EM News Flash | Sept. 22, 2016 |
An aerial view of the Idaho Site’s Radioactive Waste Management Complex.
EM’s Idaho Site Crews Complete Buried Waste Cleanup Accomplishment
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho – EM’s Idaho Site program
and contractor Fluor Idaho have completed a significant cleanup
accomplishment that further protects the underlying Snake River Plain
Aquifer, the primary drinking and irrigation water source for more than
300,000 Idahoans.
Workers recently satisfied a provision of a 2008 agreement among the
DOE, state of Idaho and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by
packaging a total of 7,485 cubic meters of exhumed hazardous and
radioactive waste generated at the Rocky Flats nuclear weapons
production plant near Denver and buried in Idaho in the 1950s and 1960s.
The amount of waste exhumed is equivalent to nearly 36,000 55-gallon
drums of material.
Per
the agreement, crews will continue to remove radioactive and hazardous
waste from a combined area of 5.69 acres of the unlined 97-acre landfill
called the Subsurface Disposal Area (SDA) at the Radioactive Waste
Management Complex. To date, Fluor Idaho and two previous contractors
have exhumed waste from 4.24 acres, and the project remains about two
years ahead of schedule. Fluor Idaho will continue exhumation until all
of the 5.69 acres are exhumed.
Once exhumed, characterized and repackaged, the waste is shipped out
of Idaho for disposal. Following completion of waste exhumation, a soil
cap will be installed over the entire SDA.
Waste exhumation underway at EM's Idaho Site.
Targeted waste in a drum packaging station for visual examination.
To complete the 2008 agreement between the DOE, state of Idaho the
EPA, just two of nine different areas within the 97-acre SDA are left to
be exhumed.
The
waste exhumation project, which began in 2005, targets removal of the
highest concentrations of solvents and transuranic radionuclides, such
as plutonium and americium, buried in the landfill.
Currently,
crews are 56 percent complete on the eighth area, and are working to
remove hazardous and radioactive buried waste within a steel-framed,
fabric-sided building. Waste exhumation in that building is expected to
continue into 2017. Construction of the building over the ninth and
final area within the SDA began in July of 2016 and should be complete
in 2017.
Waste exhumation will begin post-construction and is expected to be completed in 202
|
Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire
Major Energy and Environmental News and Commentary affecting the Nuclear Industry.
Thursday, September 22, 2016
EM’s Idaho Site Crews Complete Buried Waste Cleanup Accomplishment
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