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When a centralized storage facility for highly radioactive nuclear fuel
is opened, thousands of shipments of dangerous
waste will begin coursing the nation's highways and rails each year.
Accidents will happen. Are shipping containers safe? Are
communities prepared for radiation-related accidents?
RADIOACTIVE FUEL BACKING UP
Without a safe publicly acceptable permanent repository, high-level
waste is building up at 109 nuclear reactors across
the country. This highly radioactive waste is presently shielded and
cooled underwater in fuel pools which are rapidly filling to
capacity. With no permanent disposal location, some utilities are beginning
to store this waste outdoors in concrete
containers. Shielding, with concrete, lead or water is essential; a
person standing three feet from unshielded
irradiated fuel would receive a lethal radiation dose in 10 seconds.
While the nuclear industry has plans for a permanent
repository in Nevada, these plans are no closer to realization than
they were in 1972 when the first repository site was
proposed in Lyons, Kansas. The operation date for a Nevada repository
has now slipped to the year 2023. As a temporary fix, utilities are planning
a centralized storage facility on Native American lands in New Mexico.
Or alternatively, a bill
introduced to the U.S. Congress in January 1995 would site a surface
storage facility at the entrance to the proposed Nevada
repository at Yucca Mountain. If either of these plans happen, the
high-level waste flood gates would open. Thousands of truck and train shipments
would move dangerous radioactive waste across the country, by everyone's
backyard. Transportation
routes would go through 43 states. Department of Transportation regulations
require highway shipments of nuclear waste to take the most direct Interstate
routes, even if these routes traverse densely populated metropolitan areas.
SHIPPING CONTAINERS:
THEY'RE BIG. THEY'RE STRONG. THEY'RE VULNERABLE.
A shipping cask is a cylindrical metal container, made up of steel
and lead or uranium. Each truck shipping cask weighs 25
tons; rail casks weigh up to 125 tons. Inside the cask, the fuel consists
of solid uranium stacked like poker chips within metal
tubes. A collection of these tubes is called an assembly. A typical
pressurized water reactor (PWR) uses 60 fuel assemblies,
or 30 tons of fuel, each year. Each truck cask contains 1 or 2 PWR
fuel assemblies. Each rail cask holds up to 24 fuel
assemblies. In terms of radioactivity, each fuel assembly contains
10 times the long-lived radioactivity released by the
Hiroshima bomb.
The more severe an accident, the more likely that radioactive material
would be released to the environment. A low speed
accident could unseat a valve or damage a seal, releasing radioactive
particulates to the environment. The same event could crack the brittle
metal tubing about the fuel. According to the American Petroleum Institute,
heavy truck accidents occur
about 6 times each million miles traveled. With thousands of truck
shipments, at least 15 accidents are expected each year.
Shipping containers are designed to withstand a crash into an immovable
object at 30 miles per hour. Obviously Interstate
trucks travel much faster than 30 m.p.h. Impact into a bridge abutment
or falls off a bridge could easily exceed the design
limits of the container.
A fire associated with a truck or rail accident increases the probability
that radioactivity will be released. Fires occur in
1.6% of all truck and 1% of all train accidents. Shipping containers
are designed to withstand a 1/2-hour fire at a
temperature of 1475 F. But rail fires could burn for hours, sometimes
for days, at temperatures considerably higher. Diesel
fuel burns at 1850 F. Some materials burn twice as hot. The heat could
vaporize some radioactive materials and sweep them up into the air. Persons
downwind could inhale radioactive particulates and later develop cancer
or genetic effects.
None of the containers presently used on highways and rails has been
physically tested. These containers were designed and built in the 1960's
and '70's. Waste containers have only been tested by computer or hand calculators.
Before the flood gates open on nuclear shipments, the Department of Energy
should at least require that the new generation of shipping containers
presently proposed be actually physically tested, but the Department has
no such plans.
ARE YOU READY?
Even if a small percentage of radioactive waste is released from a
shipping container, the number of health effects and the
impact on a local community could be disastrous. A 1980 study by the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission estimates economic
consequences in an urban area on the order of $2 billion. A more recent
study by Department of Energy contractors estimates
economic costs on the order of $460 million, and a period greater than
1 year to clean up the radioactive residue.
Who would be first on the accident scene? Local fire, police and emergency
personnel, who are neither trained nor equipped to cope with emergencies
of this magnitude. It is important that fire companies extinguish a fire
within a half hour, yet it is
often unclear who has authority and responsibility for cleanup and
protecting the public health in an emergency.
WHAT TO DO
High-level waste containers should be designed to withstand all real
highway and rail accidents. The standards need to be
raised. Waste containers should be physically tested to withstand realistic
and credible accidents. Local community
emergency personnel should be trained and equipped to handle radiation-related
accidents. No nuclear fuel should move until
these basic safety conditions are met.
For more information contact:
Nuclear Information and Resource Service
Radioactive Waste Project
1424 16th Street NW, #404
Washington, DC 20036
202-328-0002; fax: 202-462-2183
e-mail: nirsnet@nirs.org
www.nirs.org
prepared by Radioactive Waste Management Associates, New York, NY, January 1995
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