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Source: US offers nuclear waste hosting deals to states

Source: US offers nuclear waste hosting deals to states
Source: US offers nuclear waste hosting deals to states

The?U.S. The Department of Energy is seeking interest from U.S. States as early as this week on the storage of nuclear waste as a reward for incentives to build reactors.

The Trump administration wants to quadruple the U.S. nuclear capacity to 400 gigawatts in 2050, as electricity demand increases for the first decade due to data centers and cryptocurrency.

The new strategy represents a major shift in policy aimed at solving an old problem that has plagued the U.S. Nuclear Industry for decades: how to dispose of its radioactive waste. The administration believes that overcoming local opposition to waste disposal is crucial to reaching its ambitious nuclear expansion goals.

Trump said at the World Economic Forum of Davos that nuclear power could be developed for "good prices" while still being safe, despite his previous reservations.

The Energy Department didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comments on the plan. Details could change.

In recent years, local concerns over radioactive and toxic nuclear wastes have slowed down the development of nuclear energy. Waste is stored at nuclear power stations, initially in spent fuel pools, and then in concrete or steel casks.

In exchange for incentives to build nuclear power plants, states could host deep-underground waste storage facilities. This would be a departure from the long-standing plan of storing waste beneath Nevada's Yucca Mountain.

In 1987, the department devoted all its efforts to Yucca as "a single repository" for all U.S. nuclear waste. However, due to opposition by state legislators, former President Barack Obama halted the project. Over several administrations, the U.S. spent at least 15 billion dollars on Yucca.

The Department has focused its efforts on locating nuclear waste sites based on consent. There are no plans at this time for a permanent site.

Source: The Energy Department is going to invite states' interest in deals that will also include?incentives on nuclear waste reprocessing, uranium enrichment and nuclear waste reprocessing. The source stated that the plan was 'non-binding' and that states did not have to accept all elements.

The former President Ronald Reagan lifted the moratorium on the reprocessing or recycling of nuclear waste. However, companies in the United States have not developed this technique commercially due to the costs. Reprocessing is opposed by many non-proliferation activists, who say that its supply chain can be used as a target by militants looking to steal materials to use in crude nuclear weapons.

Politico reported the plan for the first time on Wednesday. (Reporting and editing by Lisa Shumaker; reporting by Timothy Gardner)

(source: Reuters)