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Yucca and Mountain
* Voted NO on barring website promoting Yucca Mountain nuclear waste dump.
There have also been campaigns relating to the Y-12 Nuclear Weapons Plant, the Idaho National Laboratory, proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository, the Hanford Site, the Nevada Test Site, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and transportation of nuclear waste from the Los Alamos National Laboratory.
The capacity of the surrounding sediment to contain the nuclear waste products has been cited by the U. S. federal government as supporting evidence for the feasibility to store spent nuclear fuel at the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository.
** The U. S. Secretary of Energy makes the decision that Yucca Mountain is suitable to be the United States ' nuclear repository.
* The Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository was scheduled to begin accepting nuclear waste.
* Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository
The center of population of Nevada is located in Nye County, very near Yucca Mountain.
The Nevada Test Site and proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository are located in the southwestern part of the county and are the focus of a great deal of political and public controversy in the state.
The repository was located instead in Yucca Mountain in Nevada.
Yucca Mountain
The Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository was to be a deep geological repository storage facility for spent nuclear reactor fuel and other high level radioactive waste, until the project was defunded by Nevada Senator and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in 2010.
The proposed repository was within Yucca Mountain, a ridge line in the south-central part of Nevada near its border with California.
However, under the Obama Administration funding for development of Yucca Mountain waste site was terminated effective via amendment to the Department of Defense and Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, passed by Congress on April 14, 2011.
The Department of Energy began studying Yucca Mountain in 1978 to determine whether it would be suitable for the nation's first long-term geologic repository for over ( 150 million pounds ) of spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste currently stored at 121 sites around the nation.
The three sites were Hanford, Washington ; Deaf Smith County, Texas ; and Yucca Mountain.
In 1987, Congress amended the Nuclear Waste Policy Act and directed DOE to study only Yucca Mountain, which is already located within a former nuclear test site.
The Act provided that if during Site Characterization the Yucca Mountain location is found unsuitable, studies will be stopped immediately.
The Department of Energy was to begin accepting spent fuel at the Yucca Mountain Repository by January 31, 1998 but did not do so because of a series of delays due to legal challenges, concerns over how to transport nuclear waste to the facility, and political pressures resulting in underfunding of the construction.
On September 8, 2006 Ward ( Edward ) Sproat, a nuclear industry executive formerly of PECO energy in Pennsylvania, was nominated by President Bush to lead the Yucca Mountain Project.
Reid has said that he would continue to work to block completion of the project, and is quoted as having said: " Yucca Mountain is dead.
In the 2008 Omnibus Spending Bill, the Yucca Mountain Project's budget was reduced to $ 390 million.
During his 2008 presidential campaign, Barack Obama promised to abandon the Yucca Mountain project.
A tour group entering the North Portal of Yucca Mountain
The purpose of the Yucca Mountain project is to comply with the Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982 and develop a national site for spent nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste storage.

Yucca and nuclear
The plant was in operation from 1960 to 1992, and the plant is now completely decommissioned, with the nuclear waste set to be transported to Yucca Mountain's containment facilities upon their completion in 2020.
In addition, the Nevada Test Site ( NTS ), which borders Yucca Mountain to the east, is the location where over 1000 nuclear weapons have been detonated and continues to function as the location for nuclear weapons testing.
* Extensive studies consistently show Yucca Mountain to be a sound site for nuclear waste disposal
This award gives DOE access to academic and research institutions to help DOE meet their mission and legal obligation to license, construct, and open Yucca Mountain as the nation ’ s repository for spent nuclear fuel.
Successful nuclear waste storage siting efforts in Scandinavia have involved local communities in the decision-making process and given them a veto at each stage, but this did not happen with Yucca Mountain.

Yucca and waste
On March 5, 2009, Energy Secretary Steven Chu reiterated in a Senate hearing that the Yucca Mountain site was no longer considered an option for storing reactor waste.
The volcanic tuff at Yucca Mountain is appreciably fractured and movement of water through an aquifer below the waste repository is primarily through fractures.
In June 2008, a major nuclear equipment supplier, Holtec International, criticized the Department of Energy's safety plan for handling containers of radioactive waste before they are buried at the proposed Yucca Mountain dump.
The concern is that, in an earthquake, the unanchored casks of nuclear waste material awaiting burial at Yucca Mountain could be sent into a " chaotic melee of bouncing and rolling juggernauts ".
So one could well imagine — again, it depends on what the blue-ribbon panel says — one could well imagine that for a certain classification for a certain type of waste, you don't want to have access to it anymore, so that means you could use different sites than Yucca Mountain, such as salt domes.
Set of articles by technical experts on numerous scientific and technical issues that are unresolved ; presents arguments that Yucca Mountain has not been and may never be shown to be an appropriate repository for high-level radioactive waste.

Yucca and repository
In 2007, the DOE announced it was seeking to double the size of the Yucca Mountain repository to a capacity of, or 300 million pounds.
The U. S. Department of Energy was to begin accepting spent fuel at the Yucca Mountain repository by January 31, 1998.
However, 14 years after this deadline, the future status of the repository at Yucca Mountain is unknown due to on-going litigation, and opposition by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid ( NV ).
On January 18, 2006, DOE OCRWM announced that it would designate Sandia National Laboratories as its lead laboratory to integrate repository science work for the Yucca Mountain Project.
The independent, expert review that the scientists at Sandia will perform will help ensure that the technical and scientific basis for the Yucca Mountain repository is without question ," OCRWM ’ s Acting Director Paul Golan said.
The area around Yucca Mountain received much more rain in the geologic past and the water table was consequently much higher than it is today, though well below the level of the repository.
DOE has stated that seismic and tectonic effects on the natural systems at Yucca Mountain will not significantly affect repository performance.
" Yucca Mountain as a repository is off the table.
In July 2009, the House of Representatives voted 388 to 30 on amendments to HHR3183 () to not defund the Yucca Mountain repository in the FY2010 budget.
* Annotated bibliography for the Yucca Mountain repository from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues
In the years that followed 1994, Shundahai Network in cooperation with Nevada Desert Experience and Corbin Harney continued the protests of the government's continued nuclear weapons work and also staged efforts to stop a repository for highly radioactive waste adjacent to the test site at Yucca Mountain, northwest of Las Vegas.

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