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Go Tell It to the Mountain

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by: Kate Sheppard, Grist.org

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Voters in the battleground state of Nevada could be swayed by Obama's and McCain's positions on the Bush administration's recent push to open the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste site. (Photo: Laura Rauch / The Associated Press)

Will the push to open Yucca Mountain shift Nevada toward Obama?

    The Bush administration is pushing full speed ahead with plans to store nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain - and that could affect the presidential race in the battleground state of Nevada, where John McCain and Barack Obama are in a dead heat.

    Last month, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission agreed to review the federal government's license application for the site, where it wants to store spent fuel from nuclear plants around the U.S. as well as military nuclear waste. The review is expected to take about four years, and if all goes as planned (a very big if), the Bush administration says Yucca Mountain could open in 2020.

    Yesterday, the U.S. EPA issued new radiation standards for Yucca, responding to a 2004 federal court ruling that found its initial regulations inadequate. The new regs are the same as the previous ones in the standards they set for the first 10,000 years after waste disposal: the average human living within 18 kilometers of the facility should be exposed to no more than 15 millirem of radiation per year, about what one would get from an X-ray. What's different is that the new regs tighten the standards for years 10,000 to 1 million, from 350 millirems to 100. Yep, the court required the agency to plan a million years into the future.

    Most Nevadans probably aren't concerned about the particulars of radiation standards set for tens of thousands of years from now - they are just generally opposed to the idea of 77,700 tons of waste being shipped to a site 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas. The state has petitioned the NRC to reject the federal government's license application. In a recent poll, 58 percent of Nevadans surveyed said they opposed the storing of nuclear waste at Yucca.

    Anti-Yucca sentiment, brought front of mind by the Bush administration's recent moves to push the project forward, would seem to benefit Obama; he's opposed to using Yucca as a waste site while McCain is a longtime supporter of the idea. "I believe we have to have a waste repository, and I believe Yucca Mountain is a place that can be made safe," McCain said in an interview in May 2007. McCain is also more pro-nuke than Obama, proposing to build 45 new nuclear reactors in the U.S. by 2030, and 55 more after that. Obama has run ads in Nevada criticizing McCain for supporting Yucca.

    How much will Yucca Mountain actually matter at the ballot box? A poll conducted in August found 60 percent of Nevadans saying the Yucca issue would have some influence on their vote, including 23 percent who said it would sway their vote; 38 percent said it would not affect their vote. Among independents, 69 percent said the issue would influence their vote at least to some extent. In a closely fought swing state, those are numbers to be noted, but for now they haven't pushed Obama ahead of McCain.

    Nevada Sens. Harry Reid (D) and John Ensign (R) yesterday condemned the EPA's new radiation standards and said they would continue to push for a nuclear-waste solution that doesn't involve Yucca. Said Reid, "Instead of working to protect the health and safety of Nevadans, EPA and [the Department of Energy] are casting science aside in an attempt to get the nuclear waste dump approved."

    Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), chair of the House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming, also weighed in on the development, and linked it to presidential politics: "Today's new rules make clear that the Department of Energy jumped prematurely with an answer before the question had been finished," he said. "They need to withdraw the application, finish their homework assignment, and resubmit it. The rules on Yucca Mountain are especially critical given that some in Congress, including Sen. McCain, are calling for an explosion in nuclear construction that would generate the need for a new Yucca Mountain every 17 to 24 years."

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Comments

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First their is a chance that

First their is a chance that transporting tons of nuclear waste to the facility would be a gargantuan risk. A large spillage of a truck on route would be enough to stop nuclear energy in its tracks. Second, Nuclear energy is not only more expensive than solar, wind, hydroelectric, coal, natural gas, the expense of any nuclear accident would be prohibitively expensive. They say that the real reason for the downfall of the Soviet Union was the expense of Chernobyl which they are still paying for today. Third, the scientists are arguing over the controversy of building a nuclear waste facility in a volcanic mountain. Some say it won't blow again, some say it is ready to blow again, and their is evidence of recent volcanic activity within a hundred miles of Yucca mountain. I myself, collected lava rocks less than 50 miles from there. Road Warrior is right on. If Yucca mountain blew, the easterly winds would kill everybody from there to western Europe.

Road Warrior WAS a fun

Road Warrior WAS a fun flick. Won't it be fun to actually live it? Welcome to the energy future of anything-but-solar "clean" fuels. I think that the problem might be that everyone has access to the sun and wind. This makes forming an over-priced cartel difficult. Oh well, Mutants Rock!