Comments (7) | Add a comment
Nuclear hearing delay sought
Tools
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Updated: Apr. 10, 2012 | 10:03 a.m.
In a surprise move, the nuclear power industry's lobbying arm has asked regulators to suspend hearings on a license to bury tens of thousands of tons of highly radioactive waste in Yucca Mountain.
The proposal by the Nuclear Energy Institute takes a step back from a 20-year goal to reach the first year of the hearing process. Institute officials say the move is necessary to make wise use of funds left in a Yucca Mountain budget slashed severely by the Obama administration.
Nevada opponents contend that suspending the hearings would hamper their efforts to achieve victory early in the process by denying the state an opportunity to offer evidence against the license application that shows the site is not suitable and the repository's design is fatally flawed.
In essence, energy lobbyists want to shift the process to one focused on safety research by the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which critics say is an end run attempt to get those agencies to sign off on a license approval for the repository without input by Yucca foes that would come during licensing hearings.
Citing an internal Energy Department memorandum that calls for ending the agency's defense of the license next month, officials for the institute suggest using the money instead for completing a review of safety issues about the planned repository site, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
"This will avoid unnecessarily consuming stakeholder resources in the face of DOE's potential withdrawal of its license application," reads the Nov. 13 letter to Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Gregory Jaczko from Marvin Fertel, president and CEO of the Nuclear Energy Institute.
Stakeholder resources refer to billions of dollars ratepayers have put in a nuclear waste fund for studying, licensing and building a repository at Yucca Mountain.
Fertel's letter was triggered by an Oct. 23 Department of Energy memo that states, "All license defense activities will be terminated in December 2009."
Nevada's legal team, which opposes the repository plan, urged Jaczko not to act on the institute's request to halt licensing hearings, saying doing so would violate the nation's nuclear waste laws and sidestep Nevada's due process rights.
In a letter last Monday to Jaczko, the state's top legal consultant, Marty Malsch, said following the institute's proposal would allow federal agencies to resolve technical issues related to the project "without any meaningful participation by any adverse party on any of the admitted safety and environmental contentions."
Adopting the institute's proposal would be "an appalling denial of due process of law," because it would usurp the licensing panel's authority to conduct a trial on Nevada's concerns with the license application, Malsch asserted.
Steven Kraft, senior director of used fuel management for the Nuclear Energy Institute, said he believes there is no need for now to proceed with the hearing process, "but we think there is value in completing the technical review."
Kraft said he thinks Nevada's lawyers "missed the point of our letter."
"We're saying, 'Why don't you hold up on the hearings for now?' ... There's absolutely no hint in our letter about denying anybody" due process, Kraft said Wednesday.
Bruce Breslow, executive director of Nevada's Agency for Nuclear Projects and the lead opponent to the Yucca Mountain Project, said the institute's proposal would allow the staffs of the Energy Department and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission "to proceed, behind closed doors," until a safety evaluation report is issued with a recommendation for granting a license without input from the state and others.
Breslow said the Nuclear Energy Institute's proposal "would have the effect of shutting down" the hearing process and enabling the Energy Department to evade the next scheduled activity by the licensing board, which is consideration of a number of legal issue contentions. A favorable ruling on some of the legal issue challenges would deal a fatal blow to the project, Malsch has said.
Meanwhile, Republican backers of the project asked Energy Secretary Steven Chu not to abandon the project because it would waste $6 billion of taxpayers' money that already has been spent on it.
Chu has said Yucca Mountain is not an option for disposing of the nation's high-level nuclear waste. He is expected to seat a panel next year to chart a course for dealing with spent fuel that is piling up at reactor sites across the nation.
In a statement Wednesday, Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, ranking member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said, "Secretary Chu could set back the U.S. nuclear waste disposal program for decades, cost U.S. taxpayers potentially billions of dollars. ... Before Secretary Chu unilaterally shuts down the Yucca Mountain program, perhaps he should explain why, something lacking from any of his public comments to date on the nuclear waste site."
Contact reporter Keith Rogers at krogers@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0308.
Comments
Terms & Conditions
The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The Review-Journal does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please use the Report Abuse button.
Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 24 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.











RSS

I second Kelly's comment. Everyone should copy it and send it to all the members of the NRC, Secretary Chu, and President Obama.
What a waste, this is just what nevada needs. Have you na-sayers beeen out there and taken the tour. Saying OK would balance and budget for years to come for the state of Nevada. Money to feed our homeless, pay for our schools, provide unemployment checks for the 1000's without jobs. Plus add 1000's of new high paying jobs, without adding to our air or water problems...Wake, you been drinking the Reed cool aid for to many years...
Chu can not unilaterally shut down the Yucca Mountain Project. Only if Congress rolls over and plays dead will Reid/Obama be allowed to win since the project is a federal law by Congress, not the whim of whomever is in office.
Punting to future generations the disposal of nuclear waste is blatantly unfair and indeed very dangerous on multiple levels, not just the waste. To stop the NWPA now will mean that nuclear waste will NEVER be removed from wherever it is produced because some politician wanting to win votes will cancel any future project as well.
Whether you are for Yucca Mountain or not is unimportant compared to the destruction of the American political and legal system that requires laws to be followed by every administration and Congress. The death of Yucca Mountain is the death of the American Republic. A very dramatic statement, but true nonetheless.
You can see the reply Sec Chu gave when asked some pointed questions by several US Senators.
http://aBadReid.com
I agree, Sec. Chu is a joke!
There is no science involved with this decision. Just fear and one senator's quest for re-election...
But hey, several billions wasted is just a drop in the barrel compared to the waste the Democrats are pushing for other items like health care!
The new American way, spend spend spend; waste waste waste!
Bad Reid
Bad Senator
At least Rep. Joe Barton has the guts to ask Secretary Chu for an explination. Senator Reid always said that a decision would be made "on scientific evidence, not emotions". What a joke.
Even if approved, the repository would be years away from being operational. In the mean time, Nevada is loosing hundreds of millions of dollars, which is greatly needed by the State.
Wake up people, where better to put the waste than Yucca Mountain??