My name is Jim Dushaw and I am the Utility
Department Director for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
the IBEW.
Mr.
Chairman, on behalf of IBEW President Ed Hill, and IBEW members, especially
worker members who are associated with the commercial nuclear power industry,
thank you for the opportunity to present our views on the Yucca Mountain
nuclear waste repository issue.
The
IBEW is a labor union with approximately 780,000 members, including many
workers at nuclear facilities. Of
the 70,000 union jobs within the nuclear industry, the IBEW represents 15,000
full-time workers at 74 nuclear stations.
Thousands more IBEW members rotate through the plants with the
contractor work force as needed for maintenance and refueling outages.
With a history of work in the commercial nuclear industry dating back
to the 1950s, and the test reactor at Shippingport, Pennsylvania, IBEW nuclear
workers can say without reservation that this is an industry with a proven
record of exceptional safety. It
is among the safest industrial work environments in the United States.
The
commercial nuclear industry is a source of high quality, safe, well-paying
jobs for tens of thousands of IBEW members and many others as well.
Does it follow then that our union is biased in favor of sustaining
nuclear power? Yes, but that is not the exclusive reason for the IBEW's
support for moving forward with development at Yucca Mountain.
I am
not an engineer, physicist, geologist, nor do I
profess to have any special technical knowledge relevant to the Yucca
Mountain issue. However, IBEW members want common sense to be heard on this
issue. We applaud the
President's decision to move forward with development of a spent fuel
repository at Yucca Mountain, and urge Congress to approve the President's
decision over the state of Nevada's objection.
We
support the President's decision on several counts; most importantly, the
IBEW has, at least since the late 1970s, adopted formal resolutions during
several consecutive IBEW International Conventions, the union's highest
governing body, that deal particularly with the need for "expediting" the
establishment of a federal repository for nuclear waste.
A similar resolution was
passed without exception by delegates to the 36th IBEW
International Convention September 12, 2001.
Mr.
Chairman, the IBEW is by name and fact an organization associated with the
energy industry. We are also
consumers, environmentalists and working folks.
We engage in energy policy issues often, and we do so from many
perspectives. The development of
public policy with respect to energy, environmental protections, and the
well-being of the nation now and for the future, is of great concern for IBEW
members.
The
IBEW view is that there is a compelling need for the nation to develop in a
thoughtful, but accelerated and safe fashion, all domestic energy resources,
including nuclear, in order to fuel economic growth, provide jobs for a
growing population, protect our environment, assure energy and, therefore,
economic security. For all of
these reasons, the nation can ill afford indecisive outcomes on vital energy
issues in such threatening times as have come upon us.
We are
satisfied to leave the technical discussion, of which the Yucca Mountain
debate is overflowing, to the qualified experts.
The IBEW has confidence that the President of the United States has
made a fully informed decision on the scientific merits in approving the
Energy Secretary's recommendation of Yucca Mountain as a permanent nuclear
waste storage site. We believe
that in the range of alternative solutions, none compare well with the Yucca
Mountain plan, which intends to place spent fuel and nuclear waste where the
potential for any harm and any access is tightly controlled and monitored.
If
plants start closing down due to a lack of spent fuel storage space, jobs will
disappear, and consumers, for no compelling reason, lose a real contender for
low-cost electricity in the newly competitive electric supply industry.
If even one plant is forced to shut down because of a lack of spent
fuel storage space, hundreds, possibly thousands, of jobs will be
irretrievably lost. Forcing
higher than necessary costs on plant operation with on-site storage makes no
sense, as consumers suffer the consequences.
It is
clear the nation needs to have a place to put the used nuclear fuel to ensure
continued operation of our nuclear power plants.
Scientists have been studying Yucca Mountain for more than a decade.
This mountain is the most extensively defined piece of property in the
world. DOE's viability
assessment shows that based upon the scientific studies of Yucca Mountain,
there are no "showstoppers" to continuing development of this urgently
needed facility. We are now
twelve years behind the goal Congress set forth in the Nuclear Waste Policy
Act.
It
clearly makes sense that used nuclear fuel should be stored at one centralized
storage facility. Fuel is
currently stored at more than 130 long-term storage facilities in 39 states.
According to the DOE Environmental Impact Statement of 1999, there is
significantly more protection for the American public and the environment if
we have one central federal repository. We
should not pass this problem onto our children and grandchildren, especially
since science has proven that we can safely transport and store the fuel at
Yucca Mountain.
It is
a fact that the spent nuclear fuel can be transported safely.
Our existing laws and regulations provide for the safe loading,
packaging, transportation and unloading of all kinds of nuclear materials
today. There is no reason to believe that the continued
transportation of radioactive materials will be any less safe. Union workers are justifiably proud of their safety record in
transporting radioactive cargo - both by rail and by truck.
The
federal government has a legal obligation to manage and dispose of the used
fuel created by the nation's electric utilities.
For twenty years, consumers of electricity, including union workers,
have paid more than $17 billion into a federal trust fund to pay for the
disposal of used nuclear fuel. Only about six billion of these dollars have been spent on
the Yucca Mountain project. Congress
should move expeditiously to see that the federal government lives up to its
lawful responsibility and begins managing the used nuclear fuel as promised.
Science shows that Yucca Mountain is a suitable repository for
the used nuclear fuel. In
addition, we have proven that we can transport radioactive cargos without
harming American citizens or the environment.
It just makes sense that we continue forward with Yucca Mountain as the
repository for our nation's used nuclear fuel.
There's much more than jobs at stake here. The IBEW submits that this issue is a challenge to the
nation's will and determination to preserve and further develop all safe
energy options.
Thank you.
-
The
IBEW is a labor union with approximately 780,000 members and represents
15,000 full-time workers at 74 nuclear stations.
Thousands more IBEW members rotate through the plants with the
contractor work force.
-
IBEW
nuclear workers can say without reservation that this is an industry with a
proven record of exceptional safety.
-
IBEW
members want common sense to be heard on this issue and applauds the
President's decision to move forward with Yucca Mountain.
-
IBEW
members are concerned with development of public policy with respect to
energy and environment.
-
The
nation can ill afford indecisive outcomes on vital energy issues.
-
IBEW
is confident that the President of the United States has made a fully
informed decision on the scientific merits of Yucca Mountain.
-
Of
alternative solutions, none compare well with Yucca Mountain, where the
potential for harm is best controlled and monitored.
-
If
operating nuclear plants start closing, jobs will disappear, consumers lose
low-cost electricity.
-
Forcing
higher than necessary costs with on-site storage makes no sense.
-
DOE's
viability assessment shows no "showstoppers".
-
We
are twelve years behind the goal set forth in the Nuclear Waste Policy Act.
-
It
makes sense that used nuclear fuel should be stored at one centralized
storage facility as opposed to more than 130 long-term storage facilities in
41 states.
-
Existing
laws and regulations provide for the safe loading, packaging, transportation
and unloading of all kinds of nuclear materials. No reason to believe that radioactive materials will be any
less safe.
-
Federal
government has a legal obligation to manage and dispose of the used fuel.
-
Consumers
have paid more than $17 billion into federal trust fund to pay for the
disposal of used nuclear fuel.
-
The
federal government should live up to its lawful responsibility.
-
This
issue is a challenge to the nation's will and determination to preserve
and further develop all safe, affordable, reliable energy options capable of
sustaining reasonably projected needs.