
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 16, 2005
Contacts: Jim Warren, NC WARN 919-416-5077,
David Lochbaum, Union of Concerned Scientists 202-223-6133
Coalition Decries Withholding of Report Damaging to
Nuclear Industry
Groups, Security
Experts Seek Meeting With Agency Heads
Washington, DC – The Nuclear Security Coalition (NSC), an alliance of 47 grassroots and public interest groups, charged today that federal bureaucrats are jeopardizing public safety by blocking release of a science panel’s report that is damaging to the nuclear power industry. The NSC said the report confirms the urgent need to lower the density of pools packed with highly irradiated fuel rods at U.S. power plants, and that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is stalling its release to protect the nuclear industry’s efforts to revive nuclear power in the United States.
The urgency of taking action was highlighted this week by the disclosure of a recent report by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Homeland Security, which found “the largely unregulated” area of general aviation remains particularly vulnerable. An NRC report from October 2000 determined the “spent” fuel pools in certain reactor designs are especially prone to damage from a plane crash.
Because spent fuel pools are considered among the highest impact targets for terrorism in the U.S., in late 2003 Congress ordered the National Academy of Sciences to study current storage methods for commercial spent nuclear fuel – and options to reduce risks. A classified version of the report was completed last summer; insiders say it confirms concerns that enormous radioactive fires could result if waste pools were attacked.
But
NRC has repeatedly sought revisions to a still-unreleased public version of the
NAS study, citing “security.” In a
letter sent to the Academy today, the Coalition pointed to NRC’s
contradictions. “Clearly from NRC’s response, we conclude that spent fuel pools are not
the ‘well-engineered’ and ‘robust’ structures as advertised – otherwise NRC
would not be worried about NAS’ report becoming public,” said Mary Lampert
of Pilgrim Watch in Massachusetts today. “The
Academy must have gotten the ‘wrong answer.’ ”
Due to long-running
exasperation toward the agency, the Coalition sent a letter
to NRC today asking for a
meeting directly with the five NRC Commissioners.
In part, the citizens want
action on a petition filed with the NRC in August 2004 urging priority measures
at 32 plants where spent fuel pools are located high inside buildings and
surrounded only by thin roofs and walls. Federal and state legislators as well
as Attorneys General have sent letters of support for the petition to the
Commission.
There is growing national pressure on the NRC to lower
the risk of attack on “spent” fuel pools, which contain far more radioactivity
than do reactors, and are vulnerable to a variety of attacks by air or ground
intruders.
In January, attorneys general from New York,
California, Massachusetts and five other states pressed the NRC to increase
plant protections, warning of “possibly unimaginable nuclear catastrophes”
and emphasizing the need "to
reflect the realities of 2005…terrorists may attack by air or water and in
numbers greater than four." That
reference stems from NRC’s continued reliance on plant defenses designed
against only small, land-based teams of attackers.
Dr. Gordon Thompson, a specialist on nuclear safety,
said today, “Added to our concern about
the vulnerability of civilian nuclear facilities to attack is a growing concern
that the NRC cannot be relied upon to protect the citizens of the United States
from this grave threat.”
The coalition, comprised of citizen groups from coast
to coast, charged that the withholding of science panel’s report is designed to
protect the nuclear industry at a most sensitive time. The long-declining industry is pouring huge
sums into a publicity offensive touting new, experimental reactors as the
solution to global warming, and seeking taxpayer funding for new nuclear plants
as part of the Bush administration’s energy bill.
The industry’s revival hinges on its ability to
maintain a public misperception that the high-level waste issue is solved. However, last month, plans for a national
waste dump at Nevada’s Yucca Mountain were set back five more years, to
2015. Many observers – including
industry officials – believe the long-delayed and multi-billion dollar project
is doomed.
Regardless of whether a dump at Yucca Mountain ever
opens, spent fuel will be stored at U.S. plants for decades. Hence, hardening spent fuel against attack –
instead of keeping it in high-density pools – is key to alleviating the
security crisis at reactors; it is also a quasi-permanent storage location for
mounting quantities of high level waste.
Increasing evidence that nuclear plants are terrorist targets, and
warnings by non-governmental counter-terrorism experts that the U.S. will again
be attacked, make increased plant security a priority.
In a December 3 letter, the
NRC requested that the National Academy spend “more time” on the study – in
other words, delay issuing any report and subsequent required remedial
action.
“NRC gives protecting fuel pools low priority, but for
reactor communities living with a terrorist target in their midst, its actions
are irresponsible. This argument
between NAS and NRC is putting our communities in harm’s way unnecessarily,” said Deb Katz, executive director of Citizens
Awareness Network. “NRC must do more to
protect our communities since it is our communities that will suffer the
consequences of agency inaction if a reactor fuel pool is attacked.”
Jim Warren of NC WARN added, “The NRC has shown itself time and time
again to be a lapdog of the industry and that is precisely why Congress
directed NAS, and not the NRC, to perform the analysis. We ask that NAS ignore the NRC and issue the
report as required by Congress.”
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See letter to NAS at: http://www.citizen.org/documents/NAS3-15-05.pdf
See letter to NRC at: http://www.citizen.org/documents/NRC3-16-05.pdf