Published on Friday, January 30, 2009 by the Times Argus (
Experts
by Daniel Barlow
MONTPELIER - Don't count on Yucca Mountain or any other national solution for the long-term storage of spent nuclear fuel, a consulting group told lawmakers Thursday.
A sign warns of radiation on the
As the
Bruce Lacy, the founder of Iowa's Lacy Consulting Group, told members of several House and Senate committees that dry cask storage of this waste material at nuclear power plants has become the default
"We are storing it here in
But that site has sat unused since then, tied up with political disputes and doubts by the
Here in
Vermont Yankee now stores its nuclear waste in its spent fuel pool within the reactor and in underground, dry cask storage units - essentially steel and concrete storage units intended to keep the waste stored safely as it degrades naturally. Entergy Vermont Nuclear, the company that owns the plant, won legislative approval for those storage units in 2005.
Lacy said Vermont Yankee has 1,911 bundles of the waste stored in its spent fuel pool and another 340 bundles stored in dry cask units at the facility, which is located south of Brattleboro along the Connecticut River in the small town of Vernon.
The facility has enough storage room - thanks to the additional space allowed by the dry cask units - to continue storing its waste until 2032, which is when it would cease operating if its application to continue past 2012 is approved.
Rep. Sarah Edwards, P-Brattleboro, is a longtime critic of
She was surprised Thursday to learn that federal regulators did not consider the possible implications of global warming in their flooding predictions for the facility.
"Their belief is that the water levels are relatively stable," Lacy told lawmakers.
Whenever Vermont Yankee is decommissioned - whether that is in 2012 or 2031 - the state should assume that the nuclear waste continue to be stored at the facility because there is no other viable national option, Lacy told lawmakers.
"This could be stored on site for a long time," he said.
Another type of waste produced at
Radioactive waste dumps in
However, a new site is being constructed in
"You cannot decommission a power plant without a contract for a disposal site," he said.
Lacy said Vermont Yankee has three decommissioning options: Immediate decommissioning, which would take six to eight years; mothballing the facility and decommissioning over a 60-year period; and filling the structure with concrete and waiting until the radioactive material decays completely.
There have been 11 nuclear facilities that have undergone immediate decommissioning, Lacy said, with two more now in progress. Eleven sites in the country have been mothballed and two more - which he described as early, prototype reactors - have been filled with concrete and shut down.
Each option has its own costs and benefits, although the true costs of shutting down a power plant for good fluctuate and are hard to pin down. Decommissioning the facility immediately would cost between $655 million and $893 million; mothballing it for a few decades would cost between $717 million and $991 million.
Vermont Yankee's owners have a trust fund set up to pay for decommissioning, but that account has dropped in recent months as troubles began on Wall Street. In September 2007, the fund was $440 million. In December 2008, it was $372 million.
"Like all trust funds in the
Because of the uncertainties of the final decommissioning costs, Lacy recommended that lawmakers insist that the owners of
"You can't sharpen your pencils enough," he said. "You don't want to be in a position 60 years from now where there is not enough money left in that fund."
Lacy Consulting, which bills itself as a non-partisan source of information on nuclear issues, was hired by the
© 2009 Times Argus
Donations can be sent to the
"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
No comments:
Post a Comment