66°F
weather icon Clear

Court nixes nuclear waste payments

WASHINGTON — No Yucca Mountain? No backup plan? Then the Department of Energy can’t force utility customers to pay into a construction fund for a nuclear waste repository that no longer is on the boards, a federal court ruled this week.

DOE has failed to come up with a credible estimate of how much money it will need to carry out a nuclear waste program now that the Nevada site has been scrapped, according to judges in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

Consequently, a three-judge panel ruled unanimously the DOE should not collect the fees and should ask Congress to pass a law to halt them.

The ruling was seen as a victory for utilities and a setback for the Department of Energy that has continued to amass a fund as it struggles to develop a new plan to dispose of high level nuclear waste.

“Consumers have upheld their end of the deal, but unfortunately all they have to show for their investment is a hole in the Nevada desert,” said Charles Gray, executive director of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners that sued DOE.

“Putting aside the political dispute about the proposed Yucca Mountain facility, nuclear-power ratepayers should not be charged for a program the federal government has closed down.,” Gray said. “Thankfully, because of today’s actions, nuclear-power consumers will no longer have to pay for the government’s mishandling of this program.”

Sen, Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, said the ruling should prod DOE “to move quickly to restart work on the Yucca Mountain repository to deal with our permanent storage needs.”

DOE leaders were studying the ruling and had no immediate comment, a spokeswoman said. The department had argued it was necessary to continue collecting fees because the money eventually is going to be needed whenever a new nuclear waste program is put together.

The government collects $750 million a year into the nuclear waste fund through fees charged to customers of utilities that generate nuclear power. About $35.8 billion has been collected since 1983, and annual interest on the fund is $1.3 billion.

The fees were authorized to build a repository for the utilities’ waste. But when President Barack Obama scrapped Yucca Mountain soon after taking office in 2009 and set off to find a new strategy, utilities balked at making more payments. About $10 billion has been spent from the fund, according to the Nuclear Energy Institute.

The court earlier ordered DOE to update its estimates how much it might need to collect, but the department came back with a cost range “so large as to be absolutely useless,” according to the seven-page ruling written by senior Judge Laurence Silberman.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
RAM event: Free medical clinic needs your help

Next weekend, Remote Area Medical will be bringing its pop-clinic to the valley for the eighth straight year and members of the local host group committee are urging the public to get involved by donating their time to this life-changing event.

USO Benefit Show set to be the best yet — here’s how to get a ticket

The Nevada Silver Tappers are well-known for their patriotic routines and their generosity to the veteran community and this October, these elements will combine into two nights of fantastic fundraising with the annual USO Benefit Show.

How a Soroptomist scholarship helped a Pahrump mom of 3

Embarking on an educational path as an adult can be challenging and for those acting as head-of-household, it can be all the more difficult.

A Smoky Valley curtain call: Youth theater debuts a Disney classic

Andrew Sweeney played multiple roles as the prince, the beast, Monsieur D’Arque and the baker. “My favorite part of BATB JR was getting to be part of the team and meeting all the other cast members,” he said. “I didn’t feel nervous because we were very prepared for the performance.”

Peek inside this senior-living community’s gardens (GALLERY)

Spring Mountain Apartments, a low-income senior living community in Pahrump, has a brand new community garden to enjoy thanks to a partnership with two of the valley’s major nonprofit organizations, the NyE Communities Coalition and the Master Gardeners with the University of Nevada, Reno Cooperative Extension.

1,000-plus cats and dogs spayed/neutered

In just seven months’ time, Tails of Nye County has managed to spay or neuter over 1,000 stray cats and personal pets in the Pahrump area with the help of funding from the Nye County American Rescue Plan Act Grant Program.

Want to seek public office? 2 seats up for appointment on Beatty Town Advisory Board

The deadline is 5 p.m. Oct. 30 to submit letters of interest to fill two seats on the Beatty Town Advisory Board that are up for reappointment after the end of the year. Letters of interest can be submitted to the Beatty Town Office. What you need to know.

Lakeview Golf Course on the upswing

Lakeview Executive Golf Course will remain under the operation of CourseCo for another five years, following renewal of a management contract with the town of Pahrump. Here’s how the troubled course turned itself around.