Tunnel Fire Exposes
Dangers Of Transporting Nuclear Waste
by Kevin Kamps
Here's a scary thought: What if the
train that burned up in a recent Baltimore rail tunnel
fire had been carrying nuclear waste?
It's not that far-fetched. According
to Energy Department maps that trace national railroad
routes for the transport of nuclear waste to a proposed
repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, a train carrying
spent fuel rods from a nuclear power plant near Maryland's
Chesapeake Bay could pass right through the same tunnel.
If a train carrying atomic waste were
to catch fire, the only thing standing between people
and deadly radiation would be the nuclear waste transport
casks, which could leak in a severe accident, releasing
radiation. Spent nuclear fuel,even decades after removal
from the reactor, could deliver a lethal dose of radiation
in just a few minutes time.
The July 18 inferno in Baltimore's Howard
Street train tunnel reportedly reached temperatures
as high as 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit. The blaze, apparently
fed by flammable chemicals in the train cargo, burned
out of control all day long, overnight, and well into
the next day.
The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission
calls for high-level nuclear waste containers to be
able to withstand a 1,475 degree fire for 30 minutes.
Clearly, this real life accident in Baltimore burned
longer and hotter than anything envisioned by the
NRC.
These outdated criteria date back to
1947 and haven't been updated since, despite combustibles
on the roads and rails today that burn at much higher
temperatures. That needs to change.
By any reckoning, the damage from a
tunnel fire involving nuclear waste could be enormous.
According to experts like Marvin Resnikoff, a nuclear
physicist with Radioactive Waste Management Associates
in New York City, a severe high-level radioactive
waste transport accident releasing radiation in an
urban area could cause scores of latent cancer fatalities
and cost tens of billions of dollars to clean up.
Resnikoff used the DOE's own computer
models to arrive at these figures. The Baltimore Sun
quoted a firefighter as saying all he could see inside
the tunnel was the glowing metal of train tanker cars.
He described it as "a deep orange, like a horseshoe
just pulled out of
the oven."
The big question is, could high-level
atomic waste containers survive such severe accident
conditions? If not, we could be looking at our own
Chernobyl catastrophe - on wheels.
Kevin Kamps is nuclear waste specialist
with the Nuclear Information and Resource Service
in Washington, DC. (Copyright 2001, Global Beat Syndicate,
418 Lafayette Street, Suite 554, New York, NY 10003;
http://www.nyu.edu/globalbeat/syndicate). For this
article, see http://www.nyu.edu/globalbeat/syndicate/kamps072601.html
.