Hanford Nuclear Reservation to become a Park?


Hanford Nuclear Reservation Wants to Become a Park

Hanford nuclear reservation is a barren 586 square mile site nesting against southwest reaches of the mighty Columbia River. It was founded in 1942 as part of the Manhattan Project, the project to build the world’s first nuclear bomb. The site was ideal because of its isolation, unlimited water supply, and dry desert-like climate allowing for quick, easy construction developments.

Today it represents a legacy of science gone mad, and a site dogged by waste and fraud.

Nuclear Conundrum

Originally, the river and her tributaries, such as Yakima River, incorporated precious salmon runs and a variety of wildlife for the native hunting grounds for the Yakima, Wanapum, and Umatilla Indian tribes. Hanford was originally a small town with some 1500 people. However, after government takeover, the project grew to include not only radiological testing and experimental research but nine nuclear reactors and associated fuel enrichment facilities.  

Over the decades, the extent of radiological and toxic wastes has proven extremely problematic for disposal and treatment. Every year, Washington State’s coffers are enriched by $700 million dollars or more to be spent by the Department of Energy in cleanup operations, energy research, operations and maintenance contracts, waste treatment design-build, and other contracts.

Nevertheless, despite technical innovations and complex studies, radiological wastes are a source of scandals and raise skepticism over the effectiveness in administration, prioritization, and transparency of cleanup efforts. The energy return on energy investment is low, yet costly in time, planning, budgeting, health, resources, treatment, storage, and disposal requirements.  

Some of the most recent scandals stem from leaking second-generation huge underground storage tanks, called double-shell tanks, which were constructed in the 1970s. With an estimated design life of 40 years, these tanks were designed as interim storage pending more permanent disposal solutions. However in 2013, after an investigation by King 5 News, it was reluctantly and officially acknowledged that at least one double-shell tank, AY-102, is leaking.[1]

At least 1/3 of the 177 huge underground tanks, mostly from single-shell first-generation tanks built between 1943 and 1964, are leaking. Although liquid has been transferred from suspected leaking tanks into the newer double-shelled tanks, radioactive sludge remains at the bottom of many single-shell tanks. The sludge is so corrosive and unstable that Washington River Protection Solutions is reluctant to monitor or reveal exactly what the sludge consists of.  

Moreover the heat from the sludge, a mixture of plutonium, cesium-137, strontium-90, leached in rainwater and other isotopes can not only melt the steel walls or steel reinforcement, but cause thermo-nuclear reaction and outgassing, creating even more hazards for the tank farm workers.

For these and other reasons, Hanford Site appears to be slated for increasing privatization, even while the government foots the bill on continued monitoring, treatment, and other indemnity.

Closed-Door Agreements

What goes on at Hanford has always remained somewhat secretive; this has to do with its regional defense industry networks; even today there are national and private research laboratories off-limits. The public is allowed to visit the site by signing up for official tours.

While the Department of Energy, Environmental Protection Agency, and the Washington State Department of Ecology through their Tri-Party Agreement has availed the public of more information through web portals, public information meetings, opportunities to comment on proposals, development agreements, and legislative provisions remain extremely limited.

Arguably, TRIDEC created itself as a Community Reuse Organization (CRO) primarily to use that designation by Energy to better position itself for Hanford land conveyance (transfer) under 10 CFR 770. Target area studies by TRIDEC for future proposals are generally hard to find.

The creation of the Manhattan Project National Historical Park (MPNHP) using legislative provisions built into the 2015 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) is a clear example of how the Department of Energy (commonly referred to as Energy) avoids public input.

Riders in the 2015 NDAA angered environmentalists and Indians because the entire bill was signed as one package by the President; he was not allowed to use line-item veto. The 2015 NDAA was flagrant in its give-aways of federal lands. Among the sweetheart deals: traditional sacred Apache lands in Arizona swapped for other lands without consent of the Indian tribes to Rio Tinto foreign mining company; and land conveyance at Hanford Site basically to TRIDEC development council and without consideration of previous Indian tribal agreements.

In both cases, the NDAA used swiftboat legislation to bypass open debate and public studies on the proposals that have involved years of private conferences, preliminary studies, alternate plans, and seeking endorsements from legislators. All of that is now boiled down to a few brief pages tucked into back of the NDAA, such as in Sections 3013, 3039, and part of Section 3081.

Now, only the Secretary of Energy may adjust the terms and conditions on the 1,641 acre land  deal. The non-negotiable clause of the land-conveyance at Hanford shirks any responsibility to the public in its wording of an expedited process for a finding of non-significance[2]:  

(c) EXPEDITED NOTIFICATION TO CONGRESS.—Except as provided in subsection (d)(2), the enactment of  this section shall be construed to satisfy any notice to Congress otherwise required for the land conveyance required by this section.

The above paragraph provides that the Tri-Party agencies may essentially act in collusion by repeatedly citing the above clause as the authority for expediting review, an Environmental Assessment, and public notice, so that a Finding of No Significance Impact will result.

In fact, this is exactly what happened despite letters of dissent filed by the public.

Park filled with Natural Attenuation

Among the most obvious of concerns is that the land transfer in the 300 Area of Hanford (SE corner along the River) was historically associated with nuclear experimental research labs–and it continues to be under contract with private labs and Energy Northwest. Many different types of uranium fuel rods were developed, furnished, and transported not only to the nine nuclear reactors at Hanford, but also to nuclear plants around the country, such as Oakridge, Tennessee.

Disposal methods included open trench, underground vaults, and “natural attenuation”; in effect using the River to dilute wastes that have leached in from nearby ponds and ditches.

While various contractor corporations have recently excavated, demolished, and transported hazardous wastes to new landfills, such as the Environmental Restoration Disposal Facility, the 300 Area remains a patchwork of contamination. Of concern especially is the long-term plan by Energy and TRIDEC is to transform the River corridor into useful privatized zones for industrial, commercial, and even eventually residential development.

Land-conveyance purpose is emphasized in documents such as the Tank Closure and Waste Management Environmental Impact Statement for the Hanford Site, Richland, Washington (TC & WM EIS), Section 3.2[3]:

The 300 Area is undergoing accelerated remediation of waste sites and inactive buildings to support future non-DOE uses.

In June 2015, the Hanford Advisory Board presented what lay ahead after Cleanup in its Vision of Hanford Reach National Monument including:

Manhattan Project National Historical Park, Land Conveyance, and Early Restoration.

Energy’s vision of Hanford Cleanup appears to confute clean with buried and greenwashed. The primary concerns are Uranium releases in the 300 Area CERCLA Proposed Plan[4]:

 

  • U[ranium] mass flux to the Columbia River represents 2-8% of total U loading the Hanford Reach. ~100-150 kg/yr U from 300 Area vs. ~1600 kg/yr from irrigation returns. Downstream, the Yakima River U flux to the Columbia River is ~4,000 kg/yr
  • U[ranium] concentrations upwelling through river substrate at times exceed federal DWS [Drinking Water Standards] but do not exceed levels of environmental concern
  • There is no statistical difference between U[ranium] concentrations upstream vs. downstream of Hanford

 

For all practical purposes, the Tri-Party Agreement supports the idea that mechanized removal or burial constitutes cleanup; that the primary toxic element to treat is uranium-related, but that toxic uranium in trace amounts shouldn’t be a concern because far more uranium leaches into the River from agricultural lands.

The line of reasoning is misleading. Toxic waste travels by air, through the ecological food chain, in water and soil far beyond the boundaries of Hanford; the types of waste present include identified radioactive wastes and chemicals used in processing and construction, and unidentified byproducts formed through disposal reactions. Many maps depict plumes of groundwater slowly but steadily migrating from other parts of Hanford towards the River, where the topography generally slopes down towards the SE 300 Area of Hanford.

More uranium does leach from agricultural lands than from Hanford; however, fertilizers with uranium from mined phosphate are not milled or enriched. At Hanford, highly enriched uranium was and continues to be used extensively in nuclear reactors. Deadly plutonium was purposely produced for nuclear weapons manufacturing resulting in huge stockpiles.

According to NIRS in report: “Radiation: The Myth of the Millirem”[5] :

A single alpha particle, acting on a single cell, may damage that cell to the same degree as if a thousand x-rays had hit it. That is, one radiation particle can cause great damage to a single cell; that damage can even lead to a person’s death, while registering

a dose to the total body of zero!

 

Energy reports that a variety of chemicals (uranium, tritium, strontium-90, carbon tetrachloride, chromium, cyanide, iodine-129, nitrate, trichlorethene) are present in groundwater, but its significance is downplayed, including in the soil where there are many other contaminants.

Out of five remedial alternatives for treating contaminated groundwater, Energy favors Alternative 3a, “Enhanced Attenuation” Focused 3 Acre U sequestration, MNA for tritium & organics, and GW Monitoring for U & nitrate plumes.[4] In other words, for the 300 Area, Energy favors a plan of limited treatment for uranium using phosphate sequestration and monitored natural attenuation (MNA) for other chemicals polluting the groundwater (GW).

According to Columbia Riverkeeper[6]:

‘Monitored natural attenuation’ relies on natural processes, such as dilution, and radioactive decay, to decrease concentrations of contaminants. At the southern Hanford riverbank, pollutants will be left in the ground and allowed to migrate towards the groundwater and the Columbia River where they will be diluted. Basically, [it] is a ‘do nothing’ approach that allows chemicals and radionuclides to flush into the Columbia River over time.

Objections by Environmentalists

Although TRIDEC maintains that this is historically the way land has been transferred between the federal government to Richland, concerned parties disagree.

The Oregon Department of Energy expressed concerns with additional uranium mobilization due to runoff infiltration from developed areas including into the groundwater.

The Umatilla and Yakama Indian tribes expressed concern with the bypassing of thorough environmental impacts and the “side-stepping of national laws and policies including, but not limited to, radiological clearances.” Both tribes expressed the desire for the government to either honor its past historic Indian treaties or to follow the standard process for allowing other federal agencies to bid on disposal real property. They mention that the 300 Area lies “within the potential path for migrating groundwater from the conveyance lands.”

The Yakama Nation whose lands are adjacent to Hanford site expressed disagreement over the adequacy of the Environmental Assessment (EA) with regard to cultural, natural, wildlife, historic, plants, and archeological resources. Both confederated tribes of the Umatilla and Yakama Nation expressed indignance over Section 3081 Ensuring Public Access to the Summit of Rattlesnake Mountain in the Hanford Reach National Monument.[7]

Yakama Nation is even more strongly opposed to this amendment. “Laliik” (our named for Rattlesnake Mountain) is a sacred mountain to the Yakama People and promoting public access–including motorized access–would constitute an adverse effect to the spiritual quality of the Mountain and the character defining features that make it eligible as a Traditional Cultural Property under the National Historic Preservation Act. Senators, Laliik is our Mount Sinai. This is where Smohalla, our most revered prophet and teacher set forth teachings and practices that are followed to this day. When our Long House leaders feel that a young adult is ready and worthy, Laliik is where they are sent to fast and to have vision quests. This is not a place for Airstreams and Winnebegos.

The Nez Perce tribe and Wanapum tribe also filed letters expressing concerns such as impacts to and changes in access to the River. Audubon Society questioned why the land could not be leased in keeping with an entire national monument under federal environmental management.

Columbia Riverkeeper, a citizen group dedicated to protecting and restoring the Columbia River since 1989 voiced their concerns in support of a “clean-up first” approach at Hanford to “protect the Columbia River and the economic and ecological health of downstream communities”[8]:

Cleaning up Hanford’s radioactive legacy is a monumental task, and only about one-third complete. Until the entire Hanford Site is clean and safe, the U.S. government should not engage in side-projects that detract from Energy’s conservation and restoration mandate.

Riverkeeper raised concerns that “the most contaminated site in the Western Hemisphere” is about to become more contaminated by new industrial and energy developments in the 300 Area, but that this jurisdiction will no longer be subject to stringent federal laws. This is supported in the Energy Final EA in Section 5.5.1. Furthermore in a report prepared in 2013, “Private Industry on Hanford Land,” Riverkeeper revealed:

TRIDEC envisions a clean energy park that is much larger than the 1,641-acre parcel currently at issue. TRIDEC’s request for 1,641 acres stated that this is merely the first of many parcels of federal land at Hanford that TRIDEC hopes to acquire. Documents obtained via public records requests are replete with statements indicating that TRIDEC and the cooperating municipalities want more land

How much more federal land is unclear, but this paper, and TRIDEC documents found online indicate that TRIDEC along with the City of Richland, the Port of Benton and Benton County have invested in economic studies on various possibilities for attracting investment as a “clean energy” park partnering with AREVA, and another foreign-owned company, creating a megasite that would help anchor and grow the industrial zone, and create many new jobs.[9]

Washington legislators supporting the development including U.S. Senators Patty Murray, Maria Cantwell; U.S. Representative Doc Hastings; and Washington State Representatives Jerome Delvin, Larry Haler, and Brad Klippert, along with other regional officials.

Summary

Worker health and safety in the face of ongoing waste contaminants are a focus for citizen groups such as Hanford Challenge which filed a letter stating their reservations on the Hanford Land Conveyance. Challenge’s definition of clean energy is energy which is renewable, and this would include solar and wind energy generation, but not small modular reactors because “there is still no solution for the cost, safety, and waste problems of nuclear power.[10]

As Columbia Riverkeeper told AGN in an email: The process DOE failed to draw on regional and national perspectives on the future of Hanford. Every American has invested in Hanford’s cleanup, and the process for Hanford’s future should be inclusive and comprehensive.[11]

The Final Environmental Assessment, Finding of No Significant Impact, and Mitigation Action Plan for the Proposed Conveyance of Land at the Hanford Site, Richland, Washington were all finalized in September 2015. A recent article was published about it in the Tri-City Herald.[12]

Hanford Land Conveyance is an example of how public business is increasingly conducted under the table; public citizens appear to have little recourse when arguments such as economic benefit and job-creation are used to flummox public debate centered around thorough clean up of Hanford Reach and restoring the Columbia River for future generations.

Select Notes:

[1] King 5, “Hanford’s Dirty Secrets,” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWYL3s7SfWQ

[2] Congress.gov, “H.R.3979 – Carl Levin and Howard P. ‘Buck’ McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015”

[3] U.S. Department of Energy, “Tank Closure and Waste Management Environmental Impact Statement for the Hanford Site, Richland, Washington – DOE_EIS-0391_2012_Ch 3 Affected Environment.pdf,” p. 4

[4] Hanford.gov, “Hanford 300 Area CERCLA Proposed Plan – 300 Area Plan – M. Thompson.pdf,” p. 15, 17

[5] NIRS.org, http://www.nirs.org/factsheets/mythmiliremfctsht.htm

[6] Columbia Riverkeeper, “Hanford Cleanup Plan Would Let Massive Amounts of Uranium Flow into the Columbia River,” http://columbiariverkeeper.org/

[7] JoDe Goudy, Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation, “Re: Troubling and Controversial Amendments in the House passed NDAA Bill,” Letter. Retrieved from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/03/ndaa-land-deals_n_6264362.html

[8] Comments by Columbia Riverkeeper, “Final Environmental Assessment Proposed Conveyance of Land at the Hanford Site, Richland, Washington, September 2015,” p. 567-571.

[9] Columbia Riverkeeper, “Private Industry on Hanford Land — May 2013 Update”; and TRIDEC, http://www.tridec.org/national-defense-authorization-act/, Jan. 15, 2015.

[10] Comments by Hanford Challenge, “Re: Scoping Comments on the Department of Energy’s Notice of Intent to Prepare and Environmental Assessment (EA) for the Proposed Conveyance of Land at the Hanford Site, Richland, WA” Oct. 19, 2012.

[11] Email from Columbia Riverkeeper, “Regarding Hanford Land Conveyance,” May 5, 2016.

[12] Tri-City Herald, “TRIDEC: Aiming for more growth in 2016,” March 22, 2016.

Tags: Nuclear, technology, policy, environment

The history of Hanford as a nuclear reservation is a troubled one, yet despite tons of nuclear waste buried amid the 586 square miles area, sections of it are slated for privitization in areas which contain hazardous wastes in the soil and subject to toxic groundwater plumes

FROM 1_A_Fact_Sheet_for_Public_Comment_on_the_Draft_Land_Conveyance_EA-071215

Map from Draft Environmental Assessment (EA) to assess potential environmental effects of conveying approximately 1,641 acres of Hanford Site land to the Tri-City Development Council, the DOE-recognized Community Reuse Organization (CRO)

Map from Draft Environmental Assessment for Proposed Land Conveyance at the Hanford Site, Richland, WA –  Public Comment Period Fact Sheet – 30 day Review July-August 2015

2013.5.8 Public White Paper – Hanford Land Conveyance Update_Riverkeeper

TRIDEC, City of Richland, Port of Benton, Benton County hope for more Hanford Site land

10,500 Acres (16.4 square miles) planned for Smart Manufacturing and Energy Integration

Figure 3–11. Floodplains on the Hanford Site — shows that Focus Study Area for Land Conveyance is prone to flooding. (Tank Closure and Waste Management Environmental Impact Statement for the Hanford Site, Richland, Washington (TC & WM EIS)–Chapter 3 Affected Environment)

Land Conveyance_Future transfer of Horn Rapids landfill, & WIDS 600-393 radioactive debris area classified as “historical and cultural mitigation” for the tribes (Source: Tri-Cities Hanford Site Land Transfer – YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-s2rUv_I9s, published February 1, 2016)

Land Conveyance_Future transfer of Horn Rapids landfill, & WIDS 600-393 radioactive debris area classified as “historical and cultural mitigation” for the tribes (Source: Tri-Cities Hanford Site Land Transfer – YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-s2rUv_I9s, published February 1, 2016)

Potential shares: Yakama nation, Radcast, Columbia Riverkeeper, WKOG, Enviroreporter, NIRS


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