DOE Announces Strategic Engineering and Technology Roadmap for Cleanup of Cold War Era Nuclear Waste
March 18, 2008 -- WASHINGTON, DC – The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today released an Engineering and Technology Roadmap (Roadmap), which details initiatives aimed at reducing the technical risks and uncertainties associated with cleaning up Cold War era nuclear waste over the next ten years. The Roadmap also outlines strategies to minimize such risks and proposes how these strategies would be implemented, furthering the Department’s goal of protecting the environment by providing a responsible resolution to the environmental legacy of nuclear weapons production.
DOE Savannah River site workers carefully maneuver a spent nuclear fuel cask, October, 2005: DOE Photo
“The Roadmap seeks to build on the Department’s previous successes in technological innovation, which have contributed greatly to the enhanced safety, effectiveness, and efficiency of our environmental management projects,” DOE’s Assistant Secretary for Environmental Management Jim Rispoli said. “As we work to improve technologies and processes to safely dispose of Cold War era nuclear waste at sites across the country, this Roadmap will serve to guide the development of an increasingly strong and responsive applied research and engineering program.”
Specifically, the Roadmap consists of thirteen strategic initiatives that address anticipated technical risks and uncertainties in the following six areas: waste processing; groundwater and soil remediation; deactivation and decommissioning and facility engineering; spent nuclear fuel; challenging materials; and integration and cross-cutting initiatives. The initiatives in the Roadmap will help ensure continued success in completing the cleanup of contaminated nuclear weapons manufacturing and testing sites across the United States.
The Department’s world-class National Laboratories, led by Savannah River National Laboratory, will spearhead the integration of these engineering and technology efforts. Input for the Roadmap was provided by DOE’s National Laboratories and the Office of Environmental Management’s (EM) project directors, stakeholders, site contractors, and the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). In February 2008, the NAS National Research Council (Council) issued its Interim Report on the EM Engineering and Technology program. The Council agreed with the major program areas for strategic research and development presented in the Roadmap.
Applied engineering and technology development has long played a crucial role in achieving cleanup results in the Environmental Management program, one of the largest, most diverse, and technically complex environmental programs in the world. The Office of Environmental Management has more information and has the Roadmap available for viewing.
Source: DOE
Related articles
- John McCain: Not Comfortable With Nuclear Waste Through Arizona, But Just Fine for 44 Other States
- Senate Passes Lautenberg Legislation To Clean Up Rail Solid Waste Sites
- Don’t Be Fooled by Nuclear Industry Shill; Environmentalists Are Not Backing New Reactors
- Utah Governor Huntsman Blocks Italian Nuclear Waste
- Senator Harry Reid Cuts $104.5 Million From Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Budget
Latest stories
- Statement by Senator Barack Obama on EU Emergency Summit Meeting
- Barack Obama Statement on the Resignation of Japanese Prime Minister Fukuda
- Senator Barack Obama's Statement on the Third Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina
- Statement from Sarah and Todd Palin Regarding Unwed Teen Daughter's Pregnancy
- White House Press Gaggle by Dana Perino and FEMA Administrator Dave Paulison -- September 1, 2008
- Zimbabwe District Calls for Renewed Government Effort on Solar Energy
- Thousands of Anti-War Protesters March to Site of Republican Convention
- US: More than 11,000 Iraqi Detainees Released in 2008
- DoD Identifies Navy Casualty: Petty Officer 1st Class Joshua Harris, 36,of Lexington, North Carolina
- DoD Identifies Army Casualty: Spc. Steven J. Fitzmorris, 26, of Columbia, Missouri
Yes We Can
Yes We Can:

















