Hanford Radioactive Waste Treated
by 2047 Under Fed-State Settlement
RICHLAND, Washington,
August 19, 2009 (ENS) – The stalled cleanup of 53 million gallons of highly
radioactive and chemical waste at the Hanford Nuclear Site in southeastern Washington state could be on track again now that a lawsuit brought by
the state against the federal government has been settled.
A
proposed consent decree between the Department of Energy and Washington State
sets what the parties say is "a new and achievable schedule" for
construction and startup of the Hanford Waste Treatment Plant and the retrieval
of waste from 177 large underground single-shell storage tanks at Hanford.
The
consent decree proposes extending the current schedule for completing retrieval
of waste from single-shell tanks from 2018 to 2040, and completing treatment of
all tank waste from 2028 to 2047.
The
waste from the single-shell tanks will be removed and pumped to newer
double-shell tanks, and ultimately transferred to the Waste Treatment Plant
where it will be immobilized in glass through a process called vitrification.
From
1944-1988 the federal government used Hanford
to produce plutonium for nuclear weapons. The processes used to produce
plutonium created huge amounts of radioactive and chemically hazardous wastes
now stored in the 177 underground storage tanks. Most of the tanks are beyond
their design life and 67 are known or believed to have leaked.
The
consent decree will be filed in federal court and then will be subject to a
public comment period. The new schedule requires changes to the 1989 Tri-Party
Agreement among the Department of Energy, the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, and the Washington State Department of Ecology. These modifications
will also be subject to a public comment period before they are finalized.
Washington
Governor Chris Gregoire announced the agreement
August 11, saying, "Our agreement settles our lawsuit against the federal
government, and obligates it to a new, enforceable and achievable schedule for
tank waste cleanup at Hanford."
"And
there is more. In tandem with the settlement agreement, Washington Ecology
Director Jay Manning joined the United States Department of Energy and the
Environmental Protection Agency in signing another agreement that establishes
new enforceable deadlines to accelerate the cleanup of contaminated underground
water plumes at Hanford,"
said the governor.
Cleaning
these plumes will protect the Columbia River, which flows through the site and
forms much of the border between Washington
and Oregon on its way to the Pacific
Ocean.
Gregoire said, "We're committed to intercepting these
plumes before they reach the river, which serves 42 cities and towns and one
million people downstream in two states."
Although
Oregon is affected by Hanford
contamination of the Columbia River, the state was denied participation in the
existing Tri_Party Agreement and has had no legal
role in the cleanup of the Hanford
site.
Now,
the State of Oregon and the Department of
Energy, DOE, have agreed to a separate consent decree that recognizes Oregon's strong interest in the cleanup effort and
provides Oregon the right to receive copies of
progress reports and legal notices, and the right to participate as observer in
joint three-year reviews with DOE and Washington State.
"Finally,"
said Oregon Governor Ted Kulongoski, after years of
battling the previous administration, we have certainty for the timelines and
schedules for this critical clean up to occur.”
"I
believe this renewed commitment to an aggressive clean up schedule and
oversight will finally deliver public health and environmental protection for
the citizens on both sides of the Columbia River,"
Kulongoski said.
The
Department of Energy has agreed to propose a moratorium on new radioactive
waste shipments to Hanford
before the Waste Treatment Plant is operational.
Governor
Kulongoski called the moratorium "very
significant" because "it keeps the focus at Hanford on cleanup and will protect hundreds
of Northwest cities from the risks trucks carrying radioactive waste passing
through their communities."
Oregon and Washington
will enter into a separate agreement that will solidify the two states'
cooperative efforts regarding Hanford.
In
Olympia, Governor Gregoire
said the federal government's economic stimulus package has restarted work at
the Hanford
site. "Accelerated cleanup of soil and water is already under way at Hanford because of
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funding of nearly $2 billion," she
said. "More than 1,300 jobs have been created or saved at the site, thanks
to these funds."
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