Showing posts with label tanks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tanks. Show all posts

Saturday, March 1, 2014

AP Newsbreak: Washington nuke waste tanks flawed?

AP Newsbreak: Washington nuke waste tanks flawed?
http://hosted2.ap.org/CBImages/?media=photo&contentId=6090c329731328084d0f6a706700e906&fmt=jpg&Role=Preview&reldt=2014-03-01T00:39:47GMT&authToken=eNoFwrkNwCAQBMCKTlpuuS%2bgGAtjicyhA4q3Zs76htO0GEQ2AInqZ%2b7hKExqSbBRNJHSbzziV8ADWAU%2f%2bx0KpmeatR%2fSohKB







FILE – In this March 6, 2013 file photo, workers labor at the ‘C’ Tank Farm at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, near Richland, Wash. Documents obtained by the Associated Press show that there are “significant construction flaws” in some newer, double-walled storage tanks at the nuclear waste complex. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)





FILE – In this March 6, 2013 file photo, workers labor at the ‘C’ Tank Farm at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, near Richland, Wash. Documents obtained by the Associated Press show that there are “significant construction flaws” in some newer, double-walled storage tanks at the nuclear waste complex. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)





FILE – In this June 19, 2013 file photo, U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, center left, answers questions from reporters in Richland, Wash., before touring the Hanford Nuclear Reservation. Documents obtained by the Associated Press show that there are “significant construction flaws” in some newer, double-walled storage tanks at the nuclear waste complex and in a letter Moniz, Friday, Feb. 28, 2014, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., called for better management of Hanford by the Dept. of Energy. (AP Photo/The Tri-City Herald, Kai-Huei Yau, file) LOCAL TV OUT; LOCAL RADIO OUT KONA





FILE – In this March 6, 2013 file photo, a warning sign is shown attached to a fence at the ‘C’ Tank Farm at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, near Richland, Wash. Documents obtained by the Associated Press show that there are “significant construction flaws” in some newer, double-walled storage tanks at the nuclear waste complex. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)





FILE – In this Feb. 19, 2013 file photo, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., center, tours the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Richland, Wash. Documents obtained by the Associated Press show that there are “significant construction flaws” in some newer, double-walled storage tanks at the nuclear waste complex. In a letter to Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz Friday, Feb. 28, 2014, Wyden called for better management of Hanford by the Dept. of Energy. (AP Photo/The Oregonian, Jamie Francis, file)













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(AP) — While one of the newer double-walled nuclear waste storage tanks at a Washington state complex has leaked, six others have “significant construction flaws” that could lead to additional leaks, according to documents obtained by The Associated Press.


The 28 double-walled tanks at Hanford nuclear waste complex hold some of the worst radioactive waste at the nation’s most contaminated nuclear weapons site.


One of those giant tanks was found to be leaking in 2012. But subsequent surveys of the other double-walled tanks performed for the U.S. Department of Energy by one of its Hanford contractors found at least six shared defects with the leaking tank that could lead to future leaks, the documents said. Thirteen additional tanks also might be compromised, according to the documents.


Questions about the storage tanks jeopardize efforts to clean up radioactive waste at the southeastern Washington site. Hanford cleanup already costs taxpayers about $ 2 billion a year.


“It is time for the Department (of Energy) to stop hiding the ball and pretending that the situation at Hanford is being effectively managed,” Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., wrote Friday in a letter to Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz.


Energy Department officials in Richland said the agency continues to make thorough inspections of the tanks, and has increased the frequency of those inspections.


“They used to be reviewed every five to seven years,” said Tom Fletcher, the Energy Department’s assistant manager for tank farms. “Now we are moving to a three-year time frame.”


The department is in the process of inspecting the final eight double-walled tanks at Hanford that have not been analyzed since the leak was detected in late 2012, Fletcher said Friday.


No new leaks have been found, he said.


“If there are changes or improvements we need to make in the program, based on what we learn, to make sure we capture the risks that exist on the tank farms, we will make them,” Fletcher said.


He added the Energy Department continues to examine the possibility of building new storage tanks at Hanford.


Concerns about the disposal of nuclear waste and the threat of leaks are not limited to Washington state. Two weeks ago, 13 workers at an underground nuclear dump in New Mexico were exposed to radiation. The above-ground radiation release led to the shutdown of operations at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant as authorities investigate the cause of the leak and the health effects on employees.


Tom Carpenter of the citizen watchdog group Hanford Challenge said he wasn’t surprised that more of the double-walled tanks are in danger of leaking.


“These tanks have an engineered design life, and we are reaching the end,” Carpenter said. “It’s bad planning that they don’t have new tanks up and running.”


While new tanks are expensive, cleaning up a leak is more expensive, he added. “The price for cleaning up the environment once this stuff gets out there is incalculable.”


Hanford contains some 53 million gallons of high-level radioactive wastes from the production of plutonium for nuclear weapons. They are stored in 177 underground storage tanks, many of which date back to World War II and are single-walled models that have leaked. The 28 double-walled tanks were built from the 1960s to the 1980s.


Current plans call for transferring wastes from leaking single-walled tanks to the newer and bigger double-walled tanks, where the waste will be stored while a $ 13 billion plant for treating the waste is constructed. But the treatment plant is plagued with design problems and construction has stalled.


The situation did not appear dire until the news in October 2012 that the oldest of the double-walled tanks, called AY-102, had leaked, becoming the first of those 28 tanks to do so.


At the time, the Energy Department blamed construction problems with this particular tank for the leak and said it “seems unlikely” that the other double-walled tanks would leak.


However, Wyden said engineering reviews of six other double-walled tanks “found significant construction flaws in those six tanks essentially similar to those at the leaking tank.” Those six tanks contain about 5 million gallons of radioactive wastes, wrote Wyden, who until recently was chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.


For instance, one tank was found to have bulging “in the primary and secondary bottoms,” according to the documents obtained through Wyden’s office. The tank also had a high number of welds that were rejected by inspectors and done again during its construction.


Additionally, a review of 13 other double-walled tanks found they were in better shape than the leaker. “But construction issues identified for these tanks, such as weld rejection rates, are cause for concern” and raise “uncertainty of long-term tank integrity,” Wyden wrote.


That means that 20 of the 28 double-walled tanks at Hanford raise some level of concern.


Wyden said the Energy Department should take a new look at proposals by the governors of Washington and Oregon to build new storage tanks at Hanford. Such tanks are likely to cost more than $ 100 million each.


The senator also criticized the Energy Department for releasing a “framework” for the cleanup of Hanford in September that did not mention the construction flaws in the double-walled tanks. He called that “indefensible.”


“The citizens living along banks of the Columbia River deserve to know the full story of what is happening with the Hanford tanks,” Wyden wrote.


Wyden asked the Energy Department to respond with an action plan in 45 days.


Hanford, located near Richland, stores about two-thirds of the nation’s high-level radioactive waste.


Officials have said the leaking materials pose no immediate risk to public safety or the environment because it would take perhaps years for the chemicals to reach groundwater.


The federal government built Hanford at the height of World War II as part of the Manhattan Project to build the atomic bomb.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines




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Sunday, May 19, 2013

No German Tanks Please, Hungarian Premier Says





MTI/MTVA Tibor Illes

Viktor Orban at Friday morning’s radio interview


Hungary’s Premier Viktor Orban detested a play of words by German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Thursday by saying Hungary wants no German cavalry to be sent to Hungary.


“Germany [at one instance] sent its cavalry to Hungary in the form of tanks. Please don’t send them again. That wasn’t a good idea then. It didn’t work out,” Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban said in a radio interview on Friday.


The mention of cavalry echoes an earlier debate between Ms. Merkel and her political contender, former German finance minister Peer Steinbrueck, who is Germany’s Social Democratic Party candidate for Chancellor of Germany in the 2013 federal elections. Ms. Merkel represents Christian Democrats in the race.


“We should not always send out cavalry,” Ms. Merkel said Thursday, in response to Mr. Steinbrueck’s criticism of Hungary, who said he wouldn’t “exclude the possibility that Hungary has to leave the EU.”


Ms. Merkel was referring to Mr. Steinbrueck’s comment from back in his ministerhood. He then criticized Switzerland for its banking secrecy, saying in the past one may have sent in the cavalry to tackle such a problem.


Hungary is widely criticized for its constitutional overhaul. Many critics, such as the European Union and the U.S. say a recent legal change curbs the powers of the constitutional court and threatens the rule of law in the country.


The European Parliament has been discussing ways how Hungary could amend these issues. The Parliament will hold a debate in June based on a report by Rui Tavares, the body’s rapporteur for fundamental rights.


After Mr. Tavares’ report was published earlier in May, the EP’s Liberal Group recommended that the EU initiate proceedings against Hungary under Article 7 of the EU Treaty. This article allows suspending voting rights if a member country’s actions pose a clear risk of a breach of the EU’s common values, or if a member state is in serious breach of those values.


Ms. Merkel on Thursday said changes need to be made where Hungary’s constitutional reforms aren’t in accordance with European treaties.


Answering a question whether Hungary should be excluded from the EU, she said: “We shouldn’t be talking about exclusion; then we have no influence anymore.”


(Susann Kreutzmann in Berlin contributed to this article)




Emerging Europe Real Time



No German Tanks Please, Hungarian Premier Says

Saturday, February 23, 2013

US nuclear waste tanks leaking

The Columbia generating station - a nuclear power plant inside the Hanford site. Photo: 2011 Hanford is reportedly the most contaminated nuclear site in the US

Six underground storage tanks at a nuclear site in the US state of Washington are leaking, authorities say.

Governor Jay Inslee described the situation at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation as “disturbing news”.

But he stressed that there was no current risk to human health.

Nearly 200 ageing containers hold millions of litres of radioactive waste left from decades of plutonium production for nuclear weapons.

“There is no immediate or near-term health risk associated with these newly discovered leaks, which are more than five miles (8km) from the Columbia River,” Mr Inslee said in a statement.

“But nonetheless this is disturbing news for all Washingtonians,” he added.

Last week, a leak was reported in one of the storage tanks. Officials said it was leaking at a rate of up 300 gallons (1,136 litres) per year.

They said that monitoring that tests had not detected higher radiation levels near the tanks.

Established as part of the Manhattan Project in 1943, Hanford was home to the world’s first full-scale plutonium production facility.

It was part of America’s bid to build the world’s first nuclear weapon during World War II.

The site produced the plutonium for the bomb that was dropped on the Japanese city of Nagasaki. Production at Hanford continued until 1989.

Under a costly clean-up proposal, the waste will eventually be treated in a special plant. It will then be safely disposed of underground in stainless steel canisters.


BBC News – US & Canada


US nuclear waste tanks leaking