Monday, July 13, 2009

Moratorium sought in Utah on depleted uranium

Monday, July 13, 2009
By Brock Vergakis
The Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY -- State regulators will consider whether federal rules for disposing of depleted uranium are adequate to protect health and safety in Utah or if the waste should be banned until more stringent procedures are put in place.

The Utah Radiation Control Board will meet Tuesday to discuss a disposal moratorium sought by the Healthy Environment Alliance of Utah, an environmental watchdog group.

"Utah is vulnerable," said Christopher Thomas, public policy director of the group.

Depleted uranium is classified as the least dangerous type of low-level radioactive waste and has been disposed of for 18 years at the EnergySolutions Inc. facility in the Utah desert 70 miles west of Salt Lake City.

However, the material is different than other low-level waste because it becomes more radioactive over time for hundreds of thousands of years.

This spring, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission directed staff to require additional safeguards for the disposal of large amounts of depleted uranium. It could take several years to finalize any new rules.

EnergySolutions intends to tell Utah regulators it has safely handled the material and there is no reason to keep more of it from being sent to Utah.

The company estimates that 46,000 metric tons of the material will be available for disposal from Department of Energy sites during the next five years.

"There are a lot of cleanups that would be adversely affected if we stopped taking this waste, and we don't think its reasonable for them stop," said Tom Magette, the company's senior vice president of nuclear regulatory strategy.

If the waste was barred from Utah, it would likely be stored at the site where it was generated or sent to a private disposal facility in Andrews County, Texas, near the New Mexico border, that's set to begin disposing of low-level radioactive waste in 2010.

On the Net: Utah Radiation Control Board http://www.radiationcontrol.utah.gov/

http://www.standard.net/live/news/178308

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