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Biden administration moves to protect Alaska wilderness; opening statements and first witness in NY trial; SCOTUS hears Starbucks case, with implications for unions on the line; rural North Carolina town gets pathway to home ownership.

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The Supreme Court weighs cities ability to manage a growing homelessness crisis, anti-Israeli protests spread to college campuses nationwide, and more states consider legislation to ban firearms at voting sites and ballot drop boxes.

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Wyoming needs more educators who can teach kids trade skills, a proposal to open 40-thousand acres of an Ohio forest to fracking has environmental advocates alarmed and rural communities lure bicyclists with state-of-the-art bike trail systems.

NRC Puts New Missouri Nuke Plants on Hold

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Tuesday, August 14, 2012   

COLUMBIA, Mo. - Missouri's new plans to build small modular nuclear power plants may have hit a snag. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has stopped licensing new plants, and extending existing licenses, because a federal court has ruled that storing the radioactive waste on-site hasn't been proven to be safe.

Up until now licensing had been granted under the assumption that plants like Callaway, near Columbia, could store spent fuel on-site in cooling pools "temporarily" until the federal government could fulfill its promise to take the waste to a safe site to be stored underground by 1998.

However, as Ed Smith, safe energy director with the Missouri Coalition for the Environment, points out, that never happened.

"The Callaway reactor has been generating literally tons of radioactive waste for 28 years now and there's nowhere for that to go."

Absent a clear plan for permanent storage, a court has ordered the NRC to get evidence from nuclear plants that on-site storage can be safe.

Smith says the Fukushima accident in Japan raised questions about on-site storage. When there is an extended power outage the pools can no longer cool the spent fuel rods, and that's when they release dangerous levels of radiation. And he questions those who consider nuclear energy to be clean energy.

"You don't evacuate 100,000 people in the case of an accident if something's clean or safe. It's the opposite. It's dirty, dangerous, and most importantly for consumers in Missouri, it's the most expensive form of energy."

Ed Lyman, senior scientist with the Union of Concerned Scientists, suggests that these issues should have been resolved a long time ago.

"We have over 60,000 metric tons of spent fuel that has been generated. So, we have no choice at this point but to come up with the least-bad way of dealing with it."

When the regulators talk about "temporary on-site storage," Lyman says, they have been referring to as much as 100 years. He says spent fuel rods in cooling pools pose a security risk and a health risk for people who live near the plants.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration says there are more than 100 nuclear reactors in the United States that are, on the average, 32 years old.


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