– EM continues to assist
Japan as it recovers from a 2011 nuclear accident through a newly formed
bilateral commission established to build on the close, collaborative
relationship between the U.S. and Japan. Senior Advisor for Environmental
Management David Huizenga and EM Office of Tank Waste Management Director Steve
Schneider were among the members of a U.S. delegation led by Deputy Secretary
Daniel Poneman at the recent inaugural meeting of the U.S.-Japan Bilateral
Commission on Civil Nuclear Energy Cooperation in Tokyo. The commission serves
as a senior-level forum for the U.S. and Japan to consult and collaborate on
issues affecting the global development of civil nuclear energy. The commission
will discuss future nuclear energy cooperation and advance shared interests in
areas such as nuclear safety and security and decontamination and decommissioning.
Led by Poneman and Japan’s Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs Koro Bessho, the
commission established five high-level working groups, one of which will focus
on decommissioning and environmental management. EM and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) are leading that group and will work with Japan’s
Ministry of the Environment (MOE) and Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry
(METI). “EM looks forward to continued cooperation between the U.S. and Japan
on the Fukushima site cleanup,” Huizenga said. “This working group led by EM
and EPA provides a great opportunity for the U.S. and Japan to share knowledge
and lessons learned from the accident and cleanup experience that may benefit
both countries.” The other working groups are involved with civil nuclear
energy research and development, emergency management, nuclear security and
safety and regulatory issues. The groups are scheduled to convene to discuss
priorities and activities and provide updates to the commission in three
months. The next commission meeting will be held in the U.S. in 2013. EM’s
involvement in the commission comes after two EM-led workshops in the past year
to assist Japan's Fukushima cleanup efforts. The workshops, attended by several
MOE and METI leaders, addressed technical issues involved in the Fukushima site
cleanup.
Hanford
Energy Secretary Chu to assemble expert panel to examine Hanford vit
plant Read more here: http://www.tri-cityherald.com/2012/08/03/2046266/energy-secretary-chu-to-assemble.html#storylink=rss#storylink=cpy
Team helping
assess Hanford black cells - NBC News Story Link
Energy Department Announces New Technical Review to Assess Black
Cells at Hanford’s Waste Treatment Plant
Link
Washington, DC – The
U.S. Department of Energy announced today that Secretary of Energy Steven Chu
has assembled a group of independent technical experts to assess
the Hanford Site’s Waste Treatment Plant (WTP), specifically as it relates to
the facility’s “black cells.” The review involves the plant’s capability, as
designed, to detect equipment failure and to repair failed equipment inside the
WTP’s black cells. Black cells are enclosed concrete rooms within the WTP
Pretreatment facility that contain tanks and piping. Due to high levels
of radioactivity once the plant begins operations, the cells are designed to be
sealed with no access by personnel over the anticipated 40-year operating life
span of the plant. The review will include the individual input of
technical experts in a variety of fields.
“I will be receiving
input from each of these highly capable experts to help improve our ability to
detect and address any potential issues in the black cells that could arise
during the course of the Waste Treatment Plant’s operational life,” said
Chu. “These experts have a reputation for developing creative solutions
to highly technical issues and their independent advice will enable us to
integrate worthwhile ideas into the design of the plant before construction is
completed.”
The WTP is being
designed and built to treat millions of gallons of tank waste from plutonium
production at Hanford from the 1940s to the 1980s. The equipment in the
facility’s 18 black cells is designed to operate without moving mechanical
parts that would require maintenance. DOE is now reviewing that technical
approach to determine whether or not those areas can or should be accessible
for monitoring and repairing equipment once operations begin.
Secretary Chu and the
independent experts will begin reviewing information about WTP this week and
are expected to visit the Hanford Site in the coming months. The principal
purposes of the review are to assess the plant’s capability to detect equipment
vulnerabilities or failures in the black cells, assess plans to repair those
systems, and recommend any design changes or operational enhancements that may
be needed. The Department has named William Hamel, the Assistant Manager
for Infrastructure at Idaho, as the lead federal employee to facilitate this
review. Hamel, an employee of the Office of Nuclear Energy, has in-depth
knowledge and experience with black cell designs and vitrification operations.
“We welcome this
assessment and look forward to assisting with this review at the Waste
Treatment Plant,” said Scott Samuelson, Manager, DOE’s Office of River
Protection. “These individuals are known for both their expertise and
capability to analyze complex problems and facilities and provide sound
recommendations to the government.”
The following
individuals will be participating in the review:
Langdon Holton has over 35 years experience in radiochemical process
engineering and operations, nuclear fuel reprocessing, waste separations and
treatment and development of waste treatment technologies supporting programs
within the United States, Germany and France. Langdon Holton is employed
by the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and has been supporting DOE in its
oversight of the Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant. He has
academic degrees in chemical engineering from the University of California, and
graduate degrees in chemical engineering and business from the University of
Washington.
·
Dr. Thomas O. Hunter retired in July 2010 as President and Laboratories
Director of Sandia National Laboratories. Dr. Hunter joined Sandia in
1967 and became president in April 2005. In May, DOE Secretary Steven Chu
appointed Dr. Hunter as lead of the federal government’s scientific team that
worked with BP officials to develop and analyze solutions to the BP oil spill.
That work is continuing. Dr. Hunter is a member of the Engineering
Advisory Board for the University of Florida, Council on Foreign Relations,
American Nuclear Society, New Mexico Technology Commercialization Council, the
MIND Research Network, and the U.S. Strategic Command’s Strategic Advisory
Group. He is the author of numerous technical papers and
presentations. Dr. Hunter earned a B.S. in mechanical engineering from
the University of Florida, an M.S. in mechanical engineering from the
University of New Mexico, an M.S. in nuclear engineering from the University of
Wisconsin, and a Ph.D. in nuclear engineering from the University of Wisconsin.
·
Dr. David Kosson is a Professor of Engineering, Chair of Civil and
Environmental Engineering, Professor of Chemical Engineering, and Professor of
Earth and Environmental Sciences at Vanderbilt University. He also is
co-principal investigator (with Charles Powers) of the multi-university
Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation (CRESP).
Kosson’s research focuses on management of nuclear and chemical wastes,
including process development and contaminant mass transfer applied to
groundwater, soil, sediment, and waste systems. Kosson has undergraduate
and graduate degrees in chemical and biochemical engineering from Rutgers
University.
·
Dr. Milton Levenson has more than 60 years experience in nuclear energy, much
of it relating to nuclear safety. His technical experience includes work
related to nuclear safety, fuel cycle, water reactors, advanced reactors, and
remote operations. Levenson was at Oak Ridge during the Manhattan Project
in the early 1940s. He had first-hand knowledge of the first fatal
nuclear accident in the United States (known as the SL-1 accident in
Idaho). He led the technical team that responded to the Three Mile Island
accident in 1979, and he was appointed to a special Soviet commission that
investigated the Chernobyl accident. His professional experience includes
research and operations positions at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the
Argonne National Laboratory, Electric Power Research Institute, and Bechtel,
where he retired as vice president in 1989. Levenson is a fellow and past
president of the American Nuclear Society, a fellow of the American Institute
of Chemical Engineers, and a recipient of the American Institute of Chemical
Engineers' Robert E. Wilson Award in Nuclear Chemical Engineering. He is
the author of more than 150 publications and presentations and holds three U.S
patents. He is also a member of the National Academies' Nuclear and
Radiation Studies Board and has served on several National Research Council
committees.
·
Dr. Arun Majumdar became the first Director of the Advanced Research Projects
Agency - Energy (ARPA-E), the country's only agency devoted to transformational
energy research and development, in October 2009. Prior to joining ARPA-E,
Majumdar was the Associate Laboratory Director for Energy and Environment at
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and a Professor of Mechanical Engineering
and Materials Science and Engineering at the University of California,
Berkeley. His highly distinguished research career includes the science
and engineering of energy conversion, transport, and storage ranging from
molecular and nanoscale level to large energy systems. In 2005, Majumdar
was elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering for this pioneering
work. He received his bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering at the
Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay and his Ph.D. from the University of
California, Berkeley.
·
Dr. Richard A. Meserve is President of the Carnegie Institution for Science and
Senior of Counsel, Covington & Burling LLP. He is a former chair of
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and is a member of the President’s Blue
Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear Future. With his Harvard law
degree, received in 1975, and his Ph.D. in applied physics from Stanford,
awarded in 1976, Meserve devoted his legal practice to technical issues arising
at the intersection of science, law, and public policy. Early in his
career, Meserve served as legal counsel to the President’s science advisor and
was a law clerk to Justice Harry A. Blackmun of the United States Supreme Court
and to Judge Benjamin Kaplan of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.
Meserve received his undergraduate degree from Tufts University in 1966.
·
Dr. Per Peterson is Professor and Chair of the Department of Nuclear
Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley (UCB). He is a
member of the President’s Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear
Future. After joining UCB in 1990 as an Assistant Professor he received a
NSF Presidential Young Investigator award, and most recently received the
Fusion Power Associates Excellence in Fusion Engineering Award and the American
Nuclear Society Thermal Hydraulics Division Technical Achievement Award.
Peterson’s research interests focus on topics in heat and mass transfer, fluid
dynamics, and phase change.
Dr. Monica Regalbuto works in the Process Chemistry and Engineering Department at Argonne National Laboratory. She previously served as a Senior Program Manager with the Office of Waste Processing with the Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management, supporting technical risk reduction and uncertainty in the Department’s clean-up programs. From 2003 to 2008, Regalbuto served as the head of the Process Chemistry and Engineering Department in Argonne’s Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division and managed a group of 30 researchers. Regalbuto has academic degrees in chemical engineering from the Instituto Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey and graduate degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Notre Dame.
Dr. Monica Regalbuto works in the Process Chemistry and Engineering Department at Argonne National Laboratory. She previously served as a Senior Program Manager with the Office of Waste Processing with the Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management, supporting technical risk reduction and uncertainty in the Department’s clean-up programs. From 2003 to 2008, Regalbuto served as the head of the Process Chemistry and Engineering Department in Argonne’s Chemical Sciences and Engineering Division and managed a group of 30 researchers. Regalbuto has academic degrees in chemical engineering from the Instituto Tecnologico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey and graduate degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Notre Dame.
State
urges DOE to choose vitrification for all Hanford waste
By Annette Cary, Tri-City
Herald
The Department of Energy needs
to pick a preferred way to treat all Hanford tank waste before a massive study
is released in the next few months, the state Department of Ecology has told
DOE headquarters. DOE has invested eight years and $85 million on the
environmental study, but without a conclusion on how all the waste should be
treated, the study will be incomplete, the state said in a recent letter. It
was sent by Jane Hedges, manager of the Department of Ecology's Nuclear Waste
Program, to Tracy Mustin, principal deputy assistant secretary of DOE's Office
of Environmental Management. The Tank Closure and Waste Management
Environmental Impact Statement is expected to be released by the end of the
year, a delay from earlier DOE statements that it might be available this
summer. STORY
State
urges DOE to choose vitrification for all Hanford waste: Cleanup proposed for
central Hanford ground water pollution
Published: July 31, 2012 By Annette
Cary, Tri-City Herald
The Department of Energy and
the Environmental Protection Agency are proposing a plan to clean up much of
the radioactive and hazardous chemical ground water contamination over 35 years
in a portion of central Hanford. However, a lack of viable technology for
certain contaminants will keep the ground water from being
cleaned to drinking water
standards for much longer than that. DOE and EPA picked the 35-year plan as
their preferred alternative after also considering 25- and 45-year plans. The
differences would include how aggressively contaminated water is pumped out of
the ground and treated to remove carbon tetrachloride, uranium, nitrate,
chromium and technetium 99. Cleaned water is then reinjected into the ground.
Hanford produced plutonium for the nation's nuclear weapons program during
World War II and the Cold War, and liquid wastes were disposed to the ground in
ditches, ponds, trenches and other in-ground structures. The goal of DOE, EPA
and the Washington State Department of Ecology is to clean ground water to
potentially be used as a source of drinking water. STORY
Cleanup
proposed for central Hanford ground water pollution
The Department of Energy and the
Environmental Protection Agency are proposing a plan to clean up much of the
radioactive and hazardous chemical ground water contamination over 35 years in
a portion of central Hanford.
However, a lack of viable
technology for certain contaminants will keep the ground water from being
cleaned to drinking water standards for much longer than that.
DOE and EPA picked the 35-year
plan as their preferred alternative after also considering 25- and 45-year
plans.
The differences would include
how aggressively contaminated water is pumped out of the ground and treated to
remove carbon tetrachloride, uranium, nitrate, chromium and technetium 99.
Cleaned water is then reinjected into the ground.
Hanford produced plutonium for
the nation's nuclear weapons program during World War II and the Cold War, and
liquid wastes were disposed to the ground in ditches, ponds, trenches and other
in-ground structures.
Read
more here: http://www.tri-cityherald.com/2012/07/31/2041624/cleanup-proposed-for-central-hanford.html#storylink=rss#storylink=cpy
State
urges DOE to choose vitrification for all Hanford waste
Published: July 31, 2012 Tri
City Herald
The Department of Energy needs to pick a preferred way to treat all Hanford tank waste before a massive study is released in the next few months, the state Department of Ecology has told DOE headquarters. DOE has invested eight years and $85 million on the environmental study, but without a conclusion on how all the waste should be treated, the study will be incomplete, the state said in a recent letter. It was sent by Jane Hedges, manager of the Department of Ecology's Nuclear Waste Program, to Tracy Mustin, principal deputy assistant secretary of DOE's Office of Environmental Management. The Tank Closure and Waste Management Environmental Impact Statement is expected to be released by the end of the year, a delay from earlier DOE statements that it might be available this summer. The comprehensive document will cover topics such as disposal at Hanford of radioactive waste, the end for the Fast Flux Test Facility, retrieval of waste from Hanford's underground tanks and treatment of the tank waste. But DOE has said it is not ready to pick a method for treating all 56 million gallons of radioactive waste now held in underground tanks. The waste is left from the past production of plutonium for the nation's weapons program.
Read more here: http://www.tri-cityherald.com/2012/07/31/2041607/state-urges-doe-to-choose-vitrification.html#storylink=cpy
Oak Ridge
State
supports DOE's 2014 environmental budget proposal; pushes for more Oak Ridge
funding; cleanup could go until 2043 at current spending
Posted by
Frank Munger on August 2, 2012 at 11:31 PM |
The Tennessee Department of
Environment and Conservation is supporting the U.S. Department of Energy's Oak
Ridge cleanup funding request for Fiscal Year 2014, although neither the state
nor DOE will reveal the exact amount of the funding request. Based on available
information, it apparently is in the range of the Oak Ridge request for FY 2013
($421.2 million) and signficantly below the average amount that the state has
sought over the past decade or so of about $550 million per year. At the
current spending rate, according documents released by TDEC, the Oak Ridge cleanup projects
won't be completed until 2043. That's a further extension beyond the previous
completion date of 2037. "If we were to receive
additional funding, we would be able to pull that 2043 back in," John
Owsley, who heads the TDEC Oak Ridge oversight office, said recently. Upon
request, the state released a May 9 letter to DOE that spells out support for
the budget proposal for FY 14 -- details the milestones -- and expressed the
state's and EPA's other priorities if the federal agency is able to acquire
additional funding. Based on the submitted fundiing request, DOE would be able
to meet the milestones for FY 2014. But the letter also indicates the
importance of getting additional funds, if possible. "The parties to the
FFA (Federal Facilities Agreement) also agreed on April 12, 2012,Ito a set of
high priority projects. In general rank order, that should be implemented
earlier than the enclosed schedules and DOE ORR (Oak Ridge Reservation) should
seek funding levels similar to those prior to the Recovery Act," the letter,
signed by Andy Binford, director of TDEC's Division of Remediation, and
Franklin Hill, director of EPA's Region 4 Superfund Division, said. The letter
was addressed to Sue Cange, the acting Environmental Manager in DOE's Oak Ridge
office. "We are concerned that much of this work cannot be started until
approximately FY 2022 or beyond under the funding levels DOE ORR
anticipates," the letter states. "The high priority work includes
further mercury source reduction and release controls at Y-12 and uncontrolled
releases in the Bear Creek Valley watershed to address these ongoing
releases."
The
letter includes tables for enforceable milestones for the near-term, but it
also includes a set of projects that demand attention if more money is
available.
Those
projects, 14 in all, include:
1.
Y-12 Comprehensive Storm Water (Outfall) Water Treatment
2. Additional West Bethel Valley Ground Water Characterization
3. 8110 Area Soil Hot Spot Excavation
4. Y-12 Beta 4 Building D&D
5. Y-12 Beta 4 Soils remediation
6. Upper East Fork Poplar Creek Sediment Excavation
7. Additional Bear Creek Valley Groundwater Characterization
8. NT-8 Flux Reduction
9. East Bethel Valley VOC Plume Groundwater Remediation
10. S-3 Ponds Remediation
11. Additional Melton Valley Groundwater Characterization
12. Bear Creek Valley Burial Ground Remediation
13. ETTP Balance of Facilities
14. ETTP Groundwater
2. Additional West Bethel Valley Ground Water Characterization
3. 8110 Area Soil Hot Spot Excavation
4. Y-12 Beta 4 Building D&D
5. Y-12 Beta 4 Soils remediation
6. Upper East Fork Poplar Creek Sediment Excavation
7. Additional Bear Creek Valley Groundwater Characterization
8. NT-8 Flux Reduction
9. East Bethel Valley VOC Plume Groundwater Remediation
10. S-3 Ponds Remediation
11. Additional Melton Valley Groundwater Characterization
12. Bear Creek Valley Burial Ground Remediation
13. ETTP Balance of Facilities
14. ETTP Groundwater
TDEC's
John Owsley said the current long-term schedule for doing cleanup is based on
level funding at existing levels, with a 2.4 percent escalation from 2019 and
beyond. The state would prefer, of course, that the Department of Energy
elevate the spending in order to get the work accomplished more quickly, he
said. Currently, the agreement between the environmental regulators and the DOE
is based on a series of short-term enforceable milestones (over three years),
and longer term milestones that are not legally bound. Owsley said the state
would like to see revisions to make enforceable milestones until the end of
cleanup, although those discussions and negotiations are still ongoing without
agreement yet. If the $550 million annual budget for Oak Ridge cleanup, which
was the earlier basis for cleanup schedules, is not achieved, then there's no
alternative but to extend the schedule for finishing the work, the state
official said. Mike Koentop, a spokesman in the DOE Oak Ridge office, said he
could not release the FY 2014 funding request.
Y-12 protesters
allegedly enter high-security area, spray paint, splash blood
Posted
at 5:35 pm July 28, 2012 by John Huotari
Oak Ridge Today
Three
activists opposed to nuclear weapons pose with banners before their reported
arrests on Saturday. Three Plowshares protesters who oppose nuclear weapons
allegedly sneaked through four fences at the Y-12 National Security Complex
before dawn Saturday and spray-painted messages and splashed human blood on the
walls of a uranium storage building before they were detained by security
guards, an activist said. The three were identified by supporters as Micheal R.
Walli, 63, of Washington, D.C.; Megan Rice, 82, of New York; and Greg
Boertje-Obed, 57, of Duluth, Minn. Story
DOE releases plutonium disposition study draft
Updated: 7/27/2012
11:36 PM aikenstandard.com
A draft environmental study report released Friday by the
Department of Energy considers the potential environmental impacts of various
alternatives for plutonium disposition, citing the MOX fuel avenue as the
department's preferred option.
The draft, which will be open to public comment through the end of
September, analyzes the possible environmental impacts of alternatives for the
disposition of 7.1 metric tons of weapons-grade plutonium from pits, as well as
6 metric tons of surplus weapons-usable non-pit plutonium.
"The MOX fuel alternative is DOE's preferred alternative for
surplus plutonium disposition," said Courtney Greenwald, National Nuclear
Security Administration spokesperson. "The MOX approach was selected from
other alternatives to dispose of 34 metric tons of U.S. surplus plutonium
through as series of decisions starting in the late 1990s, including the
recommendation of the National Academy of Sciences which identified MOX fuel as
an option for eliminating the 'clear and present danger' posed by surplus
weapons grade plutonium."
DOE's preferred alternative for the disposition of surplus
plutonium that cannot be turned to MOX fuel is disposal at the Waste Isolation
Plot Plant in New Mexico, Greenwald added.
The four alternative disposition paths analyzed in the
supplemental environmental study are: disposition using the can-in-canister
vitrification approach, which would involve small cans of materials placed in a
rack inside a Defense Waste Processing Facility canister at the Savannah River
Site; disposition of non-pit plutonium through SRS' H-Canyon and DWPF at SRS;
disposal of non-pit plutonium at WIPP and fabrication of pit and some non-pit
plutonium into MOX fuel for use in commercial power reactors.
Under all the alternatives, the impact study states, DOE would
also dispose 34 metric tons of surplus plutonium into MOX fuel, in line with
previous decisions. DOE will host public input meetings in various areas of the
country, including a meeting in North Augusta on Sept. 4. The Sept. 4 public
input meeting will be held at the North Augusta Municipal Center at 100 Georgia
Ave. from 5:30 to 8 p.m. The process for the final report and decision is
expected to take eight to 10 months, Greenwald said. For a full draft report, visit
www.nnsa.energy.gov/nepa.
Savannah River Site
Officials want to turn World War II nuclear-weapon development sites into
national parks
By Darryl Fears,
Tennessee’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory was such a well-kept secret during World War II that most
Americans still don’t know that it sits off one of busiest highways in the
South. Every year, streams of vacationers whiz by the complex that enriched
uranium for America’s first atomic bomb project. It’s on the way to Great Smoky
Mountains National Park — the
most-visited U.S. national park. And
every year, right about this time, the city of Oak Ridge, just west of
Knoxville on Interstate 40, holds a Secret City Festival, crying out to potential tourists. “They don’t even know we’re here,” said Katy Brown, president of
the city’s convention and visitors bureau. But a spotlight might shine soon on
the Oak Ridge lab and two other largely forgotten Manhattan Project sites as
the nation marks the 70th anniversary of the general order that established the
world-shaking atomic research and development program. The Obama administration
is supporting bipartisan legislation in Congress that would designate sites in
Oak Ridge; Hanford, Wash.; and Los Alamos, N.M., as national parks. Story
NRC
Bill Magwood, NRC Democrat, Is 'Treacherous, Miserable Liar' And 'First-Class Rat,' Says Harry Reid
Posted: 07/30/2012 12:16 am Updated: 07/30/2012
2:13 am Huffington Post
WASHINGTON -- Harry Reid
isn't known for hyperbole. The soft-spoken Senate majority leader tends to
wield his power behind the scenes, and when he does speak at his weekly press
briefing, reporters lean in and bend their ears to make out the words. But if
Reid is lied to, all that changes. It may sound dissonant to the public to say
that honesty is the mostly highly valued quality in Washington. But while
members of Congress may lie to their constituents with regularity, lying to one
another is considered an unforgiveable sin. In an interview with The Huffington
Post, the Nevada Democrat savaged Bill Magwood, a member of the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, when asked if he thought the Democrat had a chance to
become NRC chairman. "You know, when you're in this government, this
business of politics, the only thing that you have is your word," said
Reid, seated in his Capitol office. "I can be as partisan as I have to be,
but I always try to be nice. I try never to say bad things about people. Bill
Magwood is one of the" -- Reid paused, deciding which adjective to reach
for, before picking them all -- "most unethical, prevaricating" -- he
paused again, this time for 10 full seconds -- "incompetent people I've
ever dealt with. The man sat in that chair -- right there -- and lied to me.
I've never, ever in my life had anyone do that. Never." Story
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION MEETING AUG. 7 AT 9 AM TO DISCUSS
ONGOING LESSONS LEARNED FROM FUKUSHIMA ACCIDENT
The U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission will be briefed by its staff and other stakeholders on
the NRC’s efforts to implement lessons learned from the Fukushima Dai-ichi
accident in a public meeting Aug. 7 at 9 a.m. at NRC Headquarters, 11555
Rockville Pike, Rockville, Md. The commission meeting will be open to public
observation and will be webcast.
National Research
Council
The National Research Council-National Academy
of Sciences will conduct a study and prepare a report to the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission and Congress on lessons learned from the Fukushima
nuclear accident for improving safety and security of U.S. nuclear plants.
Nuclear Energy
Institute
NEI Commends Sen. Bingaman for
Leadership in Tackling Used Fuel Policy
WASHINGTON,
D.C.—U.S. Sen. Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.) today introduced legislation
(S. 3469) in support of key recommendations made by the Blue Ribbon Commission
on America’s Nuclear Future, presented to President Obama in January. The
Nuclear Energy Institute’s Alex Flint, senior vice president for governmental
affairs, made the following remarks in reaction to the legislation. “Senator
Bingaman is to be commended for giving serious consideration to the
recommendations of the Blue Ribbon Commission and the nation’s need to seriously
address the issue of safely managing used nuclear fuel. We look forward to
reviewing his proposal and to testifying in that regard at the appropriate
time.”
Sen.
Bingaman proposes nuclear waste management bill
By Zack Colman - 08/01/12
03:05 PM ET
Chairman of the Senate Energy Committee Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.)
introduced a bill Thursday to revamp federal oversight of nuclear waste,
although he acknowledged partisan disagreements would prevent it from passing
Congress this session.
Bingaman's bill would implement recommendations from
a January report by the Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear Future.
President Obama created the commission in 2009 to evaluate the nation’s
handling of nuclear waste.
S. 3469: Nuclear
Waste Administration Act of 2012
A bill to establish a new organization to manage nuclear
waste, provide a consensual process for siting nuclear waste facilities, ensure
adequate funding for managing nuclear waste, and for other purposes. Link
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