From Deseret News archives:
Activists urge stronger security at nuclear plants
Interim storage of nuclear waste has received increased attention from the House and Senate in the last year, with each chamber coming up with different proposals that would make interim storage an option for the Energy Department, although whether any plan will make it through Congress this year is unclear.
Michele Boyd, legislative director of the Public Citizen's energy program, told the House Energy and Air Quality Subcommittee that making on-site storage at nuclear power plants more secure should be the only focus now, because "the United States does not have a near-term solution for the permanent storage of high-level nuclear waste."
"National focus should be on addressing the threats from this waste, not on wasting resources on a failed repository program, a dangerous reprocessing program or interim away-from-reactor storage," Boyd said.
PFS aimed to store nuclear waste until the federal government opened a permanent repository at Yucca Mountain in Nevada, about 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas. The White House, a majority of lawmakers and the nuclear industry strongly support the Yucca plan, but the site might not open until 2017. It was supposed to open in 1998, and now utilities are having to deal with what to do with their waste until it opens.
Boyd, in her written testimony, said the lack of a transportation plan, inadequate law enforcement, lack of an environmental study on the effects of a terrorist attack and uncertainty about the availability of a permanent federal repository all led the Interior Department to reject the PFS lease.
In the lease decision handed down last week, the Bureau of Indian Affairs said the PFS plan left too much uncertainty about when the nuclear waste would actually leave the reservation for a permanent storage site.
Boyd used this point to argue against storage of waste in any place but at the reactors that generate it, saying the so-called temporary sites "would become long-term 'overflow parking' for high-level radioactive wastes with nowhere else to go."
Comments
- Cougars cruise past Southern 1:03 a.m.
- Utes fall to Seattle U. at home 1:01 a.m.
- Utah celebrates Real Salt Lake Day 12:59 a.m.
- Y. focused on 10-win season 12:54 a.m.
- Thunder rolls by Jazz 12:49 a.m.
- Sloan remembers Abe Pollin 12:47 a.m.
- 'Cats get past pesky D-II foe 12:33 a.m.
- Third period pivotal for Jazz 12:32 a.m.
- Utah Jazz game at a glance 12:30 a.m.
- Nets lose 14th straight 12:26 a.m.
- Utah, BYU are top choices for bowls
- BYU would like friendlier rivalry
- Protests against Phoenix LDS temple
- KSL: Prostitution in Utah County
- Best prep football games of 2009
- Man trapped in own body for 23 yrs
- Kirilenko climbing blocks list
- Woman describes stabbing, killing
- Boys basketball rankings
- 'Dancing' will fill out finale
- BYU would like friendlier rivalry
229 - Glenn Beck to enter politics?
224 - RSL wins MLS Cup on penalty kicks
202 - Protests against Phoenix LDS temple
189 - Bronco, Kyle rubber match
137 - BYU records with win
133 - Letters: Rushing to judge Palin
122 - Hall, Johnson matchup key
102 - Jazz finally win in San Antonio
99 - 4A: Timpview wins 4th in 4 years
93
needs to get a dunk!
First of all, the Thunder aren't known for being a great outside shooting...
And if BYU didn't lose any games, they could have been in the BCS. And if...
OKC = 16 Jazz = 24. Boozer and Millsap had 10 and Okur had 2. That is...
to To KF 9:35 PM My 42% increase may seem insignificant, but I have a...
Nice........
This is so weird. You see how stacked it is to include Nebraska,simply...
Mike, don't take it so personal. We know you are a Utah homer, but let's get...
I am a Seneca Indian from Western NY and find the meso America theory hard to...
If the chances are slim to none, why is this even news?? Trust the D.N. to...



You can be the first to comment on this story.