WASHINGTON -- On the brink of what should be a milestone for the Yucca Mountain project, prospects for the nuclear waste dump outside of Las Vegas have never been more in doubt.The Energy Department is expected to deliver its long-awaited application to license the repository as soon as this week, a step that ordinarily would be among the most significant in its 20-year history.But as has always been the case with Yucca, politics will intervene. Yucca Mountain's future most likely will be decided not by the scientists reviewing the application in Washington but by the next president.The two Democratic presidential candidates, New York Sen. Hillary Clinton and Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, both said that they would withdraw the government's application if elected president. Such action is one of the surest ways to kill Yucca Mountain, government experts say.Then again, the project could enjoy newfound support, as it did during the Bush administration, if presumed Republican presidential nominee John McCain is elected.Staff at McCain headquarters said the senator would do what it takes to build the waste dump.For now, the project is limping along, underfunded and struggling for political support.Bob Loux, who has been fighting the project for Nevada for much of his professional life, remains doubtful the dump can survive the scientific or political scrutiny coming in this phase.Loux expects the nuclear industry's interest in building interim waste sites across the country and the loss of Yucca's chief supporters on Capitol Hill "may cause this purported celebration (over the application) to be short-lived."The Energy Department has spent decades developing the Yucca Mountain site and plans to file the application for the project, possibly this week. The application would face a three- to four-year review before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which will unfold in a Nevada hearing room much like a court case, with witnesses and evidence presented by both sides.The application was expected to go to the commission in 1989, to meet the repository's planned opening in 1998. Another deadline was missed in 2004.Now, $10 billion later, the department has developed a 10,000-page application detailing how it thinks spent nuclear fuel, coming mostly from the nation's power plants, can be safely stored deep inside the mountain for the next 1 million years. Smaller amounts of defense waste would also be sent there.Steven P. Kraft, senior director of used fuel management at the Nuclear Energy Institute, the main lobbying arm for the nuclear industry, said that filing the Yucca Mountain application is a major milestone."What would possibly be (unknown) at this point?" Kraft said. "After all these years, it's hard to imagine there is anything that hasn't been fleshed out."But the state plans to file as many as 500 contentions against the application, challenging the science on various fronts, including what it sees as inadequacies in the government's plan to shield Nevadans from cancer-causing radiation.Because the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is autonomous from the White House, experts have said a new president would have limited options for killing Yucca Mountain.A president could, however, withdraw the Energy Department's application or eliminate project funding.(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)
Latest Stories
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By TERRY MATTINGLY, Scripps Howard News Service
By AIDIN VAZIRI, San Francisco Chronicle
By DAVID YOUNT, Scripps Howard News Service
By GREGORY K. FRITZ, The Providence Journal
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
By MIKE HARRIS, Scripps Howard News Service
By MARTIN SCHRAM, Scripps Howard News Service
By LAVINIA RODRIGUEZ, Tampa Bay Times
By JAY AMBROSE, Scripps Howard News Service
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By POHLA SMITH, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
An editorial / By Dale McFeatters, Scripps Howard News Service
By CARLEY RONEY, Scripps Howard News Service
By MAX MESSMER, Scripps Howard News Service
By RON COOK, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By ROB OWEN, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By CHRIS CAMPBELL, Scripps Howard News Service
- 1 of 2395
- ››
Yucca Mountain's future depends on Nov. election
Paying taxes unites us. It also divides us. People can pay five and even six times more in state and local taxes than other folks in similar circumstances making similar incomes.
Who's got your number?
In one of the fastest-growing forms of identity theft, crooks are stealing tax refunds by swiping personal information and using it to trick the Internal Revenue Service.




ShareThis






Yucka
This is just another great example of our long running failed energy policy. Can't we bury Congress in the mountain, at the very least?