http://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2011/05/24-11

May 24, 2011

Institute for Policy Studies
202-234-9382
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Expert Cautions that 30 Million Spent Nuclear Fuel Rods Are Unsafely 
Stored in United States, Could Cause Fukushima-like Disaster

WASHINGTON - May 24 - A new report released today details the risk of 
nuclear catastrophe from spent nuclear fuel. The Institute for Policy 
Studies (IPS) report, "Spent Nuclear Fuel Pools in the U.S.: Reducing 
the Deadly Risks of Storage," released with support from the Project 
on Government Oversight, indicates high risks of radioactive 
contamination or even nuclear chain reactions or explosions due to 
the unsafe storage of spent nuclear fuel.

Report author Robert Alvarez discussed these risks in a press 
conference call today. An interactive map created by the Physicians 
for Social Responsibility, with new data from the IPS report, makes 
it easy to determine the threat of nuclear catastrophe for specific 
regions, including sites in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Dallas, 
Atlanta, and nuclear storage facilities across the United States.

"Unprotected and crowded spent nuclear fuel pools pose an 
unacceptable threat to the public," said report author Robert 
Alvarez, senior scholar for nuclear policy at the Institute for 
Policy Studies. "Dry cask storage is a much safer alternative to 
pools. Some people say they are too expensive, but considering the 
extreme risks, the cost of doing nothing is incalculable."

The report provides data for the first time on the amount of 
radioactivity in spent nuclear fuel at all individual reactor sites 
in the United States. Several sites are storing far more radioactive 
waste in vulnerable pools than the U.S. nuclear weapons program 
produced over the past 50 years. The report also details serious 
incidents that have occurred at U.S. reactor and storage sites 
containing these enormous amounts of radioactivity, and examines dry 
cask storage as a means of reducing the risks of nuclear waste 
storage.

More than 30 million highly radioactive spent nuclear fuel rods are 
submerged in vulnerable storage pools all over the country. These 
pools at 51 sites contain some of the largest concentrations of 
radioactivity on the planet.

- New York. If a spent fuel fire were to happen at one of the two 
Indian Point nuclear reactors located 25 miles from New York City, it 
could result in as many as 5,600 cancer deaths and $461 billion in 
damages. The spent fuel stored at Indian Point has about three times 
more radioactivity than the combined total in the spent fuel pools at 
the four troubled Fukushima reactors.

- Los Angeles. The spent fuel at the Diablo Canyon nuclear reactors 
have nearly 2.7 times more radioactivity than the combined total in 
the spent fuel pools at the four troubled Fukushima reactors.

- Miami. The Turkey Point reactors 65 miles from Miami have 2.5 times 
more radioactivity than the combined total in the spent fuel pools at 
the four troubled Fukushima reactors.

- Dallas. The Comanche Peak nuclear station 60 miles southwest of 
Dallas has spent fuel that contains about 2.3 times more 
radioactivity than the combined total in the spent fuel pools at the 
four troubled Fukushima reactors.

- Atlanta. The Vogtle nuclear reactors near Augusta are 147 miles 
northeast of Atlanta. These reactors have generated 2.5 times more 
radioactivity than the combined total in the spent fuel pools at the 
four troubled Fukushima reactors.

Spent nuclear fuel rods are so deadly that a motorcyclist blasting 
past them at 60 miles per hour at a distance of one foot would be 
killed from the effects of that fleeting exposure.

If the water drains from a from a spent nuclear fuel pool, it can 
lead to a catastrophic radioactive fire that spews toxins. Often, 
spent nuclear fuel rods are kept in tightly-packed racks submerged in 
pool water, reliant on a continuous flow of electricity to keep them 
from overheating. The metal tubing that contains spent nuclear fuel 
is no thicker than a credit card, and can crack or rupture, releasing 
deadly nuclear material. In extreme cases, poorly-kept pools can 
cause conditions that lead to a nuclear chain reaction, causing an 
explosion.

Spent fuel storage pools are vulnerable. Massive land contamination, 
radiation injuries, and myriad deaths would result from a terrorist 
attack, earthquake, or even a prolonged electricity blackout - as 
happened at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi reactor site in Japan following an 
earthquake and tsunami. Pools need electricity to pump water to cool 
the rods, as well as to maintain a high water level to diffuse the 
escape of radiation. Despite these dangers, the Nuclear Regulatory 
Commission (NRC) doesn't require nuclear reactor operators to even 
have back-up power supplies for these spent-fuel pools to prevent 
disaster.

Before joining the Institute for Policy Studies, Alvarez served at 
the Department of Energy (DOE) as Senior Policy Advisor to the 
Secretary and Deputy Assistant Secretary for National Security and 
the Environment from 1993 to 1999, earning two secretarial gold 
medals. Prior to joining the DOE, he was a Senior Investigator for 
the U.S. Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs.

###

Institute for Policy Studies turns Ideas into Action for Peace, 
Justice and the Environment. We strengthen social movements with 
independent research, visionary thinking, and links to the 
grassroots, scholars and elected officials. I.F. Stone once called 
IPS "the think tank for the rest of us." Since 1963, we have 
empowered people to build healthy and democratic societies in 
communities, the US, and the world.


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