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"What the WIPP process affirmatively demonstrates is that with adequate patience, flexibility, and political and public support, success is possible," wrote the president's nuclear waste commission in its recent draft report. Technical experts say that the salt formation under WIPP would be ideal for long-term disposal of spent fuel, though some worry that nearby oil and gas drilling deep below the salt beds could raise concerns. The government has 16 square miles of land in the salt flats available. When WIPP is full it will occupy one-half of one square mile. Policymakers were led away from salt, and ultimately toward Yucca Mountain, for political and security reasons. Spent nuclear fuel still contains huge amounts of untapped energy, but to process it into a useful form requires isolating plutonium, which is used to make nuclear weapons. The Ford and Carter administrations banned reprocessing out of concern that the plutonium could be stolen and used to make bombs. Some then argued that the nuclear waste should be retrievable in case the nation decided someday to use the spent fuel as an energy source. One powerful proponent was former energy secretary James Schlesinger, who declined to be interviewed for this story. The need for a site that could serve both as a dump that could be sealed off for thousands of years and an accessible storage locker made designing a facility far more difficult, and it led eventually to the troubled Yucca Mountain project. Yucca was picked in part because proposed sites in Texas and in Washington were in districts controlled by powerful politicians at the time. Texas Rep. Jim Wright was the Speaker of the House. Washington Rep. Thomas Foley was House majority leader. The legislation that led to Yucca was known as the "Screw Nevada" bill. Yucca is near a seismically active zone, and it was designed to sit above the water table, which allows oxygen to circulate and corrode equipment. The fear is that over thousands of years, water could leak into the waste, pick up plutonium and other radioactive waste, and carry it into aquifers. Also, there is already more spent fuel in the nation's inventory than Yucca was designed to hold. Yucca Mountain still has advocates, and the Obama administration's abandonment of it is being challenged in court. Experts say salt is not the only option for a disposal site, and that with the right safeguards granite, shale or clay formations
-- even Yucca Mountain -- could be selected. "If it's properly cited and designed there's no reason to think any of them wouldn't work," says Mark Nutt, who is working on a nuclear waste program at Argonne National Laboratory. Regardless of what is ultimately chosen, scientists, environmentalists and utility executives are urging that something be decided soon. In a March summary of testimony it had heard, the president's commission wrote: "Several witnesses have stated that getting a disposal program back on track should be the highest priority of the commission." And in the June interim report, the commissioners wrote: "The need for a disposal solution is, in our view, inescapable." The commissioners recommended underground storage as the "most promising and technically accepted option available." Political and local opposition remains, as ever, daunting. During planning and design, WIPP was challenged in court by then-state Attorneys General Jeff Bingaman in 1981 and Tom Udall in 1991. Those two now represent New Mexico in the U.S. Senate. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, who helped kill the Yucca Mountain project, said in an interview he believes utilities should more aggressively move spent fuel into steel-and-concrete casks at the sites of power plants and wait for better technology to develop in the next decades. A long-term repository isn't needed, Reid said. "They're just so foolish in continually pushing that."
[Associated
Press;
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