| Yucca License Process Weighed   May 26 - Las Vegas Review - Journal
 While critics are expected to raise hundreds of legal challenges to the 
    planned Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository, the Department of Energy 
    bid to win a license to build it likely will hinge on only a couple of key 
    issues, an industry official said Thursday.
 
 Steve Kraft, a senior director at the Nuclear Energy Institute, said experts 
    who have followed the Yucca project for years can identify a handful of 
    matters that will provoke the most debate in upcoming hearings before the 
    Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
 
 A couple could turn into showstoppers if critics are able to convince NRC 
    reviewers that the Department of Energy's calculations about the 
    repository's performance are off-base, he said.
 
 "You end up getting it down to a few issues," Kraft said during a briefing 
    at the institute's Henderson office that was held in anticipation that DOE 
    will submit its license application in June.
 
 Those issues include the estimated rate at which nuclear waste canisters 
    will corrode once placed inside the mountain, and the amount of longer-lived 
    radionuclides in tens of thousands of tons of used reactor fuel that will 
    dissolve and be carried off into the environment at higher concentrations 
    than project scientists calculate.
 
 "What if solubility is way higher? That increases dose rates," Kraft said, 
    referring to isotopes of technetium, iodine and neptunium.
 
 As for corrosion of the canisters, he said a successful attempt by Nevada 
    opponents to prove that the metal alloy will corrode "far faster" than DOE 
    predicts could raise doubts with a licensing panel.
 
 "I am willing to bet that performance of solubility and corrosion rates are 
    going to be the big ones," he said.
 
 Bob Loux, the Nevada official who coordinates opposition to the Yucca plan, 
    agreed that corrosion and the movement of radioactive particles through the 
    mountain will be major issues.
 
 But Loux said he would expand the list of potential showstoppers that 
    probably will be aired.
 
 "Clearly the fitness of DOE as an applicant will also be one," said Loux, 
    executive director of the Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects.
 
 Loux said the state believes it can make a strong case that shortcomings in 
    Energy Department quality controls that have been documented over the years 
    by DOE and congressional auditors should raise questions about its ability 
    to manage the project.
 
 Nevada also believes that potential for volcanic activity in the vicinity of 
    the proposed repository, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas, might resonate 
    with the NRC, Loux said.
 
 Last year, state scientists raised concerns for earthquake faults, 
    particularly the Bow Ridge Fault, in the vicinity of concrete storage pads 
    that DOE wants to build near the mountain.
 
 That's where thousands of tons of highly radioactive spent fuel would sit to 
    cool off before disposal in tunnels inside the mountain.
 
 Kraft said it could take "a couple decades before it gets to the right heat 
    load" for underground storage.
 
 He expects Nevada will challenge the design for above-ground storage as 
    having the perception of an interim storage site, which by law is not 
    allowed in the state that hosts the permanent repository.
 
 "While it looks like it is interim storage, it is not interim storage," he 
    said.
 
 Contact reporter Keith Rogers at krogers @reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0308. 
    Contact Stephens Washington Bureau Chief Steve Tetreault at stetreault@ 
    stephensmedia.com or 202-783-1760.
 
 (c) 2008 Las Vegas Review - Journal. Provided by ProQuest 
    Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.
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