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Perry, make Yucca Mountain great again
The Washington Examiner ^ | 12-15-16

Posted on 12/15/2016 7:56:56 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic

The Obama White House made an unfortunate and ungracious choice in launching a preemptive attack on Rick Perry's nomination this week. Spokesman Josh Earnest did his best deadpan as he disparaged the choice as one based on politics and not merit.

But what about President Obama's appointments of Ken Salazar, Kathleen Sebelius, Tom Vilsack and Janet Napolitano? They were all lawyers without specific expertise in the issue areas of the departments they led. But each, having experience as elected Democratic statewide officials, knew enough about their respective issue areas that their status as non-experts never really mattered.

Perry spent 14 years governing what remains by far the largest energy-producing state in the union. That may not qualify him for an advanced degree in nuclear physics or combustion chemistry, but it does mean he understands how energy markets work.

That's perhaps as much as one can hope for from the Department of Energy, for it is hardly the most vital of federal departments. Ironically, it is one that Perry himself promised to abolish when running for president in 2012.

We doubt that Perry will make himself the last secretary of energy, but his opinion that the department's powers should be limited is something President-elect Trump's team must have viewed as a plus when it selected him, and that is a positive sign.

There is one truly important task that we hope Perry can accomplish. One of the Energy Department's few essential functions (which could easily be shifted to the Defense Department, by the way) is to safeguard and dispose of the nuclear waste produced by America's commercial nuclear power plants. Utility companies across America paid $21 billion to the Energy Department for this appropriate government service, which the Energy Department has completely failed to perform.

Its failure, due to political sabotage, is both dangerous and expensive. The Yucca Mountain repository, in a deserted, uninhabitable section of Nevada, was supposed to begin taking in nuclear waste on New Year's Day 1998, so that the material would not have to be stored in communities across the nation. Nineteen years and countless scientific studies later, Yucca is just a $15 billion hole in the ground, thanks mostly to ferocious opposition from the retiring Senate Democratic leader, Harry Reid.

Reid also had a huge assist from the Obama administration, which broke federal law in attempting to close the site for good. Obama went so far as to designate national monuments strategically in areas through which the waste would have to travel by rail on the way to Yucca.

Every year Yucca Mountain fails to take in nuclear waste, taxpayers incur billions in additional penalties to the utilities whose waste the government is not taking as agreed upon. By one 2013 estimate, taxpayers could be on the hook for $50 billion in damages by 2020, on top of the construction costs already incurred.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: doe; energy; nuclearwaste; rickperry; trumpcabinet; trumpenergy; trumptransition; yuccamountain
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To: factoryrat

We had a fuel reprocessing plant. Jimmy Carter shut it down about day 1 and it was sold for pennies on the dollar to Japan.

Might have a hard time getting money to try that again.


21 posted on 12/15/2016 10:00:26 AM PST by Clay Moore (JRandomFreeper, SWAMPSNIPER RIP)
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To: afraidfortherepublic
Let us NOT forget that the DOE was formed in 1977 by then President Jimmy Carter.

The PURPOSE for forming the DOE was to wean America off of the use of foreign oil.

It's now nearly 40 years later and the DOE has a budget of well over 30 BILLION dollars and thousands of employees who do little or nothing except BLOCK America's efforts to explore, develop, and sell our own energy reserves.

Hopefully Perry will begin to dismantle this cancer on America's energy needs.

Low cost energy and an abundance of it would do as much to turn America around as the jobs it would create.

22 posted on 12/15/2016 10:14:16 AM PST by VideoDoctor
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To: afraidfortherepublic

Yucca Mountain?
Yucca Mountain is a freaking dormant volcano.
It’s still on the geologically active list.
Why would a sane person store nuclear waste there?


23 posted on 12/15/2016 10:14:49 AM PST by BuffaloJack
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To: factoryrat
but storing spent fuel is just a waste of money and resources.

They surely can come up with a way to recycle this stuff at a reasonable cost if not profit.

24 posted on 12/15/2016 10:28:05 AM PST by itsahoot (Three words I don't want to hear, Comprehensive Immigration Reform.)
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To: factoryrat

“Luckily, the US is about the only country that stopped reprocessing fuel”

Should have said “Unfortunately”, or “Stupidly”.


25 posted on 12/15/2016 10:38:49 AM PST by factoryrat (We reserve the producers, the creators. Grow it, mine it, build it.)
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To: factoryrat
"Up until Carter, we actually HAD spent fuel reprocessing plants. The only real problems are the political will, and regaining that technology that was lost two generations ago.

True, but due to the handwriting being on the wall about the likely fate of the plants, the best qualified personnel began to look for "other opportunities", and as the quality of personnel dropped, safety issues began to crop up.

I actually minored in nuclear science en route to my PhD in chem in the 1970-73 frame, and considered a job in the nuclear industry, as what turned out to be the last reactor built in the US (River Bend), was under construction at the time.

The propaganda war waged against that plant was astounding. One of my chem profs was an extreme liberal, and he bashed the plant in his classes at every opportunity. One of his arguments was that the reactor vessel would suffer "radiation embrittlement" and fail, with a catastrophic radiation release. Plant is still up and running today, and "it ain't happened yet".

26 posted on 12/15/2016 11:01:54 AM PST by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel and NRA Life Member)
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To: Wonder Warthog
Many liberal profs suffer from brain embrittlement. They make up stories like “The China Syndrome” and terms like “radiation embrittlement” to scare the hell out of a dumbed down public.
I do hope that you are able to enjoy another related career field.
27 posted on 12/15/2016 12:55:34 PM PST by BatGuano (You don't think I'd go into combat with loose change in my pocket, do ya?)
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To: Despot of the Delta
The tanks at Hanford are being held together with spit, baling wire and duct tape,

So, I'm told, are they at Savannah River. The real danger is theft. The waste, I'm assured, is not too dangerous on its own, but gathered into a "dirty bomb" by an enemy agent could spread contamination for miles.

28 posted on 12/16/2016 4:51:00 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic ( “Some ideas are so stupid that only intellectuals believe them.”)
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To: BuffaloJack

It’s a salt dome.


29 posted on 12/16/2016 4:56:15 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic ( “Some ideas are so stupid that only intellectuals believe them.”)
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