The huge amounts of spent nuclear fuel accumulating in containment pools across the U.S. pose a potentially catastrophic risk and should be moved to dry storage as soon as possible, a new report by the Institute for Policy Studies warns. Of the 65,000 metric tons of highly radioactive spent fuel generated by U.S. reactors, about 75 percent is kept in cooling pools. According to Robert Alvarez, a senior policy advisor in the U.S. Department of Energy in the Clinton administration and co-author of the report, those pools were not designed for the amount of fuel — or the level of radiation — they are holding and are vulnerable to the type of events that crippled the Fukushima plant in Japan in April. While spent fuel pools contain some of the largest concentrations of radioactivity on the planet, Alvarez said, “some are made from materials commonly used to house big-box stores and car dealerships.” The report says the U.S. can reduce the risk by moving the rods to dry, hardened storage casks. Transporting that much spent fuel would likely take a decade and cost $3.5 to $7 billion, Alvarez wrote, but “the price of doing too little is incalculable.”
U.S. Spent Nuclear Fuel Pools Pose Catastrophic Risks, Report Claims
More From E360
-
CONSERVATION
Out of the Wild: How A.I. Is Transforming Conservation Science
-
Energy
China’s Mega Dam Project Poses Big Risks for Asia’s Grand Canyon
-
Solutions
How Natural Solutions Can Help Islands Survive Sea Level Rise
-
INTERVIEW
Will U.S. Push on Seabed Mining End Global Consensus on Oceans?
-
Biodiversity
In Mexico’s ‘Avocado Belt,’ Villagers Stand Up to Protect Their Lands
-
Food & Agriculture
How Herbicide Drift from Farms Is Harming Trees in Midwest
-
Policy
U.S. Aid Cuts Are Hitting Global Conservation Projects Hard
-
INTERVIEW
How a Former Herder Protected Mongolia’s Vast Grasslands
-
Solutions
A.I. Is Quietly Powering a Revolution in Weather Prediction
-
RIVERS
On a Dammed River, Amazon Villagers Fight to Restore the Flow
-
Biodiversity
With the Great Mussel Die-Off, Scientists Scramble for Answers
-
ANALYSIS
Recycling Nuclear Waste: A Win-Win or a Dangerous Gamble?