Aerial view of Yucca Mountain (Photo courtesy of U.S.
Dept. of Energy)
Oral arguments are
slated Jan. 14 in a federal appeals court for Nevada's six-pronged
challenge to the planned underground nuclear waste depository
at Nevada's Yucca Mountain.
Nevada officials told reporters
at a Dec. 19 briefing in Washington that a three-judge panel
of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit has consolidated six separate lawsuits filed by the
state and will hear their side and the federal governments
counter-arguments at a January session. Joseph Egan, Nevada's
lead outside attorney, said, "We're expecting a resolution
of these cases in mid-2004." But he said its likely that
whatever the appeals court decides, there will be appeals
to U.S. Supreme Court.
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Bob Loux, executive director of
the State of Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects, says DOE
is working on its application with the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission to license the Yucca Mountain repository. That
process, Egan says, could take four years.
In the meantime a major focus for
the Nevada side is its litigation. One case contends that
having a site in Nevada is unconstitutional. Egan says, "It
is not constitutional for 49 states to gang up on one, politically
isolated, essentiallly powerless state and impose an unwanted
burden upon that state without some compelling rational basis."
Its other suits challenge DOE's rules for determining the
site is suitable, the environmental impact statement DOE issued
for the project; and the Environmental Protection Agency's
radiation standards.
One "thread" that runs
through the suits, Egan said, is Nevada's objection to what
it says was DOE's moving away from using the site's geology
as the key factor to contain the radioactive waste.
Joe Davis, a DOE spokesman, says,
"Nevada seems to be basing their case on the 1982 [nuclear
waste] law, when in fact Congress changed the law in 1987
and 1992" to take into account recommendations by outside
scientists. Davis adds that DOE "followed the law"
and is meeting NRC and EPA regulatory guidelines "and
we'll prove that in the NRC public hearing process" for
the licensing.
Davis says, "I think Nevada's
case is misguided. the obviously don't understand the particulars
of the law and our case will bear that out.....We also make
the case that this whole process is in compliance with the
law." and also contends that Nevada "doesn't have
a case at all."
Davis says, "We'll see what
the court decides, but we're confident.
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