Congress Needs to Start Over on San Onofre Nuclear Waste
- Times of San Diego - Opinion: Congress Needs to Start Over on San Onofre Nuclear Waste - By Geoffrey Fettus, Special for CALmatters
On-Site Storage
Currently, all radioactive waste generated by U.S. reactors is stored at the reactor site - either in fuel pools or waste casks. However, the casks are currently security-vulnerable and should be "hardened" while a better solution continues to be sought.
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As posted at the State of Nevada Agency for Nuclear Project's "What's News" website section:
Updated - Thursday, March 28, 2019 [the 40th annual commemoration of the Three Mile Island Unit 2 reactor meltdown]
[$116,000 is, of course, mere pocket change for a corporation like Southern California Edison/Edison International.]
March 25, 2019
What does Hardened On-Site Storage mean?
See "HOSS it!" (IEER Nuclear Waste Management Plan), dated June 4, 2002.
See Dr. Gordon Thompson's Jan. 2003 report, "Robust Storage," to find out:
Executive Summary of “Robust Storage of Spent Nuclear Fuel: A Neglected Issue of Homeland Security”, Institute for Resource and Security Studies (January 2003) focuses on the vulnerability of irradiated fuel stored at the nation’s nuclear power stations to terrorism and what we can do about it.
Full report of “Robust Storage of Spent Nuclear Fuel: A Neglected Issue of Homeland Security”, Institute for Resource and Security Studies (January 2003) focuses on the vulnerability of irradiated fuel stored at the nation’s nuclear power stations to terrorism and what we can do about it.
Citizens Awareness Network of the Northeast commissioned Dr. Thompson's "Robust Storage" report.
Also see the Statement of Principles for Safeguarding Nuclear Waste at Reactors, posted at the IEER (Institute for Energy and Environmental Research) website. Dr. Arjun Makhijani, President of IEER, coined the phrase "Hardened On-Site Storage (HOSS)," which he unveiled at a CAN event in April 2002 held at Wesleyan U. in CT.
To see another artist's rendition of HOSS, in addition to the one above, click here.
As reported by Brian PJ Cronin in The Highlands Current. Beyond Nuclear is quoted throughout the article.
The following letter to the editor was published in the Los Angeles Times, written in response to a Sept. 11, 2017 L.A. Times editorial:
The writer monitors radioactive waste for the group Beyond Nuclear.