Energy Northwest has been awarded nearly $57 million by a federal court because of Department of Energy delays in opening the Yucca Mountain, Nev., nuclear repository.
The money is intended to reimburse Energy Northwest for its costs to build and operate temporary storage near Richland for used nuclear power fuel from 1998 to about 2006.
"It's a good thing for the ratepayer, a good thing for public power," said Energy Northwest spokesman Michael Paoli.
Yucca Mountain was to open in January 1998 to accept used fuel from commercial nuclear power plants, such as Energy Northwest's plant north of Richland, and defense waste, including that at Hanford. In addition to the delay, the Obama administration has moved to terminate Yucca Mountain as a national repository.
After Yucca Mountain did not open in 1998, Energy Northwest in 2001 began construction of an above-ground storage pad for the fuel. The $57 million includes the costs of licensing, design, construction, security, storage casks and cranes and other heavy equipment needed to move the 122-ton steel and concrete casks.
The damage award was ordered Friday in U.S. Court of Federal Claims. It followed the court's 2006 judgment that DOE was in breach of contract with Energy Northwest for failing to accept nuclear fuel in 1998.
Energy Northwest could sue only for its costs up to the time of the decision. It now has 27 casks being stored and will have 39 by 2014.
DOE has 60 days to appeal the decision, which Energy Northwest expects DOE to do. It has filed appeals in other cases that have reached the same stage in federal court, Paoli said. More than 60 similar cases have been filed by nuclear utilities.
An appeal could take several years to resolve.
Ratepayers receiving nuclear energy must pay a per kilowatt-hour fee to DOE for construction and operation of a national nuclear waste repository. Northwest ratepayers have paid approximately
$290 million into the fund since Columbia Generating Station just north of Richland began operation in 1984. It is the only commercial nuclear power plant in the Northwest.
-- Annette Cary: 582-1533; acary@tricityherald.com
Similar stories:
Temporary storage proposed for vit plant waste
Temporary storage proposed for vit plant waste
Hanford contractor officials are proposing a temporary storage system for Hanford's treated high-level radioactive waste that easily can be expanded, given uncertainties about the nation's plans for a national waste repository.
Washington River Protection Solutions formed an independent review team that is recommending a new Hanford building large enough to store as much high-level radioactive waste as the Hanford vitrification plant is expected to treat in a decade. But if needed, more vaults could be added.
The initial plans do not include a shipping facility. Given austere federal budget conditions, it makes sense to wait to add that when the nation is ready to ship the waste, said Tom Fletcher, Department of Energy acting assistant manager of the Hanford tank farms.
Blue Ribbon Commission says U.S. should start looking for Yucca alternative
Blue Ribbon Commission says U.S. should start looking for Yucca alternative
WASHINGTON -- The United States should immediately start looking for an alternative to replace the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository in Nevada, which cost an estimated
$15 billion but was never completed, a presidential commission said Thursday.
In its final report, the 15-member Blue Ribbon Commission recommended immediate efforts to develop at least one geologic disposal facility for long-term handling of nuclear waste. Any effort to site a disposal facility must have community support, it said.
The report also suggested building regional storage sites that would be open for up to 100 years while officials seek to complete a permanent burial site.
DOE looks at expanding research of small nuclear reactors
DOE looks at expanding research of small nuclear reactors
RICHLAND -- Research will be moving forward this year toward development and design certification of small modular nuclear reactors, said Peter Lyons, the Department of Energy assistant secretary of nuclear energy.
Lyons, the primary policy adviser to Energy Secretary Steven Chu on nuclear energy research and international nuclear activities, visited Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland on Tuesday and then spoke at a meeting of the Eastern Washington Chapter of the American Nuclear Society.
While no one source alone can meet increasing demand for electricity, both in the United States and also in developing countries, nuclear energy must be part of the mix as a clean and reliable source, he said.
Nuclear Regulation Commission allows Yucca closure to continue
Nuclear Regulation Commission allows Yucca closure to continue
WASHINGTON -- A divided Nuclear Regulatory Commission on Friday allowed the Obama administration to continue with plans to close the Yucca Mountain, Nev., nuclear waste repository, where Hanford waste was planned to be sent.
The commission split, 2-2, on whether to uphold or reject a decision by an independent nuclear licensing board. The board voted last year to block the Department of Energy from withdrawing its application for Yucca Mountain. The licensing board said the government failed to make a scientific case for why the application should be withdrawn.
Despite the split vote, the NRC said in an order Friday that the licensing board should continue steps to close out work on Yucca Mountain by the end of the month, citing "budgetary limitations."
GOP candidates disappoint with nuclear waste policy
GOP candidates disappoint with nuclear waste policy
If you're looking for an example of what's wrong with the way we nominate presidential candidates, the recent GOP debate in Las Vegas ought to suffice.
Republican hopefuls -- Newt Gingrich excepted -- rushed to align themselves with President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on the issue of nuclear waste disposal.
Few Herald readers will need reminding that last year the Obama administration unilaterally ordered the Department of Energy to shut down the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository program near Las Vegas.