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Federal Facilities for Storing Spent Nuclear Fuel--Are They Needed?

EMD-79-82 Published: Jun 27, 1979. Publicly Released: Jun 27, 1979.
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Highlights

The domestic and foreign aspects of the spent-fuel program of the Department of Energy (DOE) were reviewed. In the past, partially used fuel loads were taken from the nuclear reactor and transferred to a commercially-operated reprocessing plant, where residual uranium and plutonium in the spent fuel could be removed for use again in other nuclear reactors. In order to minimize the proliferation of nuclear weapons, the President in 1977 decided to defer indefinitely the commercialization of technologies that process the recycling of plutonium. DOE intended to take title to the spent nuclear fuel accumulating at reactor sites in the United States and abroad. DOE realized that a centralized interim storage facility must be provided, since many utilities would not be able to store their spent fuel on-site beginning in 1983. Alternatives being considered by DOE for a Federal interim storage facility include: construction of a new 5,000-metric-ton facility to be located on a Federally owned site; purchase of storage pools at three existing but closed reprocessing plants; and lease of storage space from the Tennessee Valley Authority. Depending on which of these is selected, DOE then would calculate a storage fee to recover all Government costs for both interim and permanent storage of spent fuel.

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Topics

Foreign policiesNuclear proliferationNuclear waste managementNuclear waste storageUraniumStorage facilitiesFuel storageNuclear reactorsSpent nuclear fuelPlutonium