Hanford, Not Fukushima, is the Big Radiological Threat to the West Coast
by ROBERT
JACOBS
29
April, 2016
There
is a dangerous radiological threat to the West Coast of the United
States that puts the health of millions of Americans at risk. It
includes dangers to public health, dangers to the food supply, and
dangers to future generations from long-lived radionuclides,
including some of the most toxic material in the world. It is not
Fukushima, it is Hanford.
While radiation from the Fukushima nuclear meltdowns is reaching the
West Coast, carried across the ocean from Japan, the radiation from
Hanford is already there, has been there for 70 years, and is in
serious risk of catastrophe that could dwarf the effects of Fukushima
even on Japan.
Hanford,
on the Columbia River in Eastern Washington State, is the site where
the United States produced the majority of its plutonium for nuclear
weapons during the Cold War. These tens of thousands of American
nuclear weapons were built as an end product of the high levels of
plutonium production at Hanford. The first three nuclear reactors on
Earth were built at Hanford, with a total of nine nuclear power
plants being built there eventually. Nuclear power plants operated
for ten years in this world before they were ever used to generate
electricity. Electricity is a secondary purpose for nuclear power
plants, they were designed and built as plutonium manufacturing
plants.
Hanford
was the first of these plutonium production sites. The two worst
radiological disasters (besides nuclear weapon detonations) in the
first four decades of the Atomic Age were accidents at the plutonium
production sites of the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union, both in
1957. Military plutonium production sites remain among the most
contaminated sites on Earth. During the period of operation more than
67 metric tons of plutonium were manufactured at Hanford. Hanford is
home to 60% (by volume) of all of the high level radioactive waste
stored in the United States. Nearly 80% of the Department of Energy’s
inventory of spent nuclear fuel rods are stored just 400 yards away
from the Columbia River. (Statistics taken from Physicians for Social
Responsibility webpage)
Here
is a very brief review of some of the worst impacts and dangers at
the Hanford Site.
The
Green Run
In
December 1949 the United States deliberately released an immense
amount of radiation into populated areas at the Hanford Site during
the notorious Green
Run.
It was the largest intentional release of radiation conducted by the
U.S. government. While nuclear testing in Nevada exposed many people
to significant amounts of radiation, this was a byproduct of the
desire to test weapons. In the Green Run the intention was
specifically to release the radiation into the Hanford area. The
Green Run was conducted in reaction to the test of the first Soviet
nuclear weapon in Kazakhstan several months earlier. The first
indications that the Soviets had successfully tested a nuclear weapon
came when sensors at Hanford picked up the radiation several days
later. It was decided to release radiation “similar” to that of
the Soviet test to develop and hone detection equipment and better
analysis of the Soviet program.
After
the end of World War Two the U.S. method of processing the plutonium
from the spent nuclear fuel rods involved “maturing” the rods, or
letting them cool for approximately 100 days to allow short-lived
nuclear isotopes (like iodine-131) to decay. Kate Brown has a
detailed discussion of the decisions that eventually led to extending
this maturing period at Hanford during this time in her pivotal
book, Plutopia.
The U.S. assumed that in their rush to produce nuclear weapons as
quickly as possible the Soviets were “short-cooling” their
plutonium being manufactured at the Mayak Complex, and thus
processing the plutonium before these short-lived radionuclides had
decayed. The Green Run was a plan to mimic this and process plutonium
that had not cooled for 100 days, but instead had cooled only a few
weeks and was, hence, “green.” To increase the ability of the
radiation detection equipment in the area, and on the airplanes that
participated, the filters at the plutonium processing plants that
specifically filtered out iodine-131 were turned off for the 12-hour
duration of the Green Run.
As
bad as this deliberate release of radiation into the downwind
communities was, things
did not go as planned.
The intended amount of iodine-131 to be released was dwarfed by the
actual release, which was double what was anticipated. While
scientists imagined they would then be tracking a coherent cloud as
it moved away from the site, the resulting radiation dispersed
throughout a vast area stretching across much of Washington State and
into Southern Oregon. Concentrations were found in valleys and
lowlands as the radiation distributed irregularly. Internalizing
iodine-131 is a direct cause of thyroid cancer.
EPA
map of
iodine-131 distribution following the Green Run showing both
heavy dose area and total distribution
The
Tank Farms
Few
things pose as great a threat to public health at Hanford than
the Tank
Farms.
The Tank Farms are 177 single and double shelled waste storage tanks
sited at two different locations on the Hanford complex. In the early
days at Hanford, when plutonium for nuclear weapons was separated
from the spent nuclear fuel, the leftover uranium from the process
was stored in these tanks. Over the years a wide range of the highest
level radioactive and chemical wastes were dumped into these tanks.
According to the State
of Washington the
177 tanks hold 53 million gallons of the highest level radioactive
waste existing in the United States. 67 of the single shelled tanks
have leaked over 1 million gallons of this highly radioactive waste
which is migrating through the soil and groundwater into the Columbia
River. In 2011 the Department of Energy emptied the contents of many
of the leaking single shelled tanks into double shelled tanks,
however the design of the double shelled tanks was found to be
flawed, resulting in further leaks.
A section of the Tank Farms at Hanford. Photo: D0E.
Dealing
with the 53 million gallons of highly radioactive waste is a
multi-billion-dollar effort designed to manage the waste by 2050, or
roughly 100 years after it was first manufactured. Currently almost
nothing has yet been accomplished towards this goal besides the
paying out of the contracts to design plans and begin the
construction of the “Vitrification
Plant”
that is intended to encase the waste in glass. In recent years’
numerous whistleblowers have come forward from among Hanford
employees to describe the flawed design and safety protocols of the
Vit Plant. Most of these whistleblowers have been fired by the
contractors running the Hanford cleanup. One, Walter
Tamosaitis,
the research and technology manager of the Vit Plant,
was vindicated and
awarded $4.3M to settle his wrongful termination suit, however other
whistleblowers have been dismissed from their positions since that
award. While the liquid waste has been extracted from the tanks the
remaining high level waste in the tanks remains largely untreated.
Hanford
employees who work maintaining the Tank Farms have suffered serious
and unexplained health problems in recent years. Each year numerous
workers have been exposed to “vapors” and have become sick or
lost consciousness and required hospitalization. Many have suffered
ongoing health problems as a result of these exposures. In 2014 over
40 workers suffered from such exposures including a two-week period
in late March that saw 26
workers hospitalized.
According to KGW news in Portland, a 1997 study conducted by the
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory warned that workers exposed to
vapors from specific tanks would have significantly increase risk of
cancers and other serious diseases, but the conclusions of
thisreport “were
never made public, shared with Hanford workers or members of the
federally chartered Hanford Advisory Board.”
On
29 September 1957 a tank containing waste similar to the waste in the
Hanford Tank Farms exploded at the Mayak plutonium production site in
the former Soviet Union, known as the Kyshtym
Disaster.
The cooling system for one of the tanks at the Mayak site failed and
the temperature inside the tank rose eventually causing a chemical
explosion that sent a radioactive cloud for over 350 km downwind and
heavily contaminated an area near the plant with catastrophic levels
of cesium-137 and strontium-90. This was one of the worst
radiological disasters in human history at the time, and remained so,
along with the fire three weeks later inside a nuclear reactor core
at theWindscale facility
(now called Sellafield) in Cumbria in the United Kingdom, until the
Chernobyl meltdown and explosion in 1987. The Kyshtym Disaster, which
a Soviet study concluded resulted directly in 8,000 deaths (not to
mention illnesses) was the consequence of an explosion in one tank.
At Hanford there are currently 177 such tanks, each containing
similar disastrous potential, and located beside one another.
Contaminations
and Dangers
The
EPA has identified between 1,500-1,200
specific sites on
the Hanford grounds where toxic or radioactive chemicals have been
dumped. The ambiguity of that number speaks volumes about the lack of
record keeping and functional data for addressing these problems. If
plans for remediation of the waste in the Tank Farms at the Hanford
Site are carried out as intended, there remains massive contamination
of the soil and groundwater under the site, leeching into the
Columbia River and surrounding countryside. That is if things go
well. Things could go badly. The Kyshtym Disaster shows the dangers
of an explosion in one of the tanks storing waste such as that stored
in the 177 tanks at the Hanford Tank Farms. An incident in which
multiple tanks experience problems could be catastrophic beyond our
imagination. What’s more, there is not effective containment or
security at the Tank Farms to face the threats of current times.
While the countries around the world worry about the dangers of
flying airplanes or drones into nuclear power plants, or of cyber
attacks on the power supplies to such plants, those sites have at
least some effective containment around the toxic materials they
hold. The Tank Farms are open air and unshielded. The amount of
deadly radiological materials contained in these tanks is far beyond
that contained at any single nuclear site in the United States.
Hanford
is Here, Fukushima is There
The
triple meltdown at Fukushima Daiichi was a horrible disaster that has
released massive amounts of radiation into the environment. The daily
passage of tons of water through the watershed below the plants where
the melted nuclear cores (corium) sit smoldering will continue to
release radiation into the ocean for decades to come. The health toll
that this will take, especially on the children of Northern Japan is
horrifying. Already a much higher than expected incidence of thyroid
cancers have been reported in area youth. This is the first of the
cancers to present and is the tip of the iceberg of health impacts on
those in the area. The release of long lived radionuclides such as
cesium-137 and uranium into the ecosystem presents dangers to people
all around the world as these particles cycle through the biosphere.
But the largest and most tragic impacts of Fukushima will be on
people in Japan. The plumes from the explosions of March 2011
deposited the bulk of their fallout within a few hundred kilometers
of the plants. Radiation from the regular releases of contaminated
water into the ocean, and the passage of groundwater across the
corium will continue to bring radioactive particles into the Pacific
Ocean where they will work their way up the food chain much as the
fallout deposited by atmospheric nuclear testing did in the Pacific
during the 1940s and 1950s. Some of that radiation is reaching the
West Coast of the U.S., and this will continue as long as the site
hemorrhages contaminated water into the ocean, which will likely be
for some decades. This disaster should not be discounted. But it
should also be remembered that it is the people of Japan, and
specifically the children of Japan who live in the areas where the
fallout plumes deposited that face the direst of these consequences.
There
is currently a great deal of awareness about the arrival of Fukushima
radiation on the West Coast. There are many people who say they will
not eat fish from the Pacific Ocean, or eat food from Japan. At the
same time, there is no discussion about eating Salmon from the
Columbia River, drinking wines from the Columbia Valley, or fruit
from the orchards that fill the downwind area around Hanford. The
amount of radiation in the Hanford area dwarfs the amount arriving on
the West Coast of the United States on a scale that is mindboggling.
What is arriving from Fukushima is the result of the meltdowns of
three nuclear cores, and it is crossing an ocean. What is stored at
Hanford and leeching into the Columbia is resultant from 2/3rds of
the high level nuclear waste of the United States, and is from
production that began decades before Fukushima was built. This is not
just contamination that is arriving today, or this year, it has been
saturating the groundwater and ecosystem of the Northwest for more
than 70 years.
Furthermore,
the impacts from Hanford are not only what may happen, but what has
already happened.
Hanford
downwinders have
suffered generations of cancers and other diseases across a wide area
of Eastern Washington and beyond. There is a legacy of death and
illness that spans generations downwind from Hanford, and the source
of those diseases percolates away in the tanks and waste sites that
sit along the Columbia River, spreading deeper into the surrounding
ecosystem. The radiation from Fukushima may slowly seep across the
vast Pacific, while at Hanford we have the threat of a radiological
explosion or terrorist act that could release volumes more radiation
than was released by Fukushima and deposited in Japan any day of any
week, and spread radiation across the West Coast and mountain west.
By
all means we should be vigilant and monitor the levels of Fukushima
radiation that arrives on the West Coast of the United States, while
remembering that the most profound victims of Fukushima are children
living near the site. But we should turn our attention and concerns
to the radioactive wound that seeps radiation into the ecosystem of
the American and Canadian West every day and threatens it with a
radiological disaster that would dwarf the worst that Fukushima has
done even in Japan. Stand up forHanford
whistleblowers.
Demand transparency on waste management practices and plans at
Hanford. Stand up for the health of Hanford workers who are being
exposed to dangerous vapors in their workplace. And demand support
and compensation for the downwind families and workers whose health
and wellbeing has been devastated by the most radioactive site in the
United States.
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