http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/06/06-1

Published on Monday, June 6, 2011 by OtherWords

America's Nuclear Spent-Fuel Time Bombs

Japan's nuclear disaster should serve as a wake-up call for the United States.

by Robert Alvarez

Now that many Americans have stopped paying attention to Japan's 
nuclear catastrophe, shocking new details about its severity are 
finally coming to light.

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission recently revealed that the 
cores of three of the Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear station's reactors 
started to melt within hours after the loss of offsite power, right 
after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Tokyo Electric Power, 
which owns the wrecked reactors, has announced that the accident 
probably released more radioactivity into the environment than the 
Chernobyl debacle. That would make it the worst nuclear accident on 
record. Meanwhile, a nuclear waste advisor to the Japanese government 
reported that about 373 square miles near the power station - an area 
roughly 17 times the size of Manhattan - may now be uninhabitable.

The Fukushima accident should be a wakeup call for the United States 
to address the hazards posed by our own dangerous spent fuel pools at 
nuclear reactors. They are a time bomb. America's reactors have 
generated about 65,000 metric tons of spent fuel, of which 75 percent 
is stored in pools, according to Nuclear Energy Institute data. No 
other nation has generated this much radioactivity from either 
nuclear power or nuclear weapons production.

Nearly 40 percent of the radioactivity in U.S. spent fuel is 
cesium-137. The 4.5 billion curies of radioactive cesium in U.S. 
spent reactor fuel is roughly 20 times more than what all worldwide 
atmospheric nuclear weapons tests released. The United States has 31 
boiling water reactors (BWR) with pools elevated several stories 
above ground, similar to those at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi station. 
Consider this: the pool at the Vermont Yankee reactor, a BWR Mark I 
(the same design as the four crippled Fukushima nuclear reactors), 
currently holds nearly three times the amount of spent fuel stored at 
Dai-Ichi's Unit 4 reactor.

As in Japan, spent fuel pools at U.S. nuclear power plants don't have 
steel-lined, concrete barriers that cover reactor vessels to prevent 
the escape of radioactivity. They aren't required to have back-up 
generators to keep used fuel rods cool if offsite power is lost.

For nearly 30 years, Nuclear Regulatory Commission waste-storage 
requirements have remained contingent on the opening of a permanent 
waste repository that has yet to materialize. Now that the Obama 
administration has cancelled plans to build a permanent, deep 
disposal site at Yucca Mountain in Nevada, spent fuel at the nation's 
104 nuclear reactors will continue to accumulate and is likely remain 
onsite for decades to come.

The U.S. government should promptly take steps to reduce these risks 
by placing all spent nuclear fuel older than five years in dry, 
hardened storage casks like Germany did 25 years ago. It would take 
about 10 years at a cost between $3.5 and $7 billion. If the cost 
were transferred to energy consumers, the expenditure would result in 
a marginal increase of less than 0.4 cents per kilowatt hour for 
consumers of nuclear-generated electricity. Despite the destruction 
wreaked by the earthquake and tsunamis, the dry casks at the 
Fukushima site were unscathed.

Money could also be allocated from the $18.1 billion in unexpended 
funds already collected from consumers of nuclear-generated 
electricity under the Nuclear Waste Policy Act to establish a 
disposal site for high-level radioactive wastes.

After more than 50 years, the quest for permanent nuclear waste 
disposal remains illusory. One thing, however, is clear, whether we 
like it or not: the largest concentrations of radioactivity on the 
planet will remain in storage at U.S. reactor sites for the 
indefinite future. In protecting America from nuclear catastrophe, 
safely securing the spent fuel should be a public safety priority of 
the highest degree.

Robert Alvarez, an Institute for Policy Studies senior scholar, 
served as senior policy adviser to the Energy Department's secretary 
and deputy assistant secretary for national security and the 
environment from 1993 to 1999.


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