From AP:


Los Alamos National Laboratory packed 57 barrels of nuclear waste with a type of kitty litter believed to have caused a radiation leak at the federal government’s troubled nuclear waste dump, posing a potentially “imminent” and “substantial” threat to public health and the environment, New Mexico officials said Monday.


los alamos


State Environment Department Secretary Ryan Flynn issued a formal order giving the lab two days to submit a plan for securing the waste containers, many of which are likely stored outdoors on the lab’s northern New Mexico campus or at temporary site in west Texas.


The order says 57 barrels of waste were packed with nitrate salts and organic kitty litter, a combination thought to have caused a heat reaction and radiation release that contaminated 22 workers with low levels of radiation at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) near Carlsbad in February.


The kitty litter soaks up any liquid before drums of waste are sealed and shipped. Officials are investigating whether a switch from non-organic to organic litter is to blame for the leak.


According to the order, two of those containers are known to be at WIPP. It doesn’t say where the rest of the barrels are, but Los Alamos was in the process of transferring the last of thousands of barrels of waste from decades of nuclear bomb making to the underground dump when the leak shuttered the half-mile-deep mine.


Some containers were then transferred to temporary storage at a commercial nuclear waste dump in Andrews, Texas. But all shipments were stopped when investigators earlier this month zeroed in on the Los Alamos container as the likely source of the leak.


“Based on the evidence presented to NMED, the current handling, storage, treatment and transportation of the hazardous nitrate salt bearing waste containers at LANL may present an imminent and substantial endangerment to health or the environment,” the order signed by Flynn states.


The lab said in a statement that officials are committed to ensuring the barrels “pose no significant safety or health risk to the public, the environment and the workers.”


The lab has taken a series of precautionary measures, the statement said, including packing the drums into special containers and moving them under a dome with a fire protection system. The lab is also monitoring the drums for any rise in temperature.


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CuzMike
Just think how much of this stuff exists worldwide.
  • May 21, 2014
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Redneck Angel Warrior
Too much! But now that we have it...what do we do with it? It has a shelf life of 50,000 years!!
  • May 21, 2014
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CuzMike
I don't know what should be done with it. For sure no more should be being made though.
  • May 21, 2014
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Rocky
In the words of Scarlett O'Hara, "I can't think about this now. I'll go crazy if I do. I'll think about it tomorrow."
  • May 21, 2014
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