Witness Testimony
Ms. Angelina Howard
Executive Vice President Nuclear Energy Institute 1776 I Street, NW; Suite 400
Washington, DC, 20006-3708
A Review of the Department of Energy's Yucca Mountain Project, and Proposed Legislation to Alter the Nuclear Waste Trust Fund (H.R. 3429 and H.R. 3981).
Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality
March 25, 2004
09:30 AM
Testimony for the Record
Angelina S. Howard Executive Vice President Nuclear Energy Institute
Before the Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality Energy and Commerce
Committee U.S. House of Representatives
March 25, 2004
Chairman Hall, Ranking Member Boucher and distinguished members of the
committee, I am Angie Howard, executive vice president at the Nuclear Energy
Institute. I am pleased to have this opportunity to testify on legislation to
restore the Nuclear Waste Fund to the purposes established in the Nuclear Waste
Policy Act of 1982 and on the progress toward establishing appropriate funding
for the used nuclear fuel repository at Yucca Mountain, Nev.
NEI is responsible for developing policy for the U.S. nuclear industry. Our
organization's 270 member companies represent a broad spectrum of interests,
including every U.S. energy company that operates a nuclear power plant. NEI's
membership also includes nuclear fuel cycle companies, suppliers, engineering
and consulting firms, national research laboratories, manufacturers of
radiopharma-ceuticals, universities, labor unions and law firms.
America's 103 nuclear power plants are the most efficient and reliable in the
world. Nuclear energy is the largest source of emission-free electricity
generation in the United States, providing electricity for one of every five
U.S. homes and businesses. Given this essential contribution to our nation's
energy security and economic growth, Congress should adopt policies that foster
the further development of emission-free nuclear energy as a vital part of our
nation's diverse energy mix-and fulfill existing federal obligations, including
the disposal of used nuclear fuel.
My testimony will focus on two issues. The first involves making necessary
funding available in a timely manner to meet Yucca Mountain program milestones
and maintain established operational schedules. NEI believes that legislation is
needed to restore the clear link between electricity consumer fees and
expenditures for the nation's used nuclear fuel disposal program. The second is
the industry's assessment of the Department of Energy's progress with the
nuclear waste management program.
Meeting DOE's schedule for initial repository operations in 2010 requires
certainty in funding for the program, particularly given projected expenditures
exceeding $1 billion beginning in fiscal 2006. The Yucca Mountain program has a
history of funding shortfalls. Despite consistent support for DOE's budget
requests for Yucca Mountain in the House, billions of dollars contributed by
American consumers solely for the federal government's used fuel programs have
been diverted for other use. The program has experienced a $723-million
shortfall below DOE's budget requests in the past 11 years. While the reduction
in fiscal 2004 was a modest $11 million, funding was preserved only because
House conference managers made it their top priority.
Program opponents attempt to delay the program through budget cuts and
litigation. They attempt to use delay to effectively negate scientific consensus
and the will of Congress to develop a repository at Yucca Mountain, subject to
Nuclear Regulatory Commission approval. These dilatory tactics would set
responsible environmental management back to square one. The Nuclear Waste
Policy Act of 1982 created the Nuclear Waste Fund based on the premise that
electricity consumers who benefit from nuclear energy should pay for the used
nuclear fuel disposal program. To effectively implement this relationship, funds
should be available when justified and not conditioned on annual budget
constraints.
Funding shortfalls in past years have caused DOE to defer important programs,
including procuring transportation containers for used reactor fuel; acquiring
transportation and logistics services; creating the final grant process for
providing emergency responder assistance; developing a transportation
infrastructure in Nevada; and working with regional, state, tribal and local
representatives from across the nation on transportation planning.
Further delay in the repository program will have significant financial
implications. As Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham stated in his Feb. 27
letter to Rep. David Hobson, chairman of the Energy and Water Appropriations
Subcommittee: "Each year of delay could add nearly $1 billion per year in
costs for commercial utilities and federal defense nuclear waste sites to
continue to provide temporary storage. These costs would be borne by the federal
government, based on its existing contracts with electric utility
companies."
Consumer fees, including interest, committed into the Nuclear Waste Fund
since its formation in 1983 total $23 billion. Consumers are projected to pay
between $750 million to $800 million to the fund each year. Yet only about $8
billion1 has been used for the program.
The balance in the fund is nearly $15 billion. In each of the past several
years, there has been a dramatic gap between the annual fee income and
disbursements from the fund (see chart).
The Nuclear Waste Fund has three unique characteristics that justify
modifying the current budget rules governing its use:
- The fund is intended to cover the entire cost of the federal government's
commercial used fuel management program over several decades.
- The federal
government is obligated by law and contracts signed with electric companies that
operate nuclear power plants to implement the used fuel management program.
- The disposal of used nuclear fuel from commercial reactors is financed entirely
through a 1 mill per kilowatt-hour fee established by federal law and paid by
consumers of electricity generated at nuclear power plants. Not having these
funds fully dedicated to the disposal program constitutes a taking from the
American people.
Scoring the net budget impact of the used fuel disposal program is consistent
with general federal budget accounting principles, because it more accurately
reflects the complete impact of the program on federal budget and discretionary
spending totals and is consistent with treatment of industry user fees to the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission. It will not adversely impact deficits. In fact,
by reducing the risk of program delay, it should improve the long-term federal
accounts balance.
Although the program should remain subject to congressional oversight, Yucca
Mountain program appropriations should not compete each year for funding with
unrelated programs. The industry commends the committee for its long-standing
support for reform of Yucca Mountain program budgeting, as most recently
evidenced in the committee's approval of H.R. 45 during the 106th Congress and
in H.R. 4 in 2002. During this committee's 1999 hearings on the issue, Chairman
Joe Barton noted that one of the objectives of the legislation was to
"protect consumers by halting the diversion of consumer fees to fund other
federal programs."
Last year, Committee Ranking Democrat John Dingell, in a letter to Energy
Secretary Abraham, wrote:
"It has been clear for some time that absent legislative action, money
paid into the [Nuclear Waste] Fund will continue to be diverted to other
purposes-an inequitable use of funds collected from utility ratepayers
specifically to pay for the repository. If this continues, construction could be
delayed even in the event DOE had already received NRC approval to build a
repository at Yucca Mountain. In that event, waste would remain in de facto
permanent storage at dozens of facilities which were not designed for this
purpose-in Michigan and many other states, at even greater cost to ratepayers.
Moreover, damages in breach of contract lawsuits against DOE would continue to
mount and, as I understand it, could be paid from general taxpayer
revenues."
This year, the administration submitted to Congress proposed legislation to
authorize the reclassification of fees paid into the Nuclear Waste Fund as
offsetting collections, in an amount equal to appropriations for nuclear waste
disposal. Chairman Barton recently introduced the proposal as H.R. 3981. That
bill is substantively similar to H.R. 3429, introduced by Reps. Shimkus and Rush
last November and co-sponsored by six other committee members, including five
members of the subcommittee.
Reforming the funding process is vital in FY2005, with the budget request for
the program increasing to $880 million, more than $300 million above FY2004.
These funds are necessary to support NRC review of the license application, to
acquire long-lead items to support the transportation system and to execute
detailed facility design.
The need to reform the funding profile is even more critical in view of the
administration's assumption in its FY2005 budget that this legislation would be
enacted. In addition, absent congressional action, the Appropriations Committee
will have to address a significant shortfall within the discretionary spending
totals to fully fund the $880 million request.
Under the legislation, Congress could limit obligations in any year for the
Yucca Mountain project if it determines less funding is needed, or could provide
additional funds from the Nuclear Waste Fund balance, if required. In the latter
case, funding above annual receipts into the Nuclear Waste Fund would be subject
to discretionary spending limitations. Funding for the program from DOE's
defense program account would remain subject to discretionary spending
limitations. This approach, if enacted in FY2005, would provide sufficient
funding for the non-defense portion of the program, based on DOE's requirements
through completion of the surface facilities. The industry strongly urges the
committee to approve offsetting collections legislation.
Although adequate and predictable funding is a prerequisite for program
success, it is not by itself sufficient. DOE and its contractor(s) must continue
to effectively manage the program. The Energy Department also must demonstrate
that it will meet NRC requirements for the safe and secure permanent disposal of
used nuclear fuel at Yucca Mountain before it can operate the repository.
President Bush in 2002 signed legislation designating Yucca Mountain as the
site for a national used fuel repository. DOE and its contractors are preparing
an application to build the repository and are expected to submit it to the NRC
in December. If approved, the license will permit DOE to build and operate the
repository.
Congress approved Yucca Mountain as the site of the national repository in
2002. The policy question now before Congress is: When will Yucca Mountain be
ready to accept used nuclear fuel? DOE plans to begin accepting used fuel in
2010-12 years behind the statutory deadline in the Nuclear Waste Policy Act.
That law required DOE to begin accepting used fuel by Jan. 31, 1998.
DOE has improved management at the Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste
Management (OCRWM), giving the industry more confidence that the agency can meet
its 2010 deadline for opening the repository, assuming sufficient funding for
the next six years. In addition, OCRWM has effectively implemented a Management
Improvement Initiative using the same management principles that the nuclear
energy industry has applied in building an exemplary safety record at the
nation's nuclear power plants. The creation of DOE's Office of Repository
Development in 2002 established strong project management. DOE also has made
substantial progress in resolving the NRC's outstanding key technical issues for
the Yucca Mountain project. The transition from scientific research to a
licensing project team has been a critical transition at the Yucca Mountain
site. Recently, DOE announced that it is pursuing several other far-reaching
management initiatives, including annual comprehensive independent external
financial, schedule and technical audits of the program.
These programs are further evidence of the Energy Department's commitment to
a sound scientific basis for the project. The integrity of the scientists
working on the program, the extensive and ongoing independent review process,
the conservatism built into performance assumptions, and the extensive NRC
review of the license application all enhance public and policymaker confidence
in the Yucca Mountain repository. Repository operations will not begin until DOE
can meet strict standards established for public safety and environmental
protection.
Several critical milestones must be met to maintain the 2010 target for
repository operation. The most significant of these-submitting a construction
license application to the NRC-must be accomplished by the end of this year. The
industry expects DOE to meet this milestone. After DOE files its license
application, the NRC must issue a decision on the application and conduct public
hearings within four years, using the same safety-focused, performance-based
principles it applies to licensing nuclear power plants.
DOE also must proceed with land withdrawal and transfers, site preparation,
and preliminary construction to meet the 2010 date. Congress should specifically
instruct DOE to begin these activities before the NRC's final authorization of
repository construction.
Planning for a comprehensive transportation program to transfer used fuel to
the repository also must be fully developed. This planning will build on the
comprehensive transportation program that has been used for 40 years to safely
transport 3,000 shipments of used fuel across 1.7 million miles. In December
2003, DOE issued a National Transportation Strategic Plan for developing a
nationwide transportation program, with input from state, local and tribal
governments, as well as the industry. DOE must implement this strategy.
The industry's transportation policy endorses a predominantly rail scenario
contained in DOE's Yucca Mountain Environmental Impact Statement. This scenario
recently was identified by the department as its preferred transportation
strategy. NEI also supports the use of dedicated trains for used fuel
transportation to the repository. Transportation planning must include extensive
consultation with state and local officials consistent with DOE's December 2003
strategy.
It is encouraging that the Secretary of Energy has also identified a
preferred rail corridor within Nevada for transportation of used nuclear fuel to
the repository. The Secretary's action is consistent with direction provided
last year by the House, which concluded that the Caliente route is the most
feasible corridor to Yucca Mountain. It is also consistent with what Nevadans
prefer. In a June 2003 public opinion survey of Nevadans by Voter Consumer
Research, 56 percent said they would find "acceptable" rail transport
of used nuclear fuel through rural routes, away from major cities like Reno or
Las Vegas. In contrast, 88 percent find truck transport through major cities
like Reno or Las Vegas unacceptable.
The industry encourages DOE to proceed further with the development of a
comprehensive transportation program.
This timely action supports the department's objective of beginning
construction of a rail line immediately after a decision on construction
authorization, expected by 2008. That would make rail transportation available
for used fuel shipments early in the program and minimize the need for truck
shipments within the state.
The industry also supports funding the state of Nevada and affected units of
local governments for appropriate oversight of the repository project and local
transportation preparedness. This would include federal assistance to mitigate
the social and economic impacts of the program, consistent with Section 116 of
the Nuclear Waste Policy Act.
Each of these DOE milestones must have a clearly defined schedule, with
implementation plans linked to funding requirements, if the federal government
is to meet its 2010 goal for opening the repository.
CONCLUSION
The industry thanks the committee for its long-standing commitment to
implementing public policy that ensures the safe and secure management of used
nuclear fuel from nuclear power plants and high-level radioactive waste from the
nation's defense programs. Developing a new funding process for the Yucca
Mountain project is essential to complete one of the world's most important
environmental facilities and pave the way for the U.S. government to begin
fulfilling its legal obligation to move used nuclear fuel from 40 states to a
secure and safe federal repository.
$7.6 billion has been used by DOE, $350 million by other federal agencies
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