EM News Flash | May 14, 2018 |
DOE Moving Forward With Key WIPP Infrastructure Upgrade
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is moving forward with a key infrastructure upgrade at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
(WIPP) in New Mexico to enable increased progress in DOE’s mission to
address the environmental legacy of decades of nuclear weapons
production and government-sponsored nuclear energy research.
Assistant Energy Secretary for Environmental Management Anne White
approved the start of construction for a $288 million underground
ventilation system at WIPP. The Safety Significant Confinement
Ventilation System (SSCVS) will be key to DOE’s plans to increase
shipments of transuranic waste to WIPP from cleanup sites across the DOE
complex.
“This will be a significant improvement for WIPP in support of its critical role in our national mission,” White said.
The SSCVS will significantly increase the amount of air available to
the underground portion of the WIPP facility. As a result, DOE will be
able to perform transuranic waste emplacement activities simultaneously
with facility mining and maintenance operations. The new ventilation
system will also allow for easier filter replacement and preventative
maintenance activities. Construction of the new ventilation system is
expected to be completed by early 2021.
The new ventilation system is one of a number of infrastructure
projects planned for WIPP in the coming years to enable the facility to
continue to play an integral role in DOE’s cleanup program. To date,
more than 90,000 cubic meters of transuranic waste have been disposed of
at WIPP.
“I am appreciative of the unwavering support from our local, state,
and federal elected officials and stakeholders at WIPP who have helped
to ensure we have the proper funding to make infrastructure
improvements, like the new ventilation system,” White said.
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