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NEWS & LETTERS, January-February 2002

Nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain

Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham's Jan. 11 recommendation to bury 77,000 tons of high-level nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain, Nev., was a long-expected counter-blow against the anti-nuke movement. The reaction of Native Americans, greens, Nevadans and others was immediate—not only denouncing the decision as driven by "politics, not science," but announcing that the ongoing campaign of protests, lawsuits, lobbying and public education will be stepped up.

The 1982 law that started the slide toward Yucca was originally a concession won by the anti-nuke movement, a concession that became a lifeline for an industry that had suffered a nearly fatal blow with the 1979 partial meltdown at the Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania. Since then, not a single nuclear power plant has been ordered in the U.S., and all those ordered since 1974 have been cancelled.

If Yucca goes forward, the nuclear industry hopes to find new life. The industry projects that new nuclear plants may be built as soon as 2006, and 40-year-old plants, though already decaying from the stress of constant radiation, may gain 20-year extensions on their expiring licenses. Without a permanent or interim repository, 103 reactors are running out of storage space for their highly radioactive waste.

Up to 1979, few things fueled the movement more than the series of disasters resulting from the slipshod handling of radioactive waste—from a truckload of liquid waste that dripped across 1,000 miles of highway from Michigan to Nevada, to the 430,000 gallons of acidic toxic-radioactive stew that have leaked into the ground at Hanford, Wash., and are heading for the Columbia River.

The promise of "permanent disposal" of high-level nuclear waste was supposed to lull all into forgetting that the nuclear complex threatens millions of lives every day. As time went on, all of Congress was feeling the heat from people livid at the idea of having the deadly waste forced on them, and the decision was made to gang up on Nevada.

An elaborate process was followed to lend the illusion of Yucca Mountain being blessed by the high priests of science, but problems were repeatedly found with the site. Each time, the government just lowered the standards. Even today, while Abraham declares the site "scientifically sound," the government's own General Accounting Office report states that 293 issues have not  been resolved. Most seriously, it is altogether too likely that wastes would escape into drinking water used in Nevada and California.

While Abraham trotted out terrorism as a reason for opening Yucca Mountain, the only real protection against nuclear materials—whether in terrorist attacks, or accidents, or the routine exposure that happens every day to workers and neighbors—is to shut down the entire industry, which has proven so well its incompatibility with human life.

As long as nuclear power plants keep operating, they will continue to store spent fuel until it is "cool" enough to handle, so Abraham's "terrorism" excuse is a lie. What he proposes involves 50,000 new potential accidents or targets—50,000 truckloads and trainloads of radioactive waste that would travel a cumulative 50 to 100 million miles, some through cities such as Chicago, St. Louis and Memphis. Some 52 million people live within a half mile of these routes, and it is to these 52 million that the movement will turn as the fight continues.

—Franklin Dmitryev

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