FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Giselle Barry (Markey)
Mary Kerry/Kate Gilman (Boxer)
Michael Briggs (Sanders)
Senators Markey, Boxer and Sanders Call for Increased Safety at Nuclear Plants
Trio of bills address safety of spent fuel storage and decommissioning plans
Washington
(April 15, 2015) – Senators Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), Barbara Boxer
(D-Calif.), and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) reintroduced three bills today
aimed at improving the safety and security of decommissioning reactors
and the storage of spent nuclear fuel at nuclear plants across the
nation.
When spent nuclear fuel is removed from the part of
the reactor that generates electricity, it continues to produce
significant quantities of heat and radiation for years. Spent nuclear
fuel is too dangerous to be removed from the spent fuel pools for five
to seven years. Studies conducted by the National Academy of Sciences,
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and independent experts have shown
that partial draining of the water from a spent fuel pool caused by an
accident or terrorist attack could result in a spontaneous fire, the
release of large quantities of radiation, and widespread contamination.
However, NRC regulations allow spent fuel to remain stored in spent
fuel pools until the reactor completes decommissioning, which can take
as long as 60 years. Current NRC regulations also allow the NRC and the
nuclear plant operator to adopt a decommissioning plan without
considering the concerns of nearby states and communities. The three
bills introduced today will address all of these problems.
“An
accident at an overstuffed spent fuel pool like the one at Pilgrim
Nuclear Power Plant in Massachusetts would be as disastrous as an
accident at an operating nuclear reactor,” said Senator Markey, top
Democrat on the Superfund, Waste Management, and Regulatory Oversight
Subcommittee. “ Pilgrim’s spent fuel pool contains nearly four times
more radioactive waste than it was originally designed to hold. We need
to ensure dangerous nuclear waste is moved to safer storage before a
nuclear disaster occurs.”
““In my home state of California,
the San Onofre nuclear plant closed permanently,” said Senator Boxer,
Ranking Member of the Committee on Environment and Public Works (EPW).
“Our legislation will ensure that the San Onofre facility, and others
like it across the nation, are safely decommissioned and that the
surrounding communities are protected.”
“Currently a nuclear
plant operator could adopt a decommissioning plan that ignores the needs
and interests of the public and the state would have no recourse,” said
Senator Sanders. “That is fundamentally unfair and unreasonable. This
is simply about ensuring that states have the opportunity to play a
meaningful role in a decision that has enormous economic, environmental
and community impacts.”
Safe and Secure Decommissioning Act of 2015 (Boxer, Sanders, Markey)
The
Safe and Secure Decommissioning Act would prohibit the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) from issuing exemptions from its emergency
response or security requirements for spent fuel stored at nuclear
reactors that have permanently shut down until all of the spent nuclear
fuel stored at the site has been moved into dry casks, which are a more
secure and safe option for storage. NRC has determined that earthquakes
would be the most likely cause of a spent fuel pool failure that could
result in a spontaneous fire, the release of large quantities of
radiation, and widespread contamination, but has granted every request
from emergency response requirements that it has ever received from a
licensee of a decommissioning reactor.
Nuclear Plant Decommissioning Act of 2015 (Sanders, Boxer, Markey)
The
Nuclear Plant Decommissioning Act would ensure that states and local
communities have a meaningful role in the crafting and preparation of
decommissioning plans for retired nuclear plants located in those
areas. The bill also requires NRC to publicly and transparently approve
or reject every proposed decommissioning plan, which it currently is
not required to do.
Dry Cask Storage Act of 2015 (Markey, Boxer, Sanders)
The
Dry Cask Storage Act would ensure that every nuclear reactor operator
complies with an NRC-approved plan that would require the safe removal
of spent nuclear fuel from the spent fuel pools and place that spent
fuel into dry cask storage within 7 years of the time the plan is
submitted to the NRC. The legislation also provides funding to help
reactor licensees implement the plans and expands the emergency planning
zone for non-compliant reactor operators to 50 miles.
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