Prairie Island Indian Community Granted Federal Hearing in
Fight against 40 Year Extension of Nuclear Waste Storage
WELCH, Minn., Oct. 11, 2012 /PRNewswire
In a filing with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) this
week, the Prairie Island Indian Community (PIIC) previewed
issues it hopes to raise during an early November hearing with
the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board - when the tribe will
continue its fight against a 40-year extension of onsite nuclear
waste storage on Prairie Island. Xcel Energy's initial
Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (ISFSI) license
expires on Oct. 19, 2013, and in the ongoing absence of a
national waste repository like Yucca Mountain, the utility
company has applied to extend onsite storage until 2053 - a move
PIIC argues could put Minnesotans at considerable risk.
"Four more decades of storage could expose all of us to the
vulnerabilities of aging facilities, human error, and natural
disasters," said Tribal Council President Johnny Johnson. "But
the real problem with the request is that it's based on the
fiction that it's only a 40-year extension for only 48 dry
casks. There's already enough nuclear waste in the spent fuel
pool to fill another 30 casks -11 more than the 48 casks in the
current license, and in just 20 more years of plant operation
the plant will generate enough waste to fill 98 casks.
Washington politics will continue to delay the creation of a
federally-mandated geologic repository like Yucca Mountain, and
the 98 casks containing more than 2,500 tons of radioactive
nuclear waste will be stranded indefinitely along the banks of
the Mississippi River and within 30 miles of the metro area."
When onsite nuclear storage was first approved in Minnesota
20 years ago, Minnesotans and the Prairie Island Indian
Community were told there would be no more than 17 casks and
that it would be temporary - the federal government was legally
required to develop a national repository by 1998. After decades
of scientific research and $15 billion in investments by
American ratepayers, efforts to create the only nuclear waste
storage facility in the United States specifically mandated by
federal law, the Yucca Mountain Repository in Nevada, were
suspended in 2010. To date, no replacement facility has been
identified.
The Prairie Island Indian Community previews its case
On August 24, the Prairie Island Indian Community filed with
the NRC a request for hearing and petition to intervene in Xcel
Energy's application to extend its ISFSI license another 40
years. The request for a hearing was granted by the NRC on
September 25. The Tribe's proximity to the waste,combined with
its June 8, 2012 federal court victory challenging the NRC's
proposed "Temporary Storage Rule" and its accompanying "Waste
Confidence Decision Update," make the timing of this hearing
unique.
"We believe we have a strong case to make," said Johnson.
"Forcing us to store this waste in our backyards and refusing to
pick it up for another 40 years or more violates the Nuclear
Waste Policy Act. The federal government needs to redouble its
efforts to establish a deep geologic repository. A promise is a
promise - and in this case, it's also the law."
In this week's official filing with the NRC, PIIC outlined
key issues it will address at the hearing, including the need
for a more robust review of the potential impacts and
considerable risk associated with storing 98 casks of nuclear
waste on Prairie Island indefinitely. The hearing with the
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board is tentatively scheduled for
Nov. 8 and 9, 2012.
About the Prairie Island Indian Community
The Prairie Island Indian Community, a federally recognized
Indian Nation, is located in southeastern Minnesota along the
banks of the Mississippi River, approximately 30 miles from the
Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul. Twin nuclear reactors
and 29 large steel nuclear waste storage casks sit just 600
yards from Prairie Island tribal homes. A total of 98 casks
could be stranded on Prairie Island indefinitely unless the
federal government fulfills its promise to build a permanent
storage facility. The only evacuation route off the Prairie
Island is frequently blocked by passing trains. The Tribe has
been pushing for the removal of the nuclear waste since 1994
when Xcel Energy was first allowed to store the waste near its
reservation. On the web: www.prairieisland.org.
SOURCE Prairie Island Indian Community
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