Weather | Traffic | Surf | Maps | Webcam


   
 
Home Today's Paper Sports Entertainment sdjobs sdhomes sdwheels Classifieds Shopping Visitors Guide Forums
 Monday
 »Next Story»
 News
 Local News
 Opinion
 Business
 Sports
 Currents Monday
 Front Page (PDF)
 The Last Week
 Sunday
 Monday
 Tuesday
 Wednesday
 Thursday
 Friday
 Saturday
 Weekly Sections
 Books |  UT-Books
 Family
 Food
 Health
 Home
 Homescape
 Dialog
 InStyle
 Night & Day
 Sunday Arts
 Travel
 Quest
 Wheels
Subscribe to the UT
 Sponsored Links








The San Diego Union-Tribune

 
Price tag grows for nuclear waste dump in Nevada

Opening facility, first in U.S., to cost over $90 billion

ASSOCIATED PRESS

July 21, 2008

WASHINGTON – Turns out, it's going to cost taxpayers $32 billion more than first thought to open and operate the nation's first nuclear waste dump.

The Bush administration's latest calculation – made public last week – is that the facility in Nevada will cost more than $90 billion.

It's the first estimate since 2001, when the figure was $58 billion.

Ward Sproat, the Energy Department official in charge of managing the controversial Yucca Mountain project, disclosed the new figures after testifying before a House energy subcommittee.

Sproat said the estimate includes $9 billion already spent and the projected cost of about 100 years of operation until the dump, 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas, is sealed forever.

Some of the increase was because of inflation, Sproat said.

Also, Energy Department officials now expect the dump will hold more radioactive waste than the 77,000 tons approved by Congress.

A report with precise cost breakdowns will be released to Congress in the next several weeks, Sproat said.

Already, some 64,000 tons of radioactive spent fuel rods are stored at commercial reactor sites in 33 states, according to the Nuclear Energy Institute, an industry lobbying group.

Most of the waste is stored in vaultlike pools while some has been moved into dry-cask storage, where Nevada lawmakers, who oppose Yucca Mountain, would like it to stay.

Sproat opposes that plan as impractical.

He also objected to other interim storage options raised Tuesday by frustrated lawmakers, who reported hearing from constituents about the need for new energy sources.

Commercial nuclear power plants now produce about 20 percent of U.S. electricity, but concern about waste disposal has hampered the industry's growth.

Yucca Mountain – approved by Congress in 2002 – was originally supposed to open in 1998 but has been beset by lawsuits and political and scientific controversies.

The best-possible opening date is now 2020, Sproat said.

Even that is contingent on a steady money stream, something Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has blocked.

Last week, Reid called the $90 billion figure “both brazen and ridiculous.” Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., who testified Tuesday, said “the cost only goes up and the delays only grow longer.”

The Energy Department did succeed in submitting a required construction license application to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission last month.

The NRC has up to four years to decide whether to approve the project – but that timeline, too, is dependent on congressionally approved budgets.

 »Next Story»


 Sponsored Links


Advertisements from the print edition








© Copyright 2008 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. • A Copley Newspaper Site