I’ve
begun to wonder if the nuclear industry is its own worst enemy. Its public
relations operations continually insist on downplaying the dangers of nuclear
energy and on refusing to acknowledge the horrific environmental problems that
have been created by seventy years of nuclear fuel production and spent nuclear
fuel accumulation. Some hazards may be debatable, but the toxic legacy left by
uranium enrichment facilities like the one in Paducah, Kentucky, are beyond
deniability. 
The
alarming dangers posed by such facilities have been described by government
agencies, environmental groups, journalists and writers, and by the citizens
who have to live next to them. The nuclear industry, if it has any hope of
being taken seriously as an energy alternative, and gaining any public trust, has
to come clean and cut the evasions, omissions and obfuscating glosses on the real
extent of the damage and risks.
An
excellent case in point is the news released this week by World
Nuclear News regarding the closure of the USEC uranium enrichment plant
in Paducah, Kentucky. This is contrasted below, side by side, with a report
from Ecowatch on the same topic. 
It
is notable that WNN claims to employ “experienced journalists,” given no byline
(I suspect they are probably grateful to have their names left off the reports),
who have, apparently, access to the top experts of the global nuclear industry.
These “experienced journalists” exhausted the topic of the Paducah plant
closure by writing a whopping 463 words, while the writer from Ecowatch wrote 2,500
words describing in much more detail the alarming state of the Paducah
facility. 
The
“experienced journalists” of WNN say the Paducah enrichment facility was built
when “the USA's nuclear naval and power programs grew from wartime research and
development.” I couldn’t think of a more evasive and dishonest way to describe
the billion-dollar project to drop nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This
is cosmetology, not journalism. 
They
go on to say the plant had to close because the Department of Energy “concluded
there were not sufficient benefits to taxpayers.” The plant “will now be
prepared for closure.” A remaining workforce will “perform transition
activities and meet regulatory requirements… in a cost-effective manner.”
The
Ecowatch report reveals exactly what these pleasantries refer to: another story
of a corporate termites feeding on a privatized asset, then leaving taxpayers
and citizens with the toxic excrement (in this case, crystallized uranium
hexafluoride). This business behavior is well-known, most famously because of
the leveraged buyouts led by Mitt Romney when he worked for Bain Capital. As David
Stockman put it, “The whole business was about maximizing debt, extracting
cash, cutting head counts, skimping on capital spending, outsourcing
production, and dressing up the deal for the earliest, highest-profit exit
possible.” It’s bad enough when it’s a matter of office supply retailers, but
in this case we are talking about a large-scale contamination of the land with
some of the longest-lived and most toxic materials known. 
The
two reports are below, with the most notable sections in bold print.
From
  World Nuclear News 
 | 
  
From
  Ecowatch 
 | 
 
From
  the WNN website: The goal of WNN is use plain English to place
  comprehensive coverage of nuclear power in context using background
  information, expert commentary and links to relevant authoritative sources.
  Because they are researched from original source and written in-house by
  experienced journalists… The WNN service … draws on the WNA's global network
  of contacts in industry, academia, research institutes and intergovernmental
  agencies that includes key personnel in enterprises that account for
  virtually all of the world's uranium mining, nuclear fuel manufacture,
  equipment production and nuclear power generation. 
 | 
  
From the Ecowatch website: EcoWatch
  is a cutting-edge news service promoting the work of more than 1,000
  grassroots environmental organizations and activists worldwide, and
  showcasing the insights of world-renowned environmental leaders. 
EcoWatch focuses on the issues of water, air, food, energy and
  biodiversity, and promotes ongoing environmental campaigns including climate
  change, fracking, mountaintop removal, factory farming, sustainable
  agriculture and renewable energy. News is provided on a global and local
  scale. 
 | 
 
May 28,
  2013 
[463
  words] 
USEC
  is to wind up operations this month at the Paducah plant it leases from the
  US Department of Energy (DoE). The 1950s facility is the last remaining
  gaseous diffusion uranium enrichment plant in the world. 
Paducah
  was built between 1950 and 1952 at a cost of around $800 million as the USA's nuclear naval and power programs
  grew from wartime research and development  
Given
  that USEC's American Centrifuge project is only at the stage of pilot
  operation, the closure of Paducah will leave the company without any
  enrichment capacity of its own. USEC said it would meet its commitments
  from existing inventory and purchases from Russia - from the downblending of
  decommissioned weapons or Russia's nuclear fuel export firm Tenex via a deal
  signed in 2011 to cover USEC's orders in the timeframe of 2013-2022. 
Bob
  Van Namen is USEC's senior vice president and chief operating officer. He
  said the company had looked at possible ways to continue enrichment at
  Paducah, but the DoE "concluded there were not sufficient
  benefits to taxpayers." The government department owns the facility
  which it leases to USEC to operate. 
The Paducah site will now be
  prepared for closure. Van
  Namen said USEC anticipates maintaining a workforce at Paducah "into
  next year to support ongoing operations, perform
  transition activities and meet regulatory requirements." He added
  that USEC wanted to make the
  transition to a shut-down state in a cost-effective manner: "The
  company and our workforce have unparalleled experience that should be drawn
  on." 
Vice
  president of enrichment operations Steve Penrod said: "We want to thank
  our employees and the entire Paducah community for their efforts to support
  continued enrichment at the plant. Although
  the community has known about this possibility for a number of years, we
  recognize that the Paducah area will soon feel the real impact of this decision
  and its effects on many individuals and families." 
US
  legacy infrastructure 
In
  western Kentucky, Paducah has operated since September 1952 and has capacity
  of 8 million SWU per year, compared to US reactor needs of 12.7 million SWU
  per year. The plant was built in less than two years, at a cost of
  around $800 million as the USA's
  nuclear naval and power programs grew from wartime research and development. It
  is located across the Ohio River from the Metropolis conversion plant in
  southern Illinois, which turns uranium from solid to gaseous forms for the
  enrichment process. That plant is owned by Honeywell and General Atomics
  and operated by their joint venture ConverDyn. 
Paducah
  is the world's only remaining gaseous diffusion enrichment plant, and the
  only US-owned enrichment facility in the USA (the other being Urenco's LES
  facility, which was inaugurated in 2012). Metropolis is the USA's only
  conversion plant. 
Researched
  and written 
by
  World Nuclear News 
 | 
  
May 22, 2013 
By Geoffrey Sea 
[2,571 words] 
Disaster
  is about to strike in western Kentucky, a full-blown nuclear catastrophe
  involving hundreds of tons of enriched uranium tainted with plutonium,
  technetium, arsenic, beryllium and a toxic chemical brew. But this nuke calamity will
  be no fluke. It’s been
  foreseen, planned, even programmed, the result of an atomic extortion game
  played out between the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the most failed
  American experiment in privatization, the company that has run the Paducah
  plant into the poisoned ground, USEC Inc . 
As now scheduled,
  main power to the gargantuan gaseous diffusion uranium plant at Paducah,
  Kentucky, will be cut at midnight on May 31, just nine days from now—cut
  because USEC has terminated its power contract with TVA as of that time
  [“USEC Ceases Buying Power,” Paducah Sun, April 19, page 1] and
  because DOE can’t pick up the bill. 
DOE is five months
  away from the start of 2014 spending authority, needed to fund clean power-down
  at Paducah. Meanwhile, USEC’s
  total market capitalization has declined to about $45 million, not enough to
  meet minimum listing requirements for the New York Stock Exchange, pay off
  the company’s staggering debts or retain its operating licenses under financial
  capacity requirements of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. 
The Paducah plant
  cannot legally stay open, and it can’t safely be shut down—a lovely metaphor
  for the end of the Atomic Age and a perfect nightmare for the people of
  Kentucky. 
Dirty Power-Down 
If
  the main power to the diffusion cascade is cut as now may be unavoidable, the
  uranium hexafluoride gas inside thousands of miles of piping and process
  equipment will crystallize, creating a very costly gigantic hunk of junk as a
  bequest to future generations, delaying site cleanup for many decades and
  risking nuclear criticality problems that remain unstudied. Unlike gaseous uranium that can be flushed from
  pipes with relative ease, crystallized uranium may need to be chiseled out
  manually, adding greatly to occupational hazards. 
The gaseous
  diffusion plant at Oak Ridge, TN, was powered-down dirty in 1985, in a safer
  situation because the Oak Ridge plant did not have near the level of
  transuranic contaminants found at Paducah. The Oak Ridge
  catastrophe left a poisonous site that still awaits cleanup a quarter-century
  later, and an echo chamber of political promises that such a stupid move
  would never be made again. But that was before the privatization
  of USEC. 
Could a dirty power-down
  at Paducah—where recycled and reprocessed uranium contaminated with plutonium
  and other transuranic elements was added in massive quantities—result in “slow-cooker” critical mass formations
  inside the process equipment? No
  one really knows. 
Everybody does know
  that the Paducah plant is about to close . Its
  technology is Jurassic, requiring about ten times the energy of competing
  uranium enrichment methods around the world. The Paducah plant has been the largest single-meter consumer of
  electric power on the planet, requiring two TVA coal plants just to keep it
  operating, and it’s the largest single-source emitter of the very worst
  atmospheric gasses—chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). 
The plant narrowly
  escaped the selection process that shuttered its sister plants in Tennessee
  and Ohio long ago. A 2012
  apocalypse for Paducah workers was averted only by a last-second, five-party
  raid on the U.S. Treasury involving four federal entities pitching together
  to bail out USEC financially, a deal so arcane that knowledge of Mayan
  astrological codices would be required to grasp its basic principles. The
  plot would make for a great super-crime Hollywood movie in which Kentucky’s
  own George Clooney and Ashley Judd could star, if only the crafting lawyers
  and bureaucrats had made the Code of Federal Regulations as easy to decipher
  as bible code, or half as interesting. 
“The deal” that
  saved Paducah operations for a year, past one crucial election
  non-coincidentally, probably consumed more net energy than it produced by
  stupidly paying USEC to run depleted uranium waste back through the
  inefficient Paducah plant—like a massive government program paying citizens
  to drink their own pee as a way to cut sewerage costs and keep medics
  employed prior to a Presidential contest. The deal never would
  have passed muster if it had been subjected to environmental or economic
  reviews of any kind, but it wasn’t. The “jobs” mantra was chanted,
  and all applicable laws from local noise-control ordinances to the Geneva
  Conventions were waived. 
But the deal expires
  on May 31, in nine days. USEC and DOE have both said that
  discussions for a new extension deal continue, but rumors of a new deal were dashed on May 7, sending USEC stock into a
  flip-flop, when in an investor conference call , the company
  announced that no extension had been agreed, with very pessimistic notes
  about even a “short-term” postponement. That
  accompanied news that USEC had
  suffered a $2 million loss in the first quarter of 2013, largely attributable
  to the power bill at Paducah, which USEC says it’s under no obligation to
  keep paying. 
Showing no
  enthusiasm whatsoever, USEC CEO John Welch said on May 7: 
“While we continue
  to pursue options for a short-term extension of enrichment at Paducah
  beyond May 31, we also continue to prepare to cease enrichment in early
  June.” 
Meanwhile, the
  Kentucky DOE field office in charge, managed by William A. Murphie, has
  advertised a host of companies “expressing interest” in future use of the
  Paducah site, with no explanation of how the existing edifice of
  egregiousness will be made to disappear. “Off the record,” the Kentucky field office has floated dates like
  2060 for the completion of Paducah cleanup. 
That’s two
  generations from now and kind of a long time for the skilled workforce and
  other interested parties to hang around. Even the 2060 date
  assumes that costs can be minimized by evacuating the diffusion cells before
  power-down—the scenario that seems certain not to happen because no one has
  the funding for it. Flushing
  the cells of uranium hexafluoride gas is the only sensible way to power-down,
  but it’s costly and time-consuming. At the Piketon, Ohio, plant a semi-clean
  power-down has cost billions of dollars and has taken twelve years and
  counting to accomplish. (Murphie
  will have to explain why he paid USEC so much money for the extended
  power-down at Piketon, while simultaneously asserting that a Paducah
  power-down can be accomplished swiftly and cheaply). Clean
  power-down also requires that workers and supplies be available on demand,
  and in the Paducah case, there simply isn’t time. 
According
  to reliable sources, contracts are being prepared for the work of placing the
  plant into what Murphie calls “cold storage”—a term of his invention. But those contracts won’t take effect until
  October when fiscal 2014 funds are available. “Cold storage” at that point means
  closing the doors, posting guards outside, and otherwise walking away. 
Can there yet be an
  extension deal to hold over the plant until 2014 funds are available? Probably
  not, because USEC may not last that long, the equipment in the plant has been
  run to decrepitude with no attention to maintenance, there isn’t sufficient
  time to make the arrangements, and a second end-run around environmental
  compliance would likely generate lawsuits. 
Captains Log: A
  Heck of a Long Time 
As to when the site
  might be cleaned up for “future use” under a “cold storage” scenario, nothing
  has even been rumored. I think we are talking Star Trek dates. Or
  consider the half-life of natural uranium, which is about four and a half
  billion years. 
Until such time, the
  Paducah plant will either sit like a massive metallic boil on the planet, or
  be demolished and scavenged for semi-precious metals like the Oak Ridge
  facility. But the plutonium, americium and neptunium at Paducah
  may nix the latter possibility. The dirty power-down arranged by Murphie would make it impossible to
  prevent transuranic atmospheric release during demolition. 
I propose a bronze
  encasement for the whole fandango, with a plaque that reads: WRECK
  OF THE U.S. USEC GREATEST
  FAILURE OF GOVERNMENT PRIVATIZATION IN WORLD HISTORY  IN
  MEMORIUM 
At least that would
  help Murphie comply with the National Historic Preservation Act. Call
  it a learning experience. 
Interested observers
  are still awaiting some rabbit to be pulled from Murphie’s hat, as he
  produced one year ago in 2012. To gauge that possibility I sent
  Murphie an e-mail on May 10, asking him where he was going to get the money
  to pay for clean power-down with the cut-off date only weeks away as reported
  by USEC. Specifically, I wrote: “What’s up with that?” 
And, within hours I
  received a reply, probably because I had copied Mitch McConnel’s chief of
  staff on my correspondence. Murphie wrote: 
“As you are likely
  aware, the Paducah procurement process has begun involving the USEC
  facilities. I suggest you look at the DOE CBC home page regarding
  the proposed IDIQ business opportunities and keep an eye on it for updates. As
  for the funding question, the DOE did submit a request to Congress that
  includes language regarding the potential USEC facilities return [a fiscal
  year 2014 request].” 
That’s a very
  interesting reply because, aside from the vacuous PR about fantastic
  “business opportunities” at a site of nuclear catastrophe (maybe a lollipop
  factory!), it confirms that DOE does not have some secret stash of
  funds to evacuate the diffusion cells at Paducah, at least until fiscal year
  2014, at least five months too late. Murphie is still calling the certain closure of the Paducah
  monstrosity “potential,” meaning he can’t yet pay for it. I asked Murphie to
  resolve that dilemma in a follow-up e-mail, but alas I had used up my
  entitlement to one response per five years and so got none. 
I admit that some
  pretty cool proposals for Paducah “future use” have been cooked up by Murphie
  and his PR people. In mid-2012, Kentucky state legislators sought
  an exemption from the state’s moratorium on nuclear power (a giveaway to coal
  interests), so that Paducah could become a research center exploring the use
  of nuclear explosives in fracking for
  oil and gas. Hot diggity! 
“Discussions”
  between DOE and USEC about extension may indeed be ongoing. But I
  imagine they are like the proverbial separation negotiations between the
  gold-miner and the gold-digger. The gold-digger demands maintenance
  for the lifestyle to which she’s become accustomed, or she’ll walk. The
  gold-miner looks at the lump of iron pyrite he’s been left with and says:
  “You already got everything I had.” 
Murphie’s Law 
So how did it come
  to this? Since the plant was originally scheduled to cease
  operations on May 31, 2012, why didn’t USEC and DOE have plenty of time to
  plan for orderly and funded clean power-down, which was precisely what the
  sleazy one-year extension deal was supposed to give time to accomplish. 
The answer is that the entire uranium enrichment enterprise
  of the U.S. has become a sham operation, a sham designed to funnel U.S.
  Treasury funds to private companies including USEC and its partners, a
  sham designed to convert any problem or scandal into additional contractor
  award fees, a sham designed to keep the fig-leaf of a privatized USEC Inc. from
  blowing away and exposing all the naughty bits. 
Those became the
  goals of the operation, not enriching uranium, developing new technology or
  achieving safe operations or cleanup of the sites. Murphie’s Law
  is that if anything can go wrong, it will boost contractor award fees, for a
  select group of companies hand-picked by Murphie himself. Thus,
  the principal “cleanup” contractors at Piketon are Fluor and Babcock &
  Wilcox (B&W), both of which are suppliers to USEC’s fake “American
  Centrifuge Project,” and B&W is a strategic partner of USEC with a large
  share of USEC preferred stock, poised to take over USEC’s operations if the
  latter goes under. 
And
  USEC is going under, by design, leaving its bondholders, pensioners and U.S.
  taxpayers holding one very empty bag. USEC
  stock has now lost 99% of value since its bubble peak in 2007. USEC’s
  auditors issued a “going concern” letter in March of this year, warning that
  the company appears to have no viable business plan moving forward. The New York Stock
  Exchange issued a delisting warning to USEC in May of 2012, and a second
  warning on a separate deficiency in May of 2013. 
If
  USEC is delisted, about half a billion dollars of debt to bondholders becomes
  due immediately, and at least $100 million in pension obligations are owed in
  Ohio and Kentucky each. But the entire company is only worth about a twentieth of its debts,
  or about 1 percent of the cost of the new commercial plant it pretends it
  will build. USEC’s
  2013 shareholders meeting, at which the crisis might come to a precipitous
  conclusion, was postponed from April to June, presumably to give the company a chance to depart from Paducah without
  adding a nuclear crisis to its public liabilities. USEC is now an empty shell about to be shucked: the
  company’s dissolution and the Paducah plant’s decommissioning have been timed
  to coincide. 
Once USEC has
  departed Paducah, it will no longer be in the uranium enrichment business, as
  it will operate no enrichment facilities. The company, which was created by statute for the sole purposes of
  enriching uranium and developing new technology, will be doing neither. It will only be an
  international uranium broker, ironically a front for Russian uranium
  interests. Imagine if the U.S. Postal Service decided to hoard
  its U.S. government subsidies, exit the mail delivery business and become
  only a marketing agent for Russian stamps. That analogy precisely
  applies to what USEC is doing, in stark violation of the USEC Privatization
  Act. 
But USEC has had two quite powerful politicians in its
  service, from the states in which it has operated, men who control the
  Republican caucuses in both chambers of Congress—John Boehner of southern
  Ohio and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. If
  Congress had appropriated the funds to pay for Paducah power-down in a timely
  fashion, for fiscal year 2013, then the USEC house of cards would have come
  down one year earlier. There could not have been rumors of
  federally-financed extension deals, or stock speculation runs premised on
  talk of a USEC buyout, or shipments of “spare parts” from Piketon to Paducah
  just to make it look like USEC is a going concern. 
In short, if Bill Muphie’s office had secured the
  funds and let the contracts to do a clean power-down of Paducah starting June
  1, then the jig would have been up for USEC months ago, the company might
  already be in liquidation, and hundreds of millions of dollars in continuing
  federal subsidies to USEC might not have been wasted. For its part, USEC has even now failed to announce a
  date certain for Paducah closure, although cancellation of its power contract was an effective extortion tactic
  for wheedling additional dollars from federal coffers. 
So Murphie didn’t
  secure the funds and didn’t issue the contracts, and kept right on doing
  federally-paid PR work to falsely suggest there could be a smooth economic
  conversion at Paducah. Boehner and McConnell ate it all up while
  chanting the “jobs” mantra, for it reinforced their narrative that USEC Inc. is
  the best thing since sliced atoms. To
  keep a large campaign contributor out of bankruptcy court for a few more
  months, the Paducah plant was permitted to reach the current crisis state. And the people of
  Kentucky were sent straight to nuclear hell. 
Nine days. 
 | 
 
Sources:
Geoffrey Sea, “Countdown
to Nuclear Ruin at Paducah,”
Ecowatch, May 22, 2013.
Geoffrey Sea, "Slow Cooker Comes to a Boil," Ecowatch, May 28, 2013.
Geoffrey Sea, "Slow Cooker Comes to a Boil," Ecowatch, May 28, 2013.
David
Stockman, “Mitt
Romney: The Great Deformer,” The
Daily Beast, October 15, 2012.
“Paducah
enrichment plant to be closed,” World
Nuclear News, May 28, 2013.
This was brilliant! Talk about wordsmiths!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment. Credit goes to the work done by Geoffrey Sea on this issue. Go to the Ecowatch website to see what has now become his four-part series about the mess at Paducah.
Delete