14. Mainstreaming Nuclear Waste
Sources:
Nuclear Information and Resource Service, May 14, 2007
Title: Nuclear Waste in Landfills
Author: Diane DArrigo
Environment News Service, May 14, 2007
Title: US Allows Radioactive Materials in Ordinary Landfills
Author: Sunny Lewis
Environment News Service, February 4, 2008
Title: US Company Seeks Permit to Import Nuclear Waste
Author: Sunny Lewis
Student Researchers: Derek Harms and Cedric Therene
Faculty Evaluator: Noel Byrne, PhD
Radioactive materials from nuclear weapons production sites are being
dumped into regular landfills, and are available for recycling and resale.
The Nuclear Information and Resource Service (NIRS) has tracked the
Department of Energys (DOE) release of radioactive scrap, concrete,
equipment, asphalt, chemicals, soil, and more, to unaware and unprepared
recipients such as landfills, commercial businesses, and recreation
areas. Under the current system, the DOE releases contaminated materials
directly, sells them at auctions or through exchanges, or sends the
materials to processors who can release them from radioactive controls.
The recycling of these materials for reuse in the production
of everyday household and personal items such as zippers, toys, furniture,
and automobiles, or to build roads, schools, and playgrounds
is increasingly common.
The NIRS report, Out of Control on Purpose: DOEs Dispersal
of Radioactive Waste into Landfills and Consumer Products, tracks
the laws, methods, and justifications used by the DOE to expedite the
mandatory cleanup of the environmental legacy being created by the nations
nuclear weapons program and government-sponsored nuclear energy research.
One of the largest and most technically complex environmental cleanup
programs in the world, the effort includes cleanup of 114 sites across
the country to be completed by the end of 2008.
The DOE has unilaterally chosen allowable radioactive contamination
and public exposure levels to facilitate clean-up of these
sites. Pressure is increasing to allow clearing radioactivity from control
in order to legalize the dispensing and disbursing of nuclear waste.
In 2000, the Secretary of Energy banned the commercial recycling of
potentially radioactive metal. However, the ban does not apply to the
disposal, reuse, or recycling of metal equipment, components, and pipes,
or of other materials.
Seven sites of importance were investigated for the NIRS report: Oak
Ridge, Tennessee; Rocky Flats, Colorado; Los Alamos, New Mexico; Mound
and Fernald, Ohio; West Valley, New York; and Paducah, Kentucky. Of
these, Tennessee is said to be the main funnel that pours nuclear weapon
and power waste from around the country into landfills and recycling
facilities without public knowledge. People around regular trash
landfills will be shocked to learn that radioactive contamination from
nuclear weapons production is ending up there, either directly released
by DOE or via brokers and processors, says author Diane DArrigo,
NIRSs Radioactive Waste Project director.
EnergySolutions, the company that operates the only private low-level
radioactive waste disposal business in the US, disposes of more than
90 percent of the low-level radioactive waste generated in the US. It
operates waste processing and disposition facilities in Tennessee, South
Carolina, and Utah. The company also operates low-level radioactive
waste disposal facilities, vaults, and landfills on the DOE Oak Ridge
Reservation in Tennessee.
Amazingly, as the DOE struggles through desperate and irresponsible
measures to disappear this nations nuclear waste by
the end of 2008, EnergySolutions has applied for a license in Tennessee
to process nuclear waste from Italy.
This application marks the first time in the history of the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission that a company has asked to dispose of large amounts
of foreign-generated low-level radioactive waste in the United States.
In February 2008, Bart Gordon, the Tennessee Democrat who chairs the
House Committee on Science and Technology, asked the Northwest Interstate
Compact of Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management to withhold licensing
that he says would put the US on a path to becoming the worlds
nuclear garbage waste dump.
In an understatement, Gordon argued, The US already faces capacity
issues and other challenges in treating and disposing of radioactive
waste produced domestically. We should be working on solving this problem
at home before taking dangerous waste from around the world.
UPDATE BY DIANE DARRIGO
The nuclear power and weapons industry and the government agencies
that promote, oversee, and regulate nuclear activities are trying to
save money by allowing large amounts of man-made, radioactively contaminated
materials and property to be redefined as not radioactive. They dont
want to pay to try to isolate nuclear waste, including metal, concrete,
asphalt, plastic, soil, equipment, and buildings, so they have developed
ways to send the waste to regular landfills or even into commercial
recycling that could end up in daily-use items the public makes contact
with regularly.
This story is increasingly important as old nuclear weapons sites and
power reactors close and the companies seek relief from responsibility
and liability for the long-lasting nuclear waste they generated. It
is especially dangerous as new nuclear power and weapons facilities
are proposed, which will dramatically increase the amount of waste generated
that could get into the public realm.
Although the US federal agencies have not generally allowed nuclear
waste to be released from controls, they are still working on it. The
Environmental Protection Agency and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
(NRC) have proposed rules in the wings, likely to emerge at any time.
NRC is encouraging case by case releases of nuclear waste. The DOE has
procedures to allow some radioactive waste out of controls but claims
to be preventing radioactive metal from getting into the commercial
metal market. A programmatic environmental review could overturn that
prohibition, and internally DOE has many loopholes to let nuclear wastes
out.
The story wasnt covered much in the mainstream news. One notable
exception was the investigative team led by Demetria Kalodimos on Channel
4 WSMV, Nashvilles NBC affiliate, who reported on the story and
did over twenty follow-ups in the Nashville area (see http://www.nirs.org
for links). Public awareness led to legislative attention and a commitment
by the landfill operator who was taking nuclear waste to stop taking
it. Kalodimos received three journalism awards for reporting and following
up on the story herself.
The community is not satisfied with this voluntary commitment, because
the Tennessee State Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC)
still allows nuclear waste to be released from controls. TDEC licenses
companies to import nuclear waste from around the country and world
for processing, including incineration and metal melting
and reuse.
The report identified TDEC and Tennessee as leaders in releasing nuclear
waste out of control.
The situation has worsened since last year. One of the processors is
proposing to import a huge portion of Italys nuclear power waste
to burn, process, melt and dump in the US (Tennessee and Utah).
Action against this can be taken by contacting your state governors
to oppose it and by supporting federal legislation that would prohibit
the US from importing foreign nuclear waste.
Citizens can also contact their state officials to find out if their
state is allowing nuclear waste into the solid waste streams in their
communities.
Contact for more information.