Hanford
Radioactive sludge from K Reactor basins at Hanford moved away from Columbia
River
Published: September 14, 2012 By Annette Cary, Tri-City Herald
Hanford workers gathered Thursday to watch the
394th, and final, special stainless-steel container being hauled away from the
K Reactors area near the Columbia River. The canister held the last of the
"knockout pot sludge," one of two types of highly radioactive sludge
stored underwater in the K Reactor basins. The campaign to remove the sludge
that began in mid-July was the first time highly radioactive sludge has been
removed from underwater containers where it has been consolidated at the K West
Reactor basin.
"This is a major step forward in protecting the
river and a historic accomplishment in environmental cleanup," said Tom
Teynor, DOE project director for sludge treatment. The next step will be
removing the second type of sludge, which is held underwater in the K West
Basin in engineered containers. Technology is being developed to remove that
sludge, which accounts for the majority of the waste. After the Cold War, fuel
irradiated to produce plutonium, but not yet processed to remove the plutonium,
was stored in cooling basins attached to the K West and K East Basins. Link
One more tank down, 140 to goUpdated: Sep 06, 2012 8:38 PM EDT Tracci Dial, NBC News AnchorRICHLAND, Wash. - The cleanup of Hanford will go on for years but Thursday workers completed another step forward. Washington River Protection Solutions said crews removed all the radioactive and chemical waste in a ninth single shell tank in the C-Farm. This tank held 259,000 gallons of waste. It once had the second highest waste volume of all the single shell tanks in Hanford's C-Farm, including both plutonium and uranium. It took nearly two years to remove 99.5% of the waste from Tank C-104. One of 149 of the single shell tanks on the Hanford site. "Retrieving the waste from this tank reduces the risk posed by having the waste stored in these underground tanks," said Lori Gamache, a spokesperson for the Department of Energy. "So we're one step closer to meeting our regulatory requirements of completing the retrieval by September of 2014 of all the tanks in the C-Farm." Link
Waste-Plant Dispute Builds Safety and Design Concerns Slow Construction
of Nuclear-Processing Facility
By ANDREW MORSE Wall
Street Journal Sept 9, 2012
The U.S. Department of Energy is slowing
construction of a facility to process the country's largest accumulation of
radioactive waste, amid an increasingly acrimonious dispute about the design
and safety of the $12.2 billion project. Energy Secretary Steven Chu visited
the Hanford site in southeast Washington state last week, which department
officials said was part of efforts to assess the safety of the nuclear-waste
complex. Mr. Chu was accompanied by an expert panel he assembled following a
trip in June to the plant after concerns were raised about the safety culture
at the facility. Mr. Chu and the experts are reviewing the safety of rooms that
will hold radioactive waste as it is processed at the vast complex, which will
cover 65 acres and house four nuclear facilities, in addition to other
components. Link
Highly Radioactive Sludge Removal Complete
Note: Video is available
on YouTube at: http://ow.ly/dHmjZ; Photos are available on
Hanford’s website at http://ow.ly/dHpGt. DOE Press release September 13, 2012
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and contractor
CH2M HILL Plateau Remediation Company (CH2M HILL) announced today the removal
of the first phase of highly radioactive sludge from under water storage in the
K West Basin about 400 yards away from the Columbia River. Link
New Hanford Leak Raises Concerns
Posted: Sep 01, 2012 6:53 PM EDTUpdated: Sep 10, 2012 8:36 PM EDT
Breanna Gilroy, NBC News Anchor
The Department of Energy has found evidence that a
tank at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation maybe leaking radioactive material. Unknown
material has been found in a third place between the two shells of tank AY 102,
which went into use in 1971. This increases concerns that the tank, one of
Hanford's 28 double shell tanks, has a leak from its inner shell. The tanks are
needed to hold high level radioactive waste for up to 40 more years, until the
last of the waste can be treated for disposal. Link
Hanford Site Press Releases
PRESENTATION: Tank
AY-102 Status Update - The latest information on the discovery of material
found within the AY-102 annulus. Sep 11, 2012 Link
PRESENTATION: ORP
Agency Update to the Hanford Advisory Board - ORP Deputy Manager, Stacy
Charboneau, presented to the Hanford Advisory Board (HAB). Sep 6, 2012 Link
RETRIEVAL OF NINTH
SINGLE-SHELL TANK COMPLETE September 6, 2012 Link
DOE finds more evidence of possible leak in Hanford double-shell tank
By Annette Cary, Tri-City Herald
More evidence was discovered this week that might indicate
that one of Hanford's double-shell tanks is deteriorating. In early August,
radioactive material was found between the inner and outer walls of an
underground tank at Hanford for the first time, raising concerns that waste may
be leaking out of the inner shell of the tank. This week, more unusual material
was found when a video camera inspected another part of the area between the
inner and outer walls of Tank AY-102. It was the first additional area of the
tank checked as an investigation was launched. Link
DOE Secretary Steven Chu keeps up work on Hanford vit plant
Published: September 8, 2012 By Annette Cary,
Tri-City Herald
Energy Secretary Steven Chu continued to work on
Hanford vitrification plant issues through Friday evening in Richland. He
arrived Wednesday with a team of independent scientists and engineers who he
picked to take a fresh look at Hanford Waste Treatment Plant issues,
specifically focusing on the plant's black cells. Washington Gov. Chris
Gregoire's staff had tried to arrange a meeting between the governor and Chu while
the energy secretary was in the Tri-Cities, but his schedule was too tight. The
team was working long days, through meals and into the night, and has had
extensive discussions and briefings with contractors and federal staff at
meetings at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland. They officials
also stayed at the lab, which has accommodations on campus for visitors. The
group is working closely with Dave Huizenga, the senior advisor for DOE's
Office of Environmental Management, and Scott Samuelson, the DOE Hanford Office
of River Protection manager. The vitrification plant is being built to treat up
to 56 million gallons of radioactive and hazardous chemical waste left from the
past production of plutonium for the nation's nuclear weapons program. It will
turn waste into a stable glass form for disposal. The plant is planned to have
18 black cells -- enclosed concrete rooms with tanks and piping that are designed
to have no worker access during the 40 years the plant operates because of high
levels of radioactivity. To eliminate the need for hands-on maintenance, pulse
jet mixers without moving parts have been designed for tanks of high-level
radioactive waste in the black cells. The mixers suck waste up and then shoot
it back out to keep the waste well mixed and prevent particles from settling,
which could cause problems that include a criticality. Chu and his team are
looking at possible failures in the black cells. They're considering what the
response would be and what can be done now to prevent or prepare for potential
problems, said Stacy Charboneau, deputy manager for the DOE Hanford Office of
River Protection, at the Hanford Advisory Board meeting.
Chu did not stop by that meeting Thursday and Friday
in Kennewick, nor was he reported at any other events in the Tri-Cities this
week. DOE staff had said before he arrived that he planned to focus exclusively
on work with the team of experts looking at vitrification plant issues. The
team, whose members were announced in early August, began work before the visit
to the Tri-Cities. They're expected to continue work on the issue after leaving
town. An overall review is expected to be made public after Chu and the team
finish their work, according to DOE. Link
DOE wants changes to Hanford Advisory Board
Published: September 9, 2012 By Annette Cary, Tri-City Herald
The Department of Energy is changing the rules for
the Hanford Advisory Board, to the dismay or anger of most of its board
members. Initially, that would include term limits for members representing
some Hanford employees on the board and the general public. However, DOE
Hanford officials and DOE Headquarters officials are continuing talks on
additional changes to the board, with the wish for changes driven by officials
in Washington, D.C., rather than at Hanford. DOE declined to say what other
changes are being discussed. "A promise was made to the board four years
ago. The promise was not kept," said Jeff Luke, who represents non-union,
nonmanagement employees on the advisory board.
Link
Oak Ridge
Will Y-12 security bungle hurt mercury cleanup?
There's a
lot of mercury cleanup yet to be done at the Y-12 nuclear weapons plant, and I
wonder whether the July 28 security breach and all the fallout from it will
ultimately hurt near-term plans to get that started. Part of the preparation work for
the planned multi-billion-dollar Uranium Processing Facility is to reduce the
size of the plant's PIDAS (Perimeter Intrusion Detection and Assessment
System), probably from 150 acres to about half of that. The PIDAS has been in
the news a lot lately because of the break-in that penetrated three of the
security fences. Link
SRS
By: RANDY KEY | U.S.
Department of Energy Published: September 13, 2012
The Savannah River Site (SRS) achieved a significant milestone this week with the operational closure of tanks 18 and 19, meeting a federal agreement before the December 31, 2012, deadline. Savannah River Remediation (SRR), the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) contractor that has the responsibility to close waste tanks, completed the operational closure of tanks 18 and 19 months ahead of the deadline by completing the grouting of the two tanks. The end of the projects meets a requirement of the Federal Facility Agreement or FFA between DOE, the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Link
The Savannah River Site (SRS) achieved a significant milestone this week with the operational closure of tanks 18 and 19, meeting a federal agreement before the December 31, 2012, deadline. Savannah River Remediation (SRR), the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) contractor that has the responsibility to close waste tanks, completed the operational closure of tanks 18 and 19 months ahead of the deadline by completing the grouting of the two tanks. The end of the projects meets a requirement of the Federal Facility Agreement or FFA between DOE, the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Link
Grout seals Savannah River
Site's C Reactor basin
Tuesday , Sept. 1 1
, 201 2 1 :1 5 PM August Chronicle
Contractors have
completed placement of about 1,700 truckloads of concrete into Savannah River
Site’s dormant C Reactor building that once served the nation’s Cold War
nuclear weapons program. The reactor’s huge, below-ground disassembly basin –
similar to a series of interconnected swimming pools – required more than 2.8
million gallons of grout designed to permanently seal the area. The once
water-filled basin was used to cut and store irradiated fuel elements for the
reactor, which was in use from 1955 to 1985 and helped produce weapons-grade
plutonium. Before the area could be grouted, the contractor, Savannah River
Nuclear Solutions, had to remove about 2 million gallons of water through an
evaporation process, said Chris Bergren, the manager of area completion
projects. “Due to C Reactor’s historical status, the rest of the building will
not be filled with grout,” he said. “Our goal is to safely
eliminate a
potential source of contamination while fully preserving the historical
integrity of the building as a whole.” At peak operations, SRS maintained five
productions reactors, beginning in the 1950s. The last, K Reactor, was shut down
in 1992 and is still used for plutonium storage. Both P and R Reactors have
been fully grouted and permanently sealed. L Reactor remains in use as a
storage site for spent nuclear fuel. Link
Idaho
Idaho Site Launches
Corrective Actions Before Restarting Waste Treatment Facility IDAHO FALLS,
Idaho – EM News Flash September 13, 2012
The Idaho site and its cleanup contractor have
launched a series of corrective actions they will complete before safely
resuming startup operations at the Integrated Waste Treatment Unit (IWTU)
following an incident in June that caused the new waste treatment facility to
shut down. Startup of the facility was initiated this spring. IWTU is intended
to process approximately 900,000 gallons of remaining liquid radioactive waste
at the site into a solid form for disposal through a unique steam reforming
process. The liquid waste is currently stored in underground tanks at a former
Cold War spent nuclear fuel reprocessing facility. “We are taking deliberate steps
to safely startup the Integrated Waste Treatment Unit facility and promptly
process the entire 900,000 gallons of liquid waste. We continue to discuss the
status of this important project, our progress and plans in moving forward with
the state of Idaho. Completing this project is very important to us, but we
won’t compromise personnel safety or environmental protection,” said Jim
Cooper, DOE-EM Manager for the Idaho Cleanup Project. The June incident did not
release any radioactive material as the facility was in cold startup. Link
Who’s in charge? Regulators,
waste firm too friendly
First Published Sep 13 2012 01:01 am • Last Updated
Sep 13 2012 01:01 am
Senate President Mike Waddoups is angry over an
audit of state regulators who should be, but apparently aren’t, protecting
Utahns from illegal nuclear waste. His rage is justified. Waddoups,
R-Taylorsville, rightly demanded better accountability from the Utah Department
of Environmental Quality and its director, Amanda Smith, and threatened a move
to eliminate the agency and radiation-control officers along with it. But the
strongest message that should be inferred from the Legislative Auditor General
Office’s report criticizing a too-close relationship between EnergySolutions
and the DEQ is that Gov. Gary Herbert never should have nominated an executive
of the largest nuclear-waste company to the state’s new Radiation Control
Board. Legislators should not confirm Dan Shrum’s nomination. Link
Michael Waddoups fumes over
lack of radioactive waste oversight
By Amy Joi O'Donoghue , Deseret News Published:
Tuesday, Sept. 11 2012 5:58 p.m. MDT
Energy Solutions crews work at the facility in Clive, Utah Aug. 19,
2011. (Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News archives)
SALT LAKE CITY — Utah Senate President Michael
Waddoups wondered aloud Tuesday if the state Department of Environmental
Quality should be disbanded and its chief radiation control officer fired in
the wake of a blistering audit that found little oversight over the radioactive
waste buried in Tooele County. "I almost think that the Department of
Environmental Quality should be disbanded and start over from scratch
one," said Waddoups, a Republican from Taylorsville. "This is a
terrible response" to the legislative audit released Tuesday. Waddoups
said the agency's failure to carry out its regulatory duties is a bungle that
eclipses even problems identified in previous audits of the state Department of
Alcohol Beverage Control because of the public safety issues involved. In the
aftermath of audits uncovering mismanagement in the alcohol agency, the
department was overhauled in a legislative and gubernatorial fix that went into
effect this year. During a Tuesday meeting of the Legislative Audit
Subcommittee in which the report's findings were detailed, Waddoups sharply
rebuked Department of Environmental Quality Director Amanda Smith, as well as
director of the Division of Radiation Control, Rusty Lundberg. "(Your
response) appears to be justifying errors and mistakes that were made," he
said. Performed by the Office of the Legislative Auditor General, the report
states that regulators rely too heavily
on EnergySolutions to police itself over the kind of radioactive waste buried
at its western desert site in Clive, Tooele County, resulting in little
assurance that prohibitions on "hotter" waste or foreign waste aren't
being violated.
"As the oversight arm for radioactive waste
disposal in Utah, the Division of Radiation Control is not exercising
sufficient controls to detect radioactive waste banned by Utah statute,"
the legislative audit stated. Waddoups said that EnergySolutions is a
"good corporate citizen," and it is the division that has fallen down
on its job, adding that the division has a "responsibility to do better
and do more." "I think the problem here is the Division of Radiation
Control," he said. "You have to tell me, Ms. Smith, why Mr. Lundberg
shouldn't be terminated." The performance audit recommends state
regulators go beyond the so-called traditional honor system of the industry
self-reporting waste disposal shipments because of Utah's unique ban and its
relationship with the private company. State regulators, however, fired back
that while they are willing to institute additional layers of oversight, they
don't believe the costs of such a program would make the disposal site any
safer than it already is or go beyond the steps it has taken to assure
protection of public health. "The audit recommendations are heavily based
on policy implementation, whereas the existing regulatory framework is founded
on protecting public health and safety and is fully consistent with other
environmental regulatory programs," wrote Lundberg, division director. But
the audit noted that while the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission told auditors
the division has the authority to sample incoming waste, regulators have
"chosen to not exercise this authority because of the regulatory model
they follow." Instead, the audit stressed, the division "continues to
compare itself against other states, federal rules and environmental programs
that do not address the unique restrictions that are important to the Utah
site." The audit said the lack of regulatory oversight has fostered an
environment that allowed documented instances of waste being accepted by
EnergySolutions in violation of state law. "While these documented cases
are concerning, we are more concerned the Division of Radiation Control's lack
of independent oversight could allow many more shipments of greater than Class
A waste to be disposed of at the site and never detected," the audit stated.
Among the "internal control weaknesses"
identified in government oversight are:
• EnergySolutions polices its own waste disposal
operations.
• The division has no independent controls over
classification of containerized waste.
• The division's permit program lacks independent
review of waste generators, giving rise to questions about the origin and
nature of the waste, including if it comes from foreign countries.
"We questioned how the Division of Radiation
Control and EnergySolutions can really know what it is in the containers if it
is not independently verified," the audit noted. "We were told that
they can only trust that the generators and brokers are honest and accurate
with their waste classifications reported on the shipping manifest." Smith
said regulators are willing to institute additional safeguards for a more
robust system, but it comes down to cost and policy considerations. "All
of our divisions and all of our programs are based on self-regulation. That is
the way it is done across the board," she said. "The audit is really
focused on because of those differences in our state and does it justify
greater regulatory practices than what is found in our other programs."
Such a rigorous system of assuring waste
classification prior to disposal would mean that "EnergySolutions should
be regulated differently, differently than any other entity in the country that
does business," she said. Smith said such a system could ultimately give
greater assurance on adherence to state and policy restrictions, but she
questioned how much it would enhance the division's ultimate goal of protection
of public health. "Because we have a policy of no greater than Class A
waste, the audit says we should be tracking that backward and having more
independent oversight," Smith said, "but that is not based on
protecting public health, but on making sure the policy is followed." She added, too, that the federal regulatory
system of waste classification is based on a robust framework that Utah
participates in, and checking the waste on site, prior to disposal, is more
complicated than "just popping the lid."
"The problem is that is not how it is
done," Smith said. "You're exposing workers to an unnecessary amount
of radiation." The audit gave critics of the radioactive waste industry
and EnergySolutions ample ammunition to fire off another complaint that the
industry gets away with too much in the state.
"There is no accountability for
EnergySolutions," said HEAL Utah Executive Director Christopher Thomas.
"The system is broken, and it's the Utah public who is paying the
price." link
Senate
postpones vote after group questions appointment of EnergySolutions executive
By Amy Joi O'Donoghue , Deseret News
Published: Wednesday, Aug. 15 2012 4:12 p.m. MDT
SALT LAKE CITY —
Anti-nuclear critics of EnergySolutions say having one of the company's
corporate executives sit on Utah's board that regulates radioactive waste is
akin to having the fox guarding the hen house.
The concerns voiced by HEAL Utah were enough to at least temporarily
delay the appointment of Dan Shrum to the Utah Radiation Control Board. His
name, as well as the nomination of Sarah Fields, did not come up for a vote
before the full Senate Wednesday. Instead, the nominees will be reviewed by a
Senate confirmation committee in the next several weeks. Sen. Ralph Okerlund,
chairman of that Natural Resources, Agriculture and Environment Nominating
Committee, said initially there were no concerns about the two nominees but
that changed later on during the day. "In the interest of openness and
transparency, we thought we should hold a hearing," he said. If Shrum's
consideration to the board was going to be subject to delayed action, Okerlund
said it was only fair to conduct a similar inquiry into Fields, who is an
outspoken critic of nuclear power or associated waste industries. Link
NRC
NRC staff to review nuclear
reactor waste storage rules
Thu, Sep 6 2012
(Reuters) - The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
(NRC) directed its staff on Thursday to start an environmental review into the
temporary storage of spent nuclear fuel, following a court ruling that led the
agency to stop issuing new reactor licenses. The NRC did not say when it would
start issuing new reactor licenses again. The NRC has more than a dozen reactor
operating license renewal applications and a dozen new reactor license
applications pending. The NRC said it told its staff to develop an
environmental impact statement and a revised waste confidence decision and to
rule on the temporary storage of spent nuclear fuel. The environmental
statement and rule, which are in response to a June 8 ruling of the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, are to be completed within 24
months, the NRC said. The Appeals Court ruled that the NRC should have considered
the potential environmental effects in the event a permanent repository for
disposing of spent fuel - like the long-delayed Yucca Mountain proposal - is
never built, among other things. "Resolving this issue successfully is a
Commission priority," NRC Chairman Allison Macfarlane said in a statement.
"Waste confidence plays a core role in many
major licensing actions, such as new reactors and license renewals," she
said. The NRC said "waste confidence" means that spent nuclear fuel
can be safely stored for decades beyond the licensed operating life of a
reactor, without significant environmental effects. It enables the NRC to
license reactors or renew their licenses without examining the effects of
extended waste storage for each individual site pending ultimate disposal. On
August 7, the Commission issued an order that the NRC will not issue licenses
dependent on the waste confidence rule - such as new reactors and renewal of
existing reactor operating licenses - until the Court's demand is appropriately
addressed. (Reporting by Scott DiSavino; Editing by Bernadette Baum) Link
Misc
Nuclear Industry Encourages Changes to Nuclear Waste
Reform Proposals
NEI September 12, 2012
To successfully fix the federal government’s
moribund program for managing used nuclear fuel, newly proposed legislation
requires a more comprehensive framework, a nuclear energy industry leader told
a U.S. Senate committee today. Link
Addressing a Gap
in Nuclear Regulation
By MATTHEW L. WALD
New York Times September 11, 2012
Some officials and critics suggest
that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's rules do not adequately address land
contamination from an accident, as opposed to a human radiation dose.
Link
Defense
Nuclear Facilities Safety Board
September 6, 2012, Department letter requesting an additional
60-day extension to respond to Board letter of June 18, 2012, concerning the
approved safety basis for the Plutonium Facility (PF-4) at Los Alamos National
Laboratory. This letter also indicates that NNSA will provide a revised project
execution plan for seismically-related upgrades to PF-4 within 90 days of
completion of the final report for the current scope of non-linear static
seismic analyses. [PDF]
Congress
Murkowski presses Obama
official on late nuclear waste plan
By Zack Colman - 09/12/12 12:50 PM ET The Hills Energy and
Environment Blog
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) pressed an Energy Department (DOE) official
Wednesday for answers on why the Obama administration missed a summer deadline
for finalizing a nuclear waste storage plan. “The government’s failure to
address our nuclear waste issues is damaging to the development of future
nuclear power and simultaneously worsening our nation’s financial situation,”
Murkowski said during opening remarks at a hearing of the Senate Committee on
Energy and Natural Resources. “We need to act, and we need to act soon.” The
administration did not meet a scheduled July 31 deadline to complete its
nuclear waste storage plan. Peter Lyons, DOE assistant secretary for
nuclear energy, told the Senate committee the administration is
uncertain when the plan will be ready. That plan is supposed to design a
way to implement recommendations from the Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s
Nuclear Future, a group formed by President Obama in 2009 to evaluate the
nation’s handling of nuclear waste. “That work does continue and is nearing, I
think, a conclusion,” Lyons said. “The matter is very much ongoing.” When
Murkowski asked Lyons to clarify whether a plan would be ready in a month, six
months or a year, Lyons said he did not have enough specifics to comment. Link
to story
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