Yucca keeps costing more
Enough, already. The $9 billion actually spent on the project to date is too much. Yucca Mountain is a non-starter. Congress needs to scuttle the idea entirely, find ways to encourage the reprocessing of spent fuel rods and allow current nuclear power plants to continue storing waste on-site, a strategy that has worked for decades without incident.
Yucca has too many things working against it. The most powerful of these is Nevada Sen. Harry Reid. He is the Senate majority leader, and he isn't about to let final approval for Yucca come anywhere near a vote. Beyond this rock-solid barrier, however, lie other Indiana Jones-like obstacles. A Yucca storage facility would require moving all the spent fuel rods from nuclear plants nationwide, creating the possibility of lawsuits virtually wherever they are scheduled to go. The project already is mired in lawsuits and political controversies.
Originally, Yucca was to open for business in 1998. Now, 10 years later, experts say it won't be ready until 2020, but that is only if Congress approves a steady stream of funds. The government may as well wish for flying pigs to deliver those funds.
Coincidentally, Yucca's perpetual stall is taking place as a nationwide momentum builds for more nuclear power. It is emerging as the safest and cleanest of all viable energy sources, at least until renewable sources such as wind and solar develop to the point they can yield much more power than currently possible.
We hope that day comes. In the meantime, the nation needs to turn its attention more toward reprocessing and less toward an expensive mountain in Nevada.
Recent comments
In the interest of disclosure, Eileen McCabe is a relatively well...
Longtime Nevadan | Aug. 4, 2008 at 10:08 a.m.
Reprocessing spent nuclear fuel is a great idea. It was killed by...
Raymond Takashi Swenson | July 21, 2008 at 9:28 a.m.
The Deseret News is off base here. First, 90 billion dollars is...
Raymond Takashi Swenson | July 21, 2008 at 9:19 a.m.


