atomic power review
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Posted: 07 Aug 2012 02:56 PM PDT
The
Nuclear Regulatory Commission voted (in a unanimous vote) to halt
relicensing of existing nuclear power plants in the US, and to halt
licensing processes for those being planned, until resolution is found
over its concept of waste storage.
Background: In June, the DC District Court of Appeals threw out portions of NRC ruling that covered assumptions about HLW storage. See a thorough APR article on this from that time, including NEI's response to the Court decision by clicking here. The action of throwing out the Waste Confidence rule led to further industry supposition that the Yucca Mountain issue would be forced, go or no-go, and led to revival of plans to establish large but distributed areas around the country for storage of HLW. See a post on one such plan by clicking here. In the interim time period, petitioners (mostly environmentalist and anti-nuclear groups, it would appear) have interjected that NRC cannot make licensing decisions if there is no framework for expectation of future spent fuel storage. This forms the basis of the objections over which the NRC today voted to suspend licensing / relicensing until the Court's throwing out of the Waste Confidence rule is fully addressed. Click here to see the official NRC statement on the subject, with very complete reference material quotes. Click here for a summary and discussion by Platts. The NRC release indicates that utmost attention will be given to this topic; further, all licensing work is to continue normally while this process takes place. What is held up is final issuance of licenses, essentially, not the pipeline of preparatory work. It's clear to this writer that while the NRC wishes to fully address the complaints of groups over licensing with no real, permanent HLW storage policy and also wishes to address the District Court of Appeals' concerns it also does not want to create a log jam of licensing / relicensing when the fixes are made. I will have more on this site as required - and remember to watch APR's Twitter feed at @atomicnews. 5:55 PM Eastern 8/7/2012 ATOMIC POWER REVIEW |
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