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For immediate release
For further information contact:
Arjun Makhijani: (301) 270-5500
P R E S S R E L E A S E
Department of Energy Makes the Wrong Choice by Selecting Yucca Mountain, Nevada
as a Suitable Nuclear Waste Repository,
according to the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research
Takoma Park, Maryland: "The Department of Energy has made an historic
error in declaring that Yucca Mountain, Nevada is a suitable site for a
nuclear repository," said Dr. Arjun Makhijani, president of the
Institute for Energy and Environmental Research (IEER), in Takoma Park,
Maryland. "Put simply, it is the wrong choice."
IEER has long criticized the government's process of selecting and
characterizing the repository as well as the problems with the
repository itself. The government has changed the rules to accommodate
the repository a number of times. Because Yucca Mountain could not meet
rules for all other repositories, Congress asked the Environmental
Protection Agency to make special rules for Yucca Mountain, for
instance. Those rules exempted the site from meeting Safe Drinking
Water standards for all water under federal land within more than 11
miles of the site. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission also changed its
rules more than once to accommodate Yucca Mountain.
"Moving the goal post doesn't make for a better site," said Dr.
Makhijani. "This is a site that even by the DOE's own estimates will do
little to keep wastes from moving into drinking water. That whole job
depends on a recently invented metal container that has had just a few
years of testing."
The DOE plans to use a nickel-alloy container and a titanium drip shield
as the principal engineered barriers to contain the water for thousands
of years. But Yucca Mountain is an oxidizing environment in which
metals could rust under certain circumstances, notably the presence of
humidity.
"Putting a metal container in an oxidizing environment condemns one to
fighting the second law of thermodynamics for eons. It is not a
sensible approach from a basic science point of view. A metal container
belongs in a reducing environment, not an oxidizing environment," said
Dr. Makhijani. "When I pointed out this basic problem during a presentation to the
National Research Council panel on Yucca Mountain last summer, none of
the scientists on the panel challenged my assertion."
DOE has put all the eggs in the engineered-barrier basket, according to
IEER. Normally, the barriers and the geologic medium should each be
able to contain the waste on its own, thereby providing a back up. That
is not the case with Yucca Mountain.
IEER has advocated a different approach to selecting a repository or
disposal method. It involves studying a variety of different deep
geologic media. Such an approach involves (i) selecting geologic media
that would retard waste and (ii) designing engineered barriers that
mimic natural materials in those specific environments in retarding
waste movement and in durability, and finally (iii) selecting a site
where there is minimal risk of inadvertent human intrusion.
"There is no really good solution to the waste problem and its creation
must be minimized," said Dr. Makhijani. "But there are ways to handle
the burden of waste that we have with scientific prudence and technical
ingenuity. The selection of Yucca Mountain, unfortunately meets neither
criterion."
A considerable amount of literature on Yucca Mountain is available on IEER's web site.
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Available on this site:
- "If not Yucca Mountain, then what?" - An alternative plan for managing highly radioactive waste in the United States, IEER/ANA fact sheet, December 2001
- EPA's Rule on Repository for High-level Radioactive Waste Undermines Safe Drinking Water Standards, IEER press release, June 6, 2001
- Unresolved issues regarding the proposed nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain, letter to the Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board, May 15, 2001
- Alternative Plan for Highly Radioactive Waste Management in the United States, Science for Democratic Action vol. 7 no. 3, May 1999
- Fluid Inclusion Studies at Yucca Mountain, December, 1998 (technical report)
- More at our Guide to the Site, look under 'Radioactive Waste'
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