West Texas is on track to get even more nuclear waste -- thanks to the federal government
by Erin Douglas, Texas Tribune
To get rid of eight gallons of water, the U.S. Department of Energy spent $100,000.
Its little more than half a tank of gasoline in a midsize car, but the radioactive shipment from South Carolina to a West Texas company last fall marked one change that could lead to more nuclear waste traveling to Texas waste that, until recently, was considered too dangerous to be disposed of.
Much of the public debate surrounding Waste Control Specialists hazardous waste facility in Andrews County, on the New Mexico border, has focused on the companys plans, with a partner, to store the riskiest type of nuclear waste: the spent fuel rods from nuclear power plants, which can remain dangerously radioactive for hundreds of thousands of years.
Scientists agree that spent nuclear fuel should be stored deep underground, but the U.S. still hasnt located a suitable site. Interim Storage Partners a joint venture of Waste Control Specialists and Orano USA, a subsidiary of one of the worlds biggest nuclear power companies proposed bringing the spent fuel to a 332-acre site next to the WCS facility in Andrews County until a permanent storage site is found.
Read more:
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/02/10/nuclear-waste-government-rules/