Groups Urge Congress to Cut MOX Plutonium Fuel Program
Alliance for Nuclear Accountability - Union of Concerned Scientists - Arms Control Association
Project on Government Oversight - International Panel on Fissile Materials
Friends Committee on National Legislation - Physicians for Social Responsibility
Women’s Action for New Directions - Friends of the Earth
Nuclear Information and Resource Service - Nuclear Watch of New Mexico - Tri-Valley CAREs
Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance - Georgia Women’s Action for New Direction
Nuclear Watch South - Rocky Mountain Peace and Justice Center
Southern Alliance for Clean Energy
Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League - South Carolina Chapter of the Sierra Club
Fernald Residents for Environmental Safety & Health
HEAL Utah - Peace Action West - Campaign for a Nuclear Weapons Free World
Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety - Colorado Coalition for the Prevention of Nuclear War
Mothers Against Tennessee River Radiation/Bellefonte Efficiency and Sustainability Team
The Honorable Rodney P. Frelinghuysen, Chairman
The Honorable Peter J. Visclosky, Ranking Member
Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development
U.S. House of Representatives
2362 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
Cut MOX Plutonium Fuel Program – Spiraling Costs, Technical Hurdles, Impacts to Nonproliferation Programs
Chairman Frelinghuysen and Ranking Member Visclosky:
We request that the subcommittee substantially reduce funding for the Mixed Oxide Plutonium Fuel (MOX) program and direct funds to essential nuclear nonproliferation programs.
Costs for the Department of Energy’s MOX program are increasing at an alarming rate. The estimated cost of MOX plant construction at the Savannah River Site has increased from $1.6 billion in FY2004 to the current $4.9 billion. The DOE’s FY2013 overall request for MOX and associated plutonium disposition programs is $887 million and the budget indicates a funding request of $3.6 billion from FY2014 to FY2017.
The estimated annual operating cost for the MOX plant jumped to $499 million per year in the FY2013 budget request, up from $356 million in FY2012 and $156 million in FY2011 - more than a 200 percent increase in just two years. If DOE’s current prediction that the MOX plant will operate for 20 years is accurate, operating costs alone could total over $10 billion, placing continuing pressure on nuclear non-proliferation programs.
DOE attributes increased costs to such things as higher equipment costs, MOX plant design changes and “higher than expected professional/technical staff turnover due to demand for nuclear trained personnel at other projects.” Yet it is far from clear if costs are under control.
After years of effort, no reactors are contracted to test or use MOX fuel. Given the risks associated with MOX use, it is far from certain if the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) will test or use MOX in any of its reactors. MOX made from weapons-grade plutonium has never been tested or used in a boiling water reactor (BWR) such as TVA’s Browns Ferry, a GE Mark I (Fukushima Daiichi) design, necessitating a lengthy testing period. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) recently made it clear that they expect test data will be necessary to support an application for commercial use of the fuel. In-reactor MOX testing would severely impact the MOX plant operational schedule and delay the NRC’s licensing review of full-scale commercial use, resulting in additional cost increases.
The plutonium disposition request for FY2013 represents over one-third of the NNSA’s Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation budget of $2.5 billion. The result is that critical programs such as the Global Threat Reduction Initiative and the Nonproliferation and International Security program are under severe budgetary strain. Experts have made a strong case that projected funding for key non-proliferation budgets this year and in coming years is inadequate. The relentless budget pressure caused by MOX, which does nothing to address loose fissile material, is a large part of the problem.
Given the cost, schedule and technical vulnerabilities of the MOX program and the possibility that the program will fail, it is essential DOE be directed to review viable options to manage surplus plutonium as waste. In the past, immobilization of plutonium in high-level waste was shown to be less expensive than MOX.
Thank you for intensifying oversight of the MOX program and for significant cuts to the MOX plant construction and administrative budgets. Please do not allow important nonproliferation programs that have been proven effective to suffer because of the MOX program’s out-of-control costs.
Sincerely,
Tom Clements Nonproliferation Policy Director Alliance for Nuclear Accountability Washington, DC | Lisbeth Gronlund Co-Director and Senior Scientist Global Security Program Union of Concerned Scientists Cambridge, MA |
Daryl G. Kimball Executive Director Arms Control Association Washington, DC | Mia Steinle Investigator Project On Government Oversight Washington, DC |
Frank von Hippel Professor of Public and International Affairs Princeton University Co-chair, International Panel on Fissile Materials Princeton, NJ | David Culp Legislative Representative Friends Committee on National Legislation Washington, DC |
Catherine Thomasson, MD Executive Director Physicians for Social Responsibility Washington, DC | Kathy Robinson Public Policy Director Women’s Action for New Directions Washington, DC |
Damon Moglen Climate and Energy Project Director Friends of the Earth Washington, DC | Mary Olson Director, Southeast Office Nuclear Information and Resource Service Asheville, NC |
Jay Coghlan Executive Director Nuclear Watch of New Mexico Santa Fe, NM | Marylia Kelley Executive Director Tri-Valley CAREs Livermore, CA |
Ralph Hutchison Coordinator Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance Oak Ridge, TN | Amanda Hill-Attkisson Managing Director Georgia Women’s Action for New Direction Atlanta, GA |
Glenn Carroll Coordinator Nuclear Watch South Atlanta, GA | Judith Mohling Rocky Mountain Peace and Justice Center Colorado Coalition for Prevention of Nuclear War Boulder, CO |
Sara Barczak Program Director, High Risk Energy Choices Southern Alliance for Clean Energy Knoxville, TN | Louis Zeller Executive Director Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League Glendale Springs, NC |
Susan Corbett Chair of the Executive Committee South Carolina Chapter of the Sierra Club Columbia, SC | Lisa Crawford President Residents for Environmental Safety & Health Fernald, OH |
Christopher Thomas Executive Director HEAL Utah Salt Lake City, UT | Jon Rainwater Executive Director Peace Action West Oakland, CA |
Katie Heald Coordinator Campaign for a Nuclear Weapons Free World Oakland, CA | Joni Arends Executive Director Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety Santa Fe, NM |
Garry Morgan Mothers Against Tennessee River Radiation / Bellefonte Efficiency and Sustainability Team Scottsboro, AL |
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Mia Steinle
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