Energy Department pulls water applications for Yucca
rail line
Feb 10 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Keith Rogers Las Vegas
Review-Journal
In what is the strongest sign to date that it will abandon the Yucca
Mountain Project, the Department of Energy on Tuesday withdrew 116 water
applications it had filed with the State Engineer for building a rail
line to haul nuclear waste to the mountain from Caliente.
"This is the first card in hopefully a domino of cards that is ready to
fall," said Nevada's Senior Deputy Attorney General Marta Adams.
She leads the state's legal effort to block DOE from obtaining water for
the project, both for the proposed rail line and for constructing and
operating a repository to bury 77,000 tons of highly radioactive waste
in the mountain, 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas.
"I'm really happy about it, but we need to make sure it's really in the
grave. The next telling thing will be the motion to withdraw the license
application," Adams said late Tuesday.
She expects the appeals the federal government has pending in
federal court over constitutional issues with Nevada's denial of water
for constructing and operating a repository will be dismissed.
The letter dated Monday from DOE Federal Project Director Ned B. Larson
to State Engineer Tracy Taylor said the department does not intend to
pursue the Caliente rail line water applications "in light of recent
developments."
The "developments" stem from the Obama administration's plan to zero out
funding for the project and Energy Secretary Steven Chu's announcement
last week that the department would withdraw the license application
within 30 days. A review of the license application by nuclear
regulators has been suspended temporarily.
DOE filed the Caliente rail line water requests on Jan. 20, 2009, the
day Barack Obama was sworn in as president. Nevada filed its protests on
April 1.
Bob Conrad, spokesman for the state engineer's office, said Larson's
letter was received by acting State Engineer Jason King because Taylor
is on medical leave.
"Obviously, we will withdraw the applications at their request," Conrad
said.
Of the applications, 103 were for temporary wells to build a rail line
through a 319-mile corridor from Caliente west to Yucca Mountain. The
remaining 13 applications were for permanent wells to maintain and
operate the rail line, which would funnel nuclear waste shipments mainly
from states in the East and Midwest.
Bruce Breslow, executive director of the Nevada Agency for Nuclear
Projects and a opponent of the Yucca Mountain Project, said the state
wants Chu to declare the site unsuitable and withdraw the license
application with prejudice so that it will not be refiled.
He said that Congress probably will not act on Obama's budget
recommendation to zero out funding until after the fall elections.
"This is another step toward ending the misguided Yucca Mountain nuclear
waste repository project," Breslow said in a statement Tuesday.
"We are awaiting DOE's motion to withdraw the Yucca license application
'with prejudice,' and hope that the Construction Authorization Board
rules quickly to dispose of the application," he said.
Yucca Mountain is by law the only site being studied for a national
nuclear waste repository although Obama has fielded a commission to
chart a new course for dealing with nuclear waste that does not include
Yucca Mountain.
Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., released a statement Tuesday, saying, "This is
another important step toward not only killing the dump, but also making
sure it can never come back to life."
Reid has sent a letter to the Government Accountability Office asking
the agency to examine alternatives for the Yucca Mountain site.
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