NuclearFuel JULY 18, 2005 Picking U.S. reprocessing technology in 2007 not feasible, experts say The U.S. government would need years to make a sound decision on the reprocessing technology on which it should focus its development efforts, panelists at a House hearing last week agreed. The time frame for that decision is important because language in the House-approved version of the fiscal 2006 Energy & Water Development Appropriations bill requires DOE to "make a specific technology recommendation" by the end of FY-07 on a technology that will "improve upon the existing Purex process" (NF, 23 May, 8). At the July 12 hearing of the House Science Committee's energy subcommittee, Marvin Fertel of the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) questioned the "practicality" of starting up a facility based on a new reprocessing technology "in the next five or 10 years." Fertel, who is NEI's senior vice president for nuclear generation and chief nuclear officer, said one couldn't reasonably expect to have operating commercial reprocessing facilities until about 2025. In the near term, he said, the U.S. should develop a "road map" for research and development on reprocessing. By "the end of the decade," the U.S. government should have an idea of "the kind of policies [it] would like to pursue," he said. Nevertheless, Fertel said in an interview after the hearing, the House appropriators took "the right action" by establishing the 2007 deadline. He commended David Hobson (R-Ohio), the chairman of the House appropriations subcommittee that drafted the language, for "forcing [the issue] to the surface." Hobson "wants to get [utility spent fuel] moved, and that's good," Fertel said. He said work on reprocessing should take place "in parallel" with efforts toward opening a repository DOE wants to build at Yucca Mountain, Nev. In spite of his caveats, Fertel appeared to be more generally supportive of reprocessing than at least two of the other three panelists, academics who co-authored recent detailed analyses of nuclear power or reprocessing. In testimony for the hearing, which focused on economic aspects of reprocessing, Steve Fetter, dean of the University of Maryland's School of Public Policy, said "traditional reprocessing" was likely to add 3%-7% to the price of nuclear-generated electricity and that "a full separation-and-transmutation system would add still more." He added, "This can only hurt nuclear power in the economic competition with alternative methods of generating electricity, and could make the difference between a revitalized industry and continued stagnation and decline." Richard Lester, a professor of nuclear science and engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and director of the university's Industrial Performance Center, said a "major expansion" of nuclear power was likely to be needed in the U.S. but, because of the extra costs imposed by reprocessing, "an attempt to introduce spent fuel reprocessing here in the U.S. in the near term would not only not help to ensure a greater role for nuclear power but would actually make this outcome less likely."In light of current uranium prices, reprocessing costs would have to drop by about 75% to be competitive, Lester said. That figure does not "fall within the bounds of the credible," he said. Such a reduction would be "particularly implausible" with a 2007 deadline for choosing the technology, he said. The short time frame would not allow development of new technologies and therefore would "effectively force" the adoption of the existing one, he continued. And since Purex is a "relatively mature" technology, there is "simply no possibility" of achieving cost reductions on the needed scale, he said.In contrast, Donald Jones, the vice president of RCF Economic & Financial Consulting, said the added cost of reprocessing was relatively small. "If there are other motivations [for pursuing reprocessing], you should not stumble over cost," Jones said. Fertel did not provide cost projections for reprocessing versus the once-through fuel cycle. But, like Lester, he cautioned against burdening consumers of nuclear power with the additional costs imposed by reprocessing. Nuclear power has good price stability and low marginal costs, Fertel said, and it would be better "not to raise the price if you don't have to." In her opening statement, hearing chair Rep. Judy Biggert (R-Ill.) listed benefits that reprocessing could provide while acknowledging that "as long as uranium is cheap and abundant, mining and enriching it will continue to cost less than reprocessing and recycling spent fuel." But, she said, "let's face it, the federal government does a lot that isn't economical- often because doing so is in the best interest of the nation for other reasons." Fertel also said, "There's uranium out there, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't be looking at recycling techniques." He said there were benefits to be gained from reprocessing, such as a reduction in waste volume. The U.S. therefore should pursue "proliferation-resistant" reprocessing technologies, he said. Fetter argued, however, that proliferation resistance should be measured against a once-through fuel cycle, rather than against Purex reprocessing. He also said his strongest reservation about proceeding with reprocessing was "the example it would set for other countries." He said he supported further research into-but not development of-advanced reprocessing technologies. But, in response to a question from Biggert, Fetter said there would be no economic cost to delaying a decision on which technology to pursue. The prepared statements from the hearing, as well as the recent economic analyses, are available on the Science Committee's Web site at http://www.house.gov/science/hear-ings/energy05/july%2012/index.htm . Last month, the energy subcommittee held a hearing on non-economic aspects of reprocessing (NF, 20 June, 12). Fetter and former NRC chairman John Ahearne argued strongly against reprocessing at a July 11 congressional staff briefing sponsored by the Center for Arms Control & Non-Proliferation. Assuming reprocessing costs of $1,000 per kilogram of spent fuel, the price of uranium would have to rise to $400/kg for mixed-oxide plutonium fuel just to "break even" with low-enriched uranium fuel, Fetter said. However, he added, that $400/kg price "won't be achieved this century even with expanded nuclear power."Separating plutonium and transmuting other highly radioactive actinides from all U.S. spent fuel using advanced reprocessing technologies under development would add about 10% to the price of nuclear-generated electricity, costing ratepayers an additional $3- to $4-billion annually, Fetter said. Neither Purex nor advanced reprocessing would eliminate the need for a waste repository such as the one planned for Yucca Mountain, both said, because reprocessing wastes and irradiated MOX fuel would still require geologic disposal. Ahearne said he has "never heard any utility executive getting excited about reprocessing and transmutation." -Daniel Horner and Steven Dolley, Washington
Remember when the helicopter pilot dumped Boron on the remains of the Chernobyl reactor?
Boron is the answer. I always keep a box of Borax handy, in case radioactive fallout comes my way.
You can find Borax in any grocery store or supermarket in the laundry detergent aisle.
It's the nucleus of the Boron atom which absorbs the free radicals. Borax contains Boron.
So if you are concerened about nuclear waste dumps blowing up, don't sweat.
A cropduster can be dispatched to the site with Borax/Boron solution to spray on the mess.
I don't mean to stray off topic with this reply. The nuclear waste in question will still be radioactive in 2107. There's a hundred years to come up with stainless steel casks. Most of the waste should move by rail. The real matter of funding in the 2005-2007 timeframe is getting railroad crossties replaced on the trackage of the Nuclear Power Plants. It seems that nuclear fuel will outlast the railroad ties that brought it into the grounds of the power plant. Why weren't concrete sleepers used in the construction of the railroad track? The railroads in the U.S. have always been underfunded, and little allocation is granted for track maintenance.
All piping in a nuclear power plant is stainless, there must be concrete... whoever heard of wood used in the construction of a nuclear facility?