reid/Obama/Pelosi.

    There is a solution and it is coming in about 267 days. That's when Harry Reid will leave Washington for good. Reid is corrupt, self serving, incredibly tone deaf and incompetent. His departure will solve many things, including the nuclear waste storage problem.


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