US nuclear regulators greatly underestimate potential for nuclear disaster, researchers say
Please see below a statement from Rod McCullum, NEI Senior Director, Fuel and Decommissioning:
"The U.S. nuclear industry has safely and effectively stored used fuel
in steel-lined, water-filled concrete vaults at plant sites for decades.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission regularly inspects equipment and
processes for managing used fuel at nuclear plant sites to ensure this
occurs.
This most recent perspective on the oft studied topic offers nothing new
and does not change abundant evidence that used fuel at U.S. plant
sites is properly managed – a claim consistently verified by industry
experts, independent scientists, and the NRC. After completing the
latest in a series of over a dozen independent studies, the NRC
recommended (NUREG 2161) that “no further generic assessments be pursued
related to possible regulatory actions to require the expedited
transfer of spent fuel to dry cask storage.”
Thanks to sharing of best practices our already safe methods for
storing used fuel have gotten progressively safer in recent years
because of additional measures, such as improved neutron absorber
materials and operational practices that assure increased spacing
between the hottest assemblies. In addition, U.S. nuclear plants now
have FLEX equipment on site and stationed at regional locations to
respond to an unlikely event involving these used fuel vaults.
America’s nuclear energy facilities have a strong record of properly
managing these materials, yet we also look forward to renewed progress
toward licensing of the Yucca Mountain repository."
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