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Fenced-off tunnel seen as progress by those for and against
by Lisa Mascaro
Las Vegas Sun
11 January 2008
Washington — This may speak volumes about the status of the beleaguered
Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump project: A chain-link fence now blocks the
entrance to the tunnel that leads inside.
The Energy Department’s contractor says daily operations at the nation’s
planned nuclear waste repository are being put “on standby” in the face of
massive budget cuts engineered by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.
All on-site jobs, save for a few sentries’, are being eliminated. More
layoffs are on the way. Resources are being shifted at a critical juncture in the
project’s life.
As Nevadans constantly seek signs that Yucca Mountain is really dead, is a
6-foot barrier blocking entry to the tunnel the tocsin?
“It’s clear the dump is dying,” said Reid spokesman Jon Summers. “This is
one of the most significant moves we’ve seen to signal the end of the dump.
They closed the tunnel ... That’s all there is, is that tunnel.”
Yes and no.
Psychologically, shutting down the site feels like an omen. It’s even worse
than last spring, when the train that once carried visitors deep into Yucca
Mountain’s back alcoves stopped running. Closing up the tunnel seems like the
beginning of the end.
The project is certainly at a crossroads. Its currently proposed opening
date is 20 years behind schedule and even Yucca Mountain’s most ardent
supporters on Capitol Hill are losing patience.
Yet at the same time, the Energy Department soldiers on. It has pledged to
hit a June deadline to submit its application to license the facility. Much is
riding on that promise it blew the deadline four years ago.
Project advocates say the layoffs should come as no surprise after the
financial hit, and they say the cuts don’t matter. Most of the on-site research
work is done, and the tunnel is merely a PR tool until it is put to use as a
tomb for the waste.
The real work now, Yucca’s advocates say, is being done by the scientists
and lawyers behind computers at offices in Las Vegas and elsewhere as they work
toward the June deadline.
John Keeley, a spokesman for the Nuclear Energy Institute, the leading trade
group for the industry, said, “Nothing indicates it’s a setback for the
project.”
So again, if a gate over the entrance doesn’t do it, when will we know that
Yucca Mountain is dead?
Last year, one of the answers to that question was that the project’s demise
would be evident if it were delivered a serious financial blow. Check. That
happened in December when Congress cut $100 million from Yucca Mountain,
slicing more than 20 percent off the project’s budget.
Fallout from the budget cut is being felt. In addition to the 63 layoffs by
month’s end, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has been forced to cancel a
public meeting this month in Las Vegas as it reduces its travel budget. A part
of the commission budget that funds Yucca Mountain was similarly reduced by
Reid’s maneuver.
Next week the Energy Department’s project director, Edward Sproat, will, at
various public functions in Nevada, address the project’s future in the face
of steep budget cuts.
Another indictor would be if President Bush failed to fully fund the project
as he releases his 2009 priorities during the State of the Union speech this
month or in the budget proposal in February.
But probably the greatest test of Yucca’s livelihood is happening right
outside your door, where the Democratic presidential candidates who are stumping
for support in the Nevada caucus say they oppose the project and some have
pledged to kill it outright.
Nevada Democratic Rep. Shelley Berkley said even though shuttering the
tunnel is an acknowledgement by the Energy Department that the project is
suffering, it’s too early to write Yucca’s obituary.
“We’ve got a long way to go before Yucca Mountain is pronounced dead,”
Berkley said. “It’s going to take the next president of the United States to
pull the plug on this project.”
Despite outward support for Yucca Mountain, even the nuclear industry has
begun to move on from the plan, now decades in the making, to bury the nuclear
fuel from the nation’s power plants in the Nevada desert. Some industry
executives think waste can be stored at the plants for up to 100 years, a plan the
Nevada delegation has advocated. The industry is moving forward to develop
new nuclear reactors to meet the nation’s growing energy needs despite
setbacks at Yucca.
A spokesman for Nevada Republican Rep. Jon Porter, who is in France
surveying nuclear reprocessing options, said the end is near.
“Yucca Mountain is in trouble, not just because of reduced funding,”
spokesman Matt Leffingwell said, “but because there continues to be a lack of
confidence in this project.”
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